TILLING to detect induced mutations in soybean

Jennifer L. Cooper(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Bradley J. Till(University of Washington), Robert G. Laport(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Margaret C Darlow(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Justin M Kleffner(University of Missouri), Aziz Jamaï(Southern Illinois University Carbondale), Tarik El‐Mellouki(Southern Illinois University Carbondale), Shiming Liu(Southern Illinois University Carbondale), Rae Ritchie(Purdue University West Lafayette), Niels Chr. Nielsen(Purdue University West Lafayette), Kristin Bilyeu, Khalid Meksem(Southern Illinois University Carbondale), Luca Comai(University of Washington), Steven Henikoff(Fred Hutch Cancer Center)
BMC Plant Biology
January 24, 2008
Cited by 301Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) is an important nitrogen-fixing crop that provides much of the world's protein and oil. However, the available tools for investigation of soybean gene function are limited. Nevertheless, chemical mutagenesis can be applied to soybean followed by screening for mutations in a target of interest using a strategy known as Targeting Induced Local Lesions IN Genomes (TILLING). We have applied TILLING to four mutagenized soybean populations, three of which were treated with ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) and one with N-nitroso-N-methylurea (NMU). RESULTS: We screened seven targets in each population and discovered a total of 116 induced mutations. The NMU-treated population and one EMS mutagenized population had similar mutation density (approximately 1/140 kb), while another EMS population had a mutation density of approximately 1/250 kb. The remaining population had a mutation density of approximately 1/550 kb. Because of soybean's polyploid history, PCR amplification of multiple targets could impede mutation discovery. Indeed, one set of primers tested in this study amplified more than a single target and produced low quality data. To address this problem, we removed an extraneous target by pretreating genomic DNA with a restriction enzyme. Digestion of the template eliminated amplification of the extraneous target and allowed the identification of four additional mutant alleles compared to untreated template. CONCLUSION: The development of four independent populations with considerable mutation density, together with an additional method for screening closely related targets, indicates that soybean is a suitable organism for high-throughput mutation discovery even with its extensively duplicated genome.


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