4.7 Article

Field test of Easter lilies transformed with a rice cystatin gene for root lesion nematode resistance

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1134224

Keywords

Pratylenchus penetrans; cysteine protease; Lilium longiflorum; nematode management; pesticide use

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Easter lilies, grown mainly in Oregon and California, are vulnerable to the root lesion nematode, which makes them expensive to produce due to the cost of controlling the pest. A previous study found that genetically modified Easter lilies with a rice cystatin gene exhibited resistance to the nematode in laboratory conditions. This study evaluated the growth characteristics of five genetically modified lines of lilies compared to non-modified lilies in the field, and found that the modified lines showed resistance to the nematode and had similar growth and quality characteristics to non-modified lilies.
Easter lilies, Lilium longiflorum cv. Nellie White are a staple of the floral industry. In the U.S. most of the Easter lilies are grown in Oregon and California along the coast where there is a micro climate that is favorable to growth of lilies. The main pest when growing lilies in the field is Pratylenchus penetrans, the root lesion nematode. Easter lilies are one of the most expensive crops to produce because of the cost of chemicals used to control P. penetrans and other pathogens that infect the lilies. Our previous study had shown that transgenic Easter lilies containing a rice cystatin gene (Oc-I Delta D86 that has a deleted Asp86) were resistant to P. penetrans in vitro. This study examined growth characteristics of five independently transformed lines of the cystatin Easter lilies compared to non-transformed Nellie White for three seasons in the field in Brookings, Oregon. Liles grown in three soil chemical treatments 1) preplant fumigation, 2) preplant fumigation plus at plant organophosphate, and 3) at plant organophosphate were compared to those grown in nontreated soil. Growth characteristics evaluated included: time of shoot emergence, survival of plants, size of plants, visual ratings of plant health, basal roots and stem roots, weight of foliage and roots, and number and size of bulblets that developed on stems. Nematodes were counted following their extraction from the roots. While not totally resistant, when planted in the field, transformed lines demonstrated and maintained a degree of resistance to lesion nematode over two growing seasons and displayed desirable growth and quality characteristics similar to non-transformed lilies.

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