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      Establishment of an Efficient Agrobacterium-Mediated Genetic Transformation System to Enhance the Tolerance of the Paraquat Stress in Engineering Goosegrass (Eleusine Indica L.)

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          Abstract

          Eleusine indica (goosegrass) is a problematic weed worldwide known for its multi-herbicide tolerance/resistance biotype. However, a genetic transformation method in goosegrass has not been successfully established, making a bottleneck for functional genomics studies in this species. Here, we report a successful Agrobacterium-mediated transformation method for goosegrass. Firstly, we optimized conditions for breaking seed dormancy and increasing seed germination rate. A higher callus induction rate from germinated seeds was obtained in N6 than in MS or B5 medium. Then the optimal transformation efficiency of the gus reporter gene was obtained by infection with Agrobacterium tumefaciens culture of OD600 = 0.5 for 30 min, followed by 3 days of co-cultivation with 300 μmol/L acetosyringone. Concentrations of 20 mg L−1 kanamycin and 100 mg L−1 timentin were used to select the transformed calli. The optimal rate of regeneration of the calli was generated by using 0.50 mg L−1 6-BA and 0.50 mg L−1 KT in the culture medium. Then, using this transformation method, we overexpressed the paraquat-resistant EiKCS gene into a paraquat-susceptible goosegrass biotype MZ04 and confirmed the stable inheritance of paraquat-resistance in the transgenic goosegrass lines. This approach may provide a potential mechanism for the evolution of paraquat-resistant goosegrass and a promising gene for the manipulation of paraquat-resistance plants. This study is novel and valuable in future research using similar methods for herbicide resistance.

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          Most cited references40

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          Efficient transformation of rice (Oryza sativa L.) mediated by Agrobacterium and sequence analysis of the boundaries of the T-DNA.

          A large number of morphologically normal, fertile, transgenic rice plants were obtained by co-cultivation of rice tissues with Agrobacterium tumefaciens. The efficiency of transformation was similar to that obtained by the methods used routinely for transformation of dicotyledons with the bacterium. Stable integration, expression and inheritance of transgenes were demonstrated by molecular and genetic analysis of transformants in the R0, R1 and R2 generations. Sequence analysis revealed that the boundaries of the T-DNA in transgenic rice plants were essentially identical to those in transgenic dicotyledons. Calli induced from scutella were very good starting materials. A strain of A. tumefaciens that carried a so-called 'super-binary' vector gave especially high frequencies of transformation of various cultivars of japonica rice that included Koshihikari, which normally shows poor responses in tissue culture.
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            Crop losses to pests

            E-C Oerke (2005)
            The Journal of Agricultural Science, 144(1), 31-43 ["Productivity of crops grown for human consumption is at risk due to the incidence of pests, especially weeds, pathogens and animal pests. Crop losses due to these harmful organisms can be substantial and may be prevented, or reduced, by crop protection measures. An overview is given on different types of crop losses as well as on various methods of pest control developed during the last century.", "Estimates on potential and actual losses despite the current crop protection practices are given for wheat, rice, maize, potatoes, soybeans, and cotton for the period 2001–03 on a regional basis (19 regions) as well as for the global total. Among crops, the total global potential loss due to pests varied from about 50% in wheat to more than 80% in cotton production. The responses are estimated as losses of 26–29% for soybean, wheat and cotton, and 31, 37 and 40% for maize, rice and potatoes, respectively. Overall, weeds produced the highest potential loss (34%), with animal pests and pathogens being less important (losses of 18 and 16%). The efficacy of crop protection was higher in cash crops than in food crops. Weed control can be managed mechanically or chemically, therefore worldwide efficacy was considerably higher than for the control of animal pests or diseases, which rely heavily on synthetic chemicals. Regional differences in efficacy are outlined. Despite a clear increase in pesticide use, crop losses have not significantly decreased during the last 40 years. However, pesticide use has enabled farmers to modify production systems and to increase crop productivity without sustaining the higher losses likely to occur from an increased susceptibility to the damaging effect of pests.", "The concept of integrated pest/crop management includes a threshold concept for the application of pest control measures and reduction in the amount/frequency of pesticides applied to an economically and ecologically acceptable level. Often minor crop losses are economically acceptable; however, an increase in crop productivity without adequate crop protection does not make sense, because an increase in attainable yields is often associated with an increased vulnerability to damage inflicted by pests."]
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              High efficiency transformation of maize (Zea mays L.) mediated by Agrobacterium tumefaciens.

              Transformants of maize inbred A188 were efficiently produced from immature embryos cocultivated with Agrobacterium tumefaciens that carried "super-binary" vectors. Frequencies of transformation (independent transgenic plants/embryos) were between 5% and 30%. Almost all transformants were normal in morphology, and more than 70% were fertile. Stable integration, expression, and inheritance of the transgenes were confirmed by molecular and genetic analysis. Between one and three copies of the transgenes were integrated with little rearrangement, and the boundaries of T-DNA were similar to those in transgenic dicotyledons and rice. F1 hybrids between A188 and five other inbreds were transformed at low frequencies.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                IJMCFK
                International Journal of Molecular Sciences
                IJMS
                MDPI AG
                1422-0067
                April 2023
                April 01 2023
                : 24
                : 7
                : 6629
                Article
                10.3390/ijms24076629
                8505bfd8-9a03-473f-bf3b-6f5228b701ec
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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