A Simple and General Method for Transferring Genes into Plants

R. Horsch(Monsanto (United States)), J. E. Fry(Monsanto (United States)), Nancy Hoffmann(Monsanto (United States)), Marco Wallroth(Monsanto (United States)), David A. Eichholtz(Monsanto (United States)), Stephen G. Rogers(Monsanto (United States)), R.T. Fraley(Monsanto (United States))
Science
March 8, 1985
Cited by 4,756

Abstract

Transformed petunia, tobacco, and tomato plants have been produced by means of a novel leaf disk transformation-regeneration method. Surface-sterilized leaf disks were inoculated with an Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain containing a modified tumor-inducing plasmid (in which the phytohormone biosynthetic genes from transferred DNA had been deleted and replaced with a chimeric gene for kanamycin resistance) and cultured for 2 days. The leaf disks were then transferred to selective medium containing kanamycin. Shoot regeneration occurred within 2 to 4 weeks, and transformants were confirmed by their ability to form roots in medium containing kanamycin. This method for producing transformed plants combines gene transfer, plant regeneration, and effective selection for transformants into a single process and should be applicable to plant species that can be infected by Agrobacterium and regenerated from leaf explants.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis