Welcome!
To use the personalized features of this site, please log in or register.
If you have forgotten your username or password, we can help.
My Menu
Saved Items

The dsdA gene from Escherichia coli provides a novel selectable marker for plant transformation

Oskar Erikson1, Magnus Hertzberg2 and Torgny NäsholmContact Information

(1) Umeå Plant Science Centre, Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SE-90183 Umeå, Sweden
(2) SweTree Technologies, Uminova Science Park, PO Box 7981, SE-90719 Umeå, Sweden

Received: 25 October 2004  Accepted: 20 December 2004  

Abstract  Plants are sensitive to D-serine, but functional expression of the dsdA gene, encoding D-serine ammonia lyase, from Escherichia coli can alleviate this toxicity. Plants, in contrast to many other organisms, lack the common pathway for oxidative deamination of D-amino acids. This difference in metabolism has major consequences for plant responses to D-amino acids, since several D-amino acids are toxic to plants even at relatively low concentrations. Therefore, introducing an enzyme specific for a phytotoxic D-amino acid should generate a selectable characteristic that can be screened. Here we present the use of the dsdA gene as a selectable marker for transformation of Arabidopsis. D-serine ammonia lyase catalyses the deamination of D-serine into pyruvate, water and ammonium. dsdA transgenic seedlings can be clearly distinguished from wild type, having an unambiguous phenotype immediately following germination when selected on D-serine containing medium. The dsdA marker allows flexibility in application of the selective agent: it can be applied in sterile plates, in foliar sprays or in liquid culture. Selection with D-serine resistance was compared with selection based on kanamycin resistance, and was found to generate similar transformation frequencies but also to be more unambiguous, more rapid and more versatile with respect to the way the selective agent can be supplied.

Keywords  D-amino acid - D-serine dehydratase - D-serine ammonia lyase - nitrogen metabolism - plant transformation - transgenic plants


Contact InformationTorgny Näsholm
Email: Torgny.nasholm@genfys.slu.se
Fulltext Preview (Small, Large)
Image of the first page of the fulltext

References secured to subscribers.



Export this article
Export this article as RIS | Text
 
Referenced by
5 newer articles

  1. Chen, I-Chieh (2009) Lysine racemase: a novel non-antibiotic selectable marker for plant transformation. Plant Molecular Biology
    [CrossRef]
  2. Näsholm, Torgny (2009) Uptake of organic nitrogen by plants. New Phytologist
    [CrossRef]
  3. Bříza, J. (2008) Use of phosphomannose isomerase-based selection system for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of tomato and potato. Biologia Plantarum 52(3)
    [CrossRef]
  4. Forsum, Oskar (2008) Capacities and constraints of amino acid utilization in Arabidopsis. New Phytologist
    [CrossRef]
  5. Hsiao, Paoyuan (2006) Plant native tryptophan synthase beta 1 gene is a non-antibiotic selection marker for plant transformation. Planta
    [CrossRef]
Remote Address: 38.107.191.110 • Server: mpweb18
HTTP User Agent: CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)