Genome-Scale Sequence Disruption Following Biolistic Transformation in Rice and Maize

Jianing Liu(University of Georgia), Natalie J. Nannas(Hamilton College), Fangfang Fu(University of Georgia), Jinghua Shi(BioNano Genomics (United States)), Brooke Aspinwall(University of Georgia), Wayne A. Parrott(University of Georgia), R. Kelly Dawe(University of Georgia)
The Plant Cell
January 16, 2019
Cited by 171Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

) and analyzed the results by whole genome sequencing and optical mapping. Although some transgenic events showed simple insertions, others showed extreme genome damage in the form of chromosome truncations, large deletions, partial trisomy, and evidence of chromothripsis and breakage-fusion bridge cycling. Several transgenic events contained megabase-scale arrays of introduced DNA mixed with genomic fragments assembled by nonhomologous or microhomology-mediated joining. Damaged regions of the genome, assayed by the presence of small fragments displaced elsewhere, were often repaired without a trace, presumably by homology-dependent repair (HDR). The results suggest a model whereby successful biolistic transformation relies on a combination of end joining to insert foreign DNA and HDR to repair collateral damage caused by the microprojectiles. The differing levels of genome damage observed among transgenic events may reflect the stage of the cell cycle and the availability of templates for HDR.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis