Cucumber mosaic virus(CMV) can infect a wide range of host species. For the lacking of CMV resistant varieties of tomato, RNA interference(RNAi) can be used as a fast and effective method for the generation of tra...Cucumber mosaic virus(CMV) can infect a wide range of host species. For the lacking of CMV resistant varieties of tomato, RNA interference(RNAi) can be used as a fast and effective method for the generation of transgenic resistant varieties. In this current study, five intron-spliced hairpin RNA(ihp RNA) plant expression vectors aimed at five genes of CMV have been constructed. Transgenic tomatoes were obtained by Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation with expression vectors. Highly resistant generations of transgenic plants were employed as rootstocks and grafted onto non-transgenic tomatoes that resulted in the successful transfer of resistance to the scions. Using a novel method of plant cuttings for rootstock propagation, we obtained large quantities of disease-resistant material. Further, this method produces scions that can remain undetectable for transgenic resistance marker genes that may provide novel approaches to evade collective concerns about genetically-modified organism(GMO) biosafety.展开更多
基金supported by the Specialized Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education of China(20134320120013)the Natural Science Foundation of Hunan Province of China(14JJ3095)
文摘Cucumber mosaic virus(CMV) can infect a wide range of host species. For the lacking of CMV resistant varieties of tomato, RNA interference(RNAi) can be used as a fast and effective method for the generation of transgenic resistant varieties. In this current study, five intron-spliced hairpin RNA(ihp RNA) plant expression vectors aimed at five genes of CMV have been constructed. Transgenic tomatoes were obtained by Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation with expression vectors. Highly resistant generations of transgenic plants were employed as rootstocks and grafted onto non-transgenic tomatoes that resulted in the successful transfer of resistance to the scions. Using a novel method of plant cuttings for rootstock propagation, we obtained large quantities of disease-resistant material. Further, this method produces scions that can remain undetectable for transgenic resistance marker genes that may provide novel approaches to evade collective concerns about genetically-modified organism(GMO) biosafety.