The availability of a system for direct transfer of anti-fungal candidate genes into American chestnut (
Castanea dentata), devastated by a fungal blight in the last century, would offer an alternative or supplemental approach to conventional
breeding for production of chestnut trees resistant to the blight fungus and other pathogens. By taking advantage of the strong
ability of embryogenic American chestnut cultures to proliferate in suspension, a high-throughput
Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation protocol for stable integration of foreign genes into the tree was established. Proembryogenic masses
(PEMs) were co-cultivated with
A. tumefaciens strain AGL1 harboring the plasmid pCAMBIA 2301, followed by stringent selection with 50 or 100 mg/l Geneticin. A protocol
employing size-fractionation to enrich for small PEMs to use as target material and selection in suspension culture was applied
to rapidly produce transgenic events with an average efficiency of four independent transformation events per 50 mg of target
tissue and minimal escapes. Mature somatic embryos, representing 18 transgenic events and derived from multiple American chestnut
target genotypes, were germinated and over 100 transgenic somatic seedlings were produced and acclimatized to greenhouse conditions.
Multiple vigorous transgenic somatic seedlings produced functional staminate flowers within 3 years following regeneration.
Keywords American chestnut -
Castanea dentata
- Somatic embryogenesis - Transformation - Forest tree
Communicated by K. Kamo.