Ithaca, New York
July 3, 2002
Working with a decorative plant,
the petunia, scientists at
Cornell University have identified a gene that restores
pollen production to sterile plants. The finding, reported the
week of July 8 in Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, points the way to probable locations of similar
restorer genes in
approximately 150 other plant species with the so-called
cytoplasmic male-sterility (CMS) defect and could facilitate
crop-plant hybridization for increased yields.
The fertility restorer gene is located in the plant cell nuclei
of certain petunia varieties and somehow prevents an abnormal
gene in the cells' mitochondria from disrupting pollen
production, says Maureen R. Hanson, the leader of a six-year
effort to identify the gene and the Liberty Hyde Bailey
Professor of Plant Molecular Biology at Cornell. Oilseed rape,
cauliflower, sunflower and rice are among the food plants known
to have similar naturally occurring restorer genes, and knowing
the general location in one plant genome should help pinpoint it
in others, Hanson says.
Identification of a crop plant's own restorer gene will help
plant breeders transfer the gene more quickly to advanced
breeding lines, either by traditional sexual crosses or by using
genetic engineering techniques. Once the restorer gene is
incorporated into a breeding line, the plants can be used in
hybrid seed production.
No other plant gene that can turn off the expression of a
defective mitochondrial gene has previously been discovered. In
addition to Hanson, the finding was reported in PNAS by the
research team of Stephane Bentolila and Antonio A. Alfonso,
postdoctoral research associate and graduate student,
respectively, in Cornell's Department of Molecular Biology and
Genetics.
Cytoplasmic male sterility is a valuable trait that is used in a
special strategy by seed producers, lead author Bentolila
explains. First, a male-sterile plant variety, lacking any
pollen, is grown in fields near a plant variety that contains
fertility restorer genes and makes pollen. All the seeds
collected from the male-sterile plants must be hybrid, resulting
from cross pollination. Plants arising from hybrid seed are more
vigorous and productive than inbred genetically uniform seed
that arises when plants self-pollinate.
For example, hybrid rices have been bred in China using natural
fertility restorer and male-sterile lines, and the result has
been as much as a 30 percent higher yield compared with inbreds
in some areas. Hybrid rice breeding efforts are under way at
many rice research centers, including the Philippine Rice
Research Institute, where team member Alfonso will return after
completing his Ph.D. at Cornell.
To map the petunia gene, DNA from nearly 1,000 petunia plants
was extracted and analyzed. Then using special enzymes, petunia
DNA was sliced into many pieces, which were put into 86,000
different
bacterial colonies, each containing a different piece of petunia
DNA. DNA isolated from one of the bacterial colonies was found
to carry a marker near the fertility restorer gene. When that
DNA was
transferred into cells from a male-sterile plant, using tissue
culture, all plants arising from the transformed cells were able
to produce pollen -- proving that the Cornell researchers had
identified the fertility restorer gene.
The study was funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
National Research Initiative and by a Rockefeller Foundation
fellowship to Alfonso.
But identifying and locating the fertility restorer gene doesn't
explain everything, Hanson adds. "We still don't understand the
molecular mechanism of action of the petunia restorer gene and
how it turns off expression of the abnormal mitochondrial gene.
And we also need to find out why a form of the gene present in
nonrestoring lines does not allow normal pollen development in
the presence of the male-sterility cytoplasm."
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