4.7 Article

Fitness and Rhizobacteria of F2, F3 Hybrids of Herbicide-Tolerant Transgenic Soybean and Wild Soybean

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11223184

Keywords

gene flow; introgression; transgenic soybean; wild soybean; hybrids; fitness; rhizobacteria

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32071656]
  2. National Special Transgenic Project of China [2016ZX08012005]

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This study aims to investigate the potential risk of gene flow from herbicide-tolerant transgenic soybeans to wild soybeans by measuring the fitness of hybrids under different planting conditions and analyzing the soil microbial communities. The results showed that the hybrids exhibited higher fitness in certain conditions, indicating that the gene from transgenic soybeans may be transferred to wild soybeans.
The introduction of herbicide-tolerant (HT) transgenic soybeans (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) into farming systems raises great concern that transgenes may flow to endemic wild soybeans (Glycine soja Sieb. et Zucc.) via pollen, which may increase the ecological risks by increasing the fitness of hybrids under certain conditions and threaten the genetic diversity of wild soybean populations. In order to demonstrate the potential risk of gene flow from the HT soybean to the wild soybean, the fitness of F2 and F3 hybrids obtained from two wild soybean populations (HLJHRB-1, JSCZ) collected from China and the HT soybean was measured under farmland and wasteland soil conditions, as well as with or without weed competition. Compared with their wild progenitors, the F2 and F3 hybrids of HLJHRB-1 displayed a higher emergence rate, higher aboveground dry biomass, more pods and filled-seed plants, as well as better composite fitness under four planting conditions. The F2 and F3 hybrids of JSCZ also displayed a higher emergence rate, higher aboveground dry biomass, more pods, and more filled seeds per plant under mixed planting, whereas these characteristics were lower under pure planting conditions in wasteland and farmland soil. Therefore, the composite fitness of JSCZ hybrids was higher or lower depending on the planting conditions. Furthermore, the soil microbial communities of the F3 of HLJHRB-1, JSCZ, and the wild soybean were investigated with 16S rDNA sequencing, which showed that low alpha diversity of rhizobacteria was relative to high fitness, and Rhizobium played an important role in promoting F3 plant growth.

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