4.7 Article

Development of marker-free transgenic pigeon pea (Cajanus cajan) expressing a pod borer insecticidal protein

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-90050-8

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Funding

  1. Indian Council of Agricultural Research, Government of India [NFBSFARA-PB-2010-2010-11-IITKGP]

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By expressing synthetic bioactive substances and tissue-specific promoters, insect-resistant plants were successfully developed in pigeon pea. Through genetic hybridization and gene segregation, pigeon pea plants resistant to insects without selectable marker genes were eventually obtained.
Pigeon pea, a grain legume of the semiarid tropics, is a rich source of high-quality protein. The productivity of this pulse is seriously affected by lepidopteron insect pests. To generate a sustainable insect-resistant plant, synthetically prepared bioactive key constituents of a crystal protein (Syn Cry1Ab) of Bacillus thuringiensis were expressed in pigeon pea under the guidance of a tissue-specific promoter of the RuBP carboxylase/oxygenase small subunit (rbcS) gene. Regenerated transgenic plants with the cry1Ab expression cassette (cry1Ab-lox-bar-lox) showed the optimum insect motility rate (90%) in an in vitro insect bioassay with second instar larvae, signifying the insecticidal potency of Syn Cry1Ab. In parallel, another plant line was also generated with a chimaeric vector harbouring a cre recombinase gene under the control of the CaMV 2x35S promoter. Crossing between T-1 plants with a single insertion of cry1Ab-lox-bar-lox T-DNA and T-1 plants with moderate expression of a cre gene with a linked hygromycin resistance (hptII) gene was performed to exclude the bialaphos resistance (bar) marker gene. Excision of the bar gene was achieved in T1F1 hybrids, with up to 35.71% recombination frequency. Insect-resistant pigeon pea plants devoid of selectable marker genes (syn Cry1Ab- bar and cre-hptII) were established in a consecutive generation (T1F2) through genetic segregation.

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