Compositions and Methods Based on PMT Engineering for Producing Tobacco Plants and Products Having Altered Alkaloid Levels

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20230105789
  • Publication Number
    20230105789
  • Date Filed
    January 26, 2021
    3 years ago
  • Date Published
    April 06, 2023
    a year ago
Abstract
The present disclosure provides compositions and methods related to tobacco plants with altered total alkaloid and nicotine levels and commercially acceptable leaf grade, their development via breeding or transgenic approaches, and production of tobacco products from these tobacco plants.
Description
FIELD

The present disclosure provides tobacco genetic engineering for modulating alkaloid and nicotine levels.


BACKGROUND

Nicotine is the predominant alkaloid, usually accounting for more than 90-95% of the total alkaloids in commercial tobacco cultivars. The remaining alkaloid fraction is primarily comprised of three additional alkaloids: nornicotine, anabasine, and anatabine. Tobacco plants with reduced nicotine levels have been achieved with varying and inconsistent results by modulating different nicotine biosynthetic genes and transcriptional regulators through traditional plant breeding and other biotechnological techniques. There is a need for new technologies to reduce nicotine levels in tobacco leaves.


SUMMARY

The present disclosure provides tobacco plants with altered total alkaloid and nicotine levels and commercially acceptable leaf grade, their development via breeding or transgenic approaches, and production of tobacco products from these tobacco plants.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least one PMT gene selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least one PMT gene selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In another aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least two PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4.


In a further aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least three PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4.


In another aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least four PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4.


In a further aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in five PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant selected from the group consisting of a single pmt mutant, a double pmt mutant, a triple mutant, a quadruple mutant, and a quintuple mutant, as listed in Tables 8A to 8E.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant as listed in Tables 4A to 4E or Table 10. In another aspect, the present disclosure provides a progeny plant of a tobacco plant in Tables 4A to 4E or Table 10, from either self-pollinating or a cross with another plant in Tables 4A to 4E or Table 10.


In another aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant comprising various combinations of the pmt mutant alleles listed in Tables 5A to 5E or Tables 12A to 12E to give rise to a single pmt mutant, a double pmt mutant, a triple mutant, a quadruple mutant, or a quintuple mutant. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant comprising a pmt mutant allele sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID Nos. 21 to 200, 410 to 441, 474 to 505, 538 to 569, 602 to 633, and 666 to 697.


The present disclosure further provides cured tobacco, tobacco blends, tobacco products comprising plant material from tobacco plants, lines, varieties or hybrids disclosed.


BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEQUENCES

SEQ ID Nos: 1 to 5 set forth exemplary genomic sequences of PMT1b, PMT1a, PMT2, PMT3 and PMT4, respectfully, from a TN90 reference genome.


SEQ ID Nos: 6 to 10 set forth exemplary cDNA sequences of PMT1b, PMT1a, PMT2, PMT3 and PMT4, respectfully, from TN90.


SEQ ID Nos: 11 to 15 set forth exemplary polypeptide sequences of PMT1b, PMT1a, PMT2, PMT3 and PMT4, respectfully, from TN90.


SEQ ID Nos: 16 to 22 set forth exemplary guide RNA sequences.


SEQ ID Nos: 23 to 200, 410 to 441, 474 to 505, 538 to 569, 602 to 633, and 666 to 697 set forth exemplary edited pmt mutant sequences.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1: RNA expression of five PMT genes in TN90 roots



FIG. 2: Nicotine levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15 (a quintuple pmt knock-out mutant line CS15 in the NLM (Ph Ph) background), a PMT RNAi transgenic line in the VA359 background) and a low-nicotine KY171 (“LN KY171”) variety (the KY 171 background harboring nic1 and nic2 double mutations), in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 3: Nornicotine levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 4: Anabasine levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 5: Anatabine levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 6: Total alkaloid levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 7: N-nitrosonornicotine (NNN) levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 8: Nicotine-derived nitrosamine ketone (NNK) levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 9: N-nitrosoanabasine (NAB) levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 10: N-nitrosoanatabine (NAT) levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 11: Total tobacco-specific nitrosamine (TSNA) levels in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 12: Leaf yield in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIG. 13: Leaf quality in various low-alkaloid lines: CS15, PMT RNAi, and LN KY171, in comparison to their respective normal-alkaloid control line: NLM (Ph Ph), VA359, and KY171 background.



FIGS. 14A to 14E: Photographs depicting mold growth on cured tobacco, including TN90 LC (FIG. 14A), LA BU 21 (FIG. 14B), TN90 comprising an RNAi construct to downregulate PR50 (FIG. 14C), TN90 comprising an RNAi construct to downregulate PMT genes (FIG. 14D), and TN90 comprising edits to all five PMT genes (FIG. 14E).



FIG. 15: Depiction of mold infection observed in the lines examined in FIGS. 14A-14E.



FIG. 16: Nicotine levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid burley lines: CS47, CS59, CS63, CS64, and LA Burley 21, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 17: Nicotine levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid flue-cured lines: CS69, CS70, CS72, CS73, and LA FC 53, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line K326. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 18: Nornicotine levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid burley lines: CS47, CS59, CS63, CS64, and LA Burley 21, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 19: Nornicotine levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid flue-cured lines: CS69, CS70, CS72, CS73, and LA FC 53, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line K326. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 20: Anabasine levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid burley lines: CS47, CS59, CS63, CS64, and LA Burley 21, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 21: Anabasine levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid flue-cured lines: CS69, CS70, CS72, CS73, and LA FC 53, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line K326. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 22: Anatabine levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid burley lines: CS47, CS59, CS63, CS64, and LA Burley 21, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 23: Anatabine levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid flue-cured lines: CS69, CS70, CS72, CS73, and LA FC 53, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line K326. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 24: Total alkaloid levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid burley lines: CS47, CS59, CS63, CS64, and LA Burley 21, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 25: Total alkaloid levels in the lamina of various low-alkaloid flue-cured lines: CS69, CS70, CS72, CS73, and LA FC 53, in comparison to a normal-alkaloid control line K326. Levels are measured two-weeks post-topping, at harvest, and after curing. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 26: Nitrite analysis of cured burley lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS47, CS59, CS64, and LA Burley 21, and the normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 27: Nitrate analysis of cured burley lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS47, CS59, CS64, and LA Burley 21, and the normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 28: NNN analysis of cured burley lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS47, CS59, CS64, and LA Burley 21, and the normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 29: NNN analysis of cured flue-cured lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS70, CS72, CS73, LA FC 53, and the normal-alkaloid control line K326. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 30: NNK analysis of cured burley lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS47, CS59, CS64, and LA Burley 21, and the normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 31: NNK analysis of cured flue-cured lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS70, CS72, CS73, LA FC 53, and the normal-alkaloid control line K326. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 32: NAB analysis of cured burley lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS47, CS59, CS64, and LA Burley 21, and the normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 33: NAT analysis of cured burley lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS47, CS59, CS64, and LA Burley 21, and the normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 34: NAT analysis of cured flue-cured lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS70, CS72, CS73, LA FC 53, and the normal-alkaloid control line K326. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 35: Yield analysis of cured burley lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS47, CS59, CS64, and LA Burley 21, and the normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 36: Yield analysis of cured flue-cured lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS70, CS72, CS73, LA FC 53, and the normal-alkaloid control line K326. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 37: Reducing sugars analysis of cured flue-cured lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS70, CS72, CS73, LA FC 53, and the normal-alkaloid control line K326. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 38: Leaf quality analysis of cured burley lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS47, CS59, CS64, and LA Burley 21, and the normal-alkaloid control line TN 90 LC. All plants are field grown.



FIG. 39: Leaf quality analysis of cured flue-cured lamina from low-alkaloid lines CS70, CS72, CS73, LA FC 53, and the normal-alkaloid control line K326. All plants are field grown.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Unless defined otherwise, technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art. One skilled in the art will recognize many methods can be used in the practice of the present disclosure. Indeed, the present disclosure is in no way limited to the methods and materials described. Where a term is provided in the singular, the inventors also contemplate aspects of the disclosure described by the plural of that term, and vice versa. Where there are discrepancies in terms and definitions used in references that are incorporated by reference, the terms used in this application shall have the definitions given herein. Other technical terms used have their ordinary meaning in the art in which they are used, as exemplified by various art-specific dictionaries, for example, “The American Heritage® Science Dictionary” (Editors of the American Heritage Dictionaries, 2011, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Boston and New York), the “McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms” (6th edition, 2002, McGraw-Hill, New York), or the “Oxford Dictionary of Biology” (6th edition, 2008, Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York). For purposes of the present disclosure, the following terms are defined below.


Any references cited herein, including, e.g., all patents and publications are incorporated by reference in their entirety and to the same extent as if each individual publication, patent, or patent application is specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.


When a grouping of alternatives is presented, any and all combinations of the members that make up that grouping of alternatives is specifically envisioned. For example, if an item is selected from a group consisting of A, B, C, and D, the inventors specifically envision each alternative individually (e.g., A alone, B alone, etc.), as well as combinations such as A, B, and D; A and C; B and C; etc. The term “and/or” when used in a list of two or more items means any one of the listed items by itself or in combination with any one or more of the other listed items. For example, the expression “A and/or B” is intended to mean either or both of A and B—i.e., A alone, B alone, or A and B in combination. The expression “A, B and/or C” is intended to mean A alone, B alone, C alone, A and B in combination, A and C in combination, B and C in combination, or A, B, and C in combination.


When a range of numbers is provided herein, the range is understood to inclusive of the edges of the range as well as any number between the defined edges of the range. For example, “between 1 and 10” includes any number between 1 and 10, as well as the number 1 and the number 10.


As used herein, the singular form “a,” “an,’ and “the” include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. For example, the term “a compound” or “at least one compound” may include a plurality of compounds, including mixtures thereof.


When the term “about” is used in conjunction with a numerical range, it modifies that range by extending the boundaries above and below the numerical values set forth by 10%.


As used herein, phrases such as “less than”, “more than”, “at least”, “at most”, “approximately”, “below”, “above”, and “about”, when used in conjunction with a series of numerical values, modify each and every value within the series. For example, an expression of “less than 1%, 2%, or 3%” is equivalent to “less than 1%, less than 2%, or less than 3%.” Similarly, to avoid any doubt, used herein, terms or phrases such as “less than”, “more than about”, “at least”, “at least about”, “at most”, “approximately”, “below”, “above”, and “about”, when used in conjunction with a series of numerical values, such terms or phrases are deemed to modify each and every value within the series.


As used herein, a tobacco plant refers to a plant from the species Nicotiana tabacum.


As used herein, a “low alkaloid variety” (also referred to as “LA variety”) of tobacco refers to tobacco variety comprising one or more genetic modifications reducing the total alkaloids (measured via dry weight) to a level less than 25% of the total alkaloid level in a control tobacco variety of a substantially similar genetic background except for the one or more genetic modifications. As a non-limiting example, KY171 can serve as a control for a low-alkaloid variety LA KY171. Without being limiting, low-alkaloid tobacco varieties include LA Burley 21, LAFC53, LN B&W, and LN KY171. Similarly, a “low nicotine variety” (also referred to as “LN variety”) of tobacco refers to tobacco variety comprising one or more genetic modifications reducing nicotine (measured via dry weight) to a level less than 25% of the nicotine level in a control tobacco variety of a substantially similar genetic background except for the one or more genetic modifications.


Nicotine biosynthesis in tobacco starts with the methylation of the polyamine, putrescine, to N-methylputrescine by the enzyme, putrescine N-methyltransferase (PMT), using S-adenosyl-methionine as the co-factor. This is a step that commits precursor metabolites to nicotine biosynthesis. PMT enzymes are classified under the enzyme classification system as EC 2.1.1.53. In Nicotiana tabacum, five genes encode putrescine N-methyltransferases, designated PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4. Table 1A lists genomic DNA sequences, cDNA sequences, and protein sequences of these five PMT genes in a TN90 plant. The present disclosure describes compositions and methods that are used to edit PMT genes to produce pmt mutant plants having reduced nicotine levels while maintaining leaf quality.


As used herein, “PMT1b” or the “PMT1b gene” refers to a genic locus in tobacco encoding a polypeptide having an exemplary amino acid sequence in TN90 as set forth in SEQ ID No. 11.


As used herein, “PMT1a” or the “PMT1a gene” refers to a genic locus in tobacco encoding a polypeptide having an exemplary amino acid sequence in TN90 as set forth in SEQ ID No. 12.


As used herein, “PMT2” or the “PMT2 gene” refers to a genic locus in tobacco encoding a polypeptide having an exemplary amino acid sequence in TN90 as set forth in SEQ ID No. 13.


As used herein, “PMT3” or the “PMT3 gene” refers to a genic locus in tobacco encoding a polypeptide having an exemplary amino acid sequence in TN90 as set forth in SEQ ID No. 14.


As used herein, “PMT4” or the “PMT4 gene” refers to a genic locus in tobacco encoding a polypeptide having an exemplary amino acid sequence in TN90 as set forth in SEQ ID No. 15.


As used herein, a mutation refers to an inheritable genetic modification introduced into a gene to reduce, inhibit, or eliminate the expression or activity of a product encoded by the gene. Such a modification can be in any sequence region of a gene, for example, in a promoter, 5′ UTR, exon, intron, 3′ UTR, or terminator region. In an aspect, mutations are not natural polymorphisms that exist in a particular tobacco variety or cultivar. As used herein, a “mutant allele” refers to an allele from a locus where the allele comprises a mutation. It will be appreciated that, when identifying a mutation, the reference sequence should be from the same tobacco variety or background. For example, if a modified tobacco plant comprising a mutation is from the variety TN90, then the corresponding reference sequence should be the endogenous TN90 sequence, not a homologous sequence from a different tobacco variety (e.g., K326). In an aspect, a mutation is a “non-natural” or “non-naturally occurring” mutation. As used herein, a “non-natural” or “non-naturally occurring” mutation refers to a mutation that is not, and does not correspond to, a spontaneous mutation generated without human intervention. Non-limiting examples of human intervention include mutagenesis (e.g., chemical mutagenesis, ionizing radiation mutagenesis) and targeted genetic modifications (e.g., CRISPR-based methods, TALEN-based methods, zinc finger-based methods). Non-natural mutations and non-naturally occurring mutations do not include spontaneous mutations that arise naturally (e.g., via aberrant DNA replication in a germ line of a plant.


As used herein, a “genetic modification” refers to a change in the genetic makeup of a plant or plant genome. A genetic modification can be introduced by methods including, but not limited to, mutagenesis, genome editing, genetic transformation, or a combination thereof. A genetic modification includes, for example, a mutation (e.g., a non-natural mutation) in a gene or a transgene targeting a gene. As used here, “targeting” refers to either directly upregulating or directly downregulating the expression or activity of a gene. As used here, “directly”, in the context of a transgene impacting the expression or activity of a gene, refers to the impact being exerted over the gene via a physical contact or chemical interaction between the gene (e.g., a promoter region or a UTR region) or a product encoded therein (e.g., a mRNA molecule or a polypeptide) and a product encoded by the transgene (e.g., a small non-coding RNA molecule or a protein such as a transcription factor or a dominant negative polypeptide variant). In an aspect, a transgene impacts the expression or activity of a target gene without involving a transcription factor (e.g., the transgene does not encode a transcription factor and/or does not suppress the expression or activity of a transcription factor that in turn regulates the target gene).


As used herein, a “pmt mutant” refers to a tobacco plant comprising one or more mutations in one or more PMT genes. A pmt mutant can be a single mutant, a double mutant, a triple mutant, a quadruple mutant, or a quintuple mutant. As used herein, a single, double, triple, quadruple, or quintuple pmt mutant refers to a mutant having modifications in one, two, three, four, or five PMT genes, respectively. A pmt mutant can also be a homozygous mutant, a heterozygous mutant, or a heteroallelic mutant combination in one or more PMT genes.


As used herein, a gene name or a genic locus name is capitalized and shown in italic, e.g., PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4. A protein or polypeptide name is capitalized without being italicized, e.g., PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4. A mutant name (for either referencing to a general mutation in a gene or a group of genes, or referencing to a specific mutant allele) is shown in lower case and italic, e.g., pmt, pmt1a, pmt1b, pmt2, pmt3, and pmt4.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least one PMT gene selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least two PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least three PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least four PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in each of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 75%, at least 100%, at least 150%, at least 200%, at least 300%, at least 400%, at least 500%, at least 600%, at least 700%, at least 800%, or at least 900% greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 75%, at least 100%, at least 150%, at least 200%, at least 300%, at least 400%, at least 500%, at least 600%, at least 700%, at least 800%, or at least 900% greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 75%, at least 100%, at least 150%, at least 200%, at least 300%, at least 400%, at least 500%, at least 600%, at least 700%, at least 800%, or at least 900% greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 75%, at least 100%, at least 150%, at least 200%, at least 300%, at least 400%, at least 500%, at least 600%, at least 700%, at least 800%, or at least 900% greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 75%, at least 100%, at least 150%, at least 200%, at least 300%, at least 400%, at least 500%, at least 600%, at least 700%, at least 800%, or at least 900% greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level of at least 0.13%, at least 0.2%, at least 0.3%, at least 0.4%, at least 0.5%, at least 0.6%, at least 0.7%, at least 0.8%, at least 0.9%, or at least 1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level of at least 0.13%, at least 0.2%, at least 0.3%, at least 0.4%, at least 0.5%, at least 0.6%, at least 0.7%, at least 0.8%, at least 0.9%, or at least 1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level of at least 0.13%, at least 0.2%, at least 0.3%, at least 0.4%, at least 0.5%, at least 0.6%, at least 0.7%, at least 0.8%, at least 0.9%, or at least 1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level of at least 0.13%, at least 0.2%, at least 0.3%, at least 0.4%, at least 0.5%, at least 0.6%, at least 0.7%, at least 0.8%, at least 0.9%, or at least 1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level of at least 0.13%, at least 0.2%, at least 0.3%, at least 0.4%, at least 0.5%, at least 0.6%, at least 0.7%, at least 0.8%, at least 0.9%, or at least 1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least one PMT gene selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least two PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least three PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least four PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in each of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 20% at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 40%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 100%, at least 125%, at least 150%, at least 175%, at least 200%, at least 225%, at least 250%, or at least 300% greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 20% at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 40%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 100%, at least 125%, at least 150%, at least 175%, at least 200%, at least 225%, at least 250%, or at least 300% greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 20% at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 40%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 100%, at least 125%, at least 150%, at least 175%, at least 200%, at least 225%, at least 250%, or at least 300% greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 20% at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 40%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 100%, at least 125%, at least 150%, at least 175%, at least 200%, at least 225%, at least 250%, or at least 300% greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 20% at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 40%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 100%, at least 125%, at least 150%, at least 175%, at least 200%, at least 225%, at least 250%, or at least 300% greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level of at least 0.017%, at least 0.02%, at least 0.025%, at least 0.03%, at least 0.035%, at least 0.04%, at least 0.05%, at least 0.06%, at least 0.07%, at least 0.08%, at least 0.09% or at least 0.1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level of at least 0.017%, at least 0.02%, at least 0.025%, at least 0.03%, at least 0.035%, at least 0.04%, at least 0.05%, at least 0.06%, at least 0.07%, at least 0.08%, at least 0.09% or at least 0.1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level of at least 0.017%, at least 0.02%, at least 0.025%, at least 0.03%, at least 0.035%, at least 0.04%, at least 0.05%, at least 0.06%, at least 0.07%, at least 0.08%, at least 0.09% or at least 0.1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level of at least 0.017%, at least 0.02%, at least 0.025%, at least 0.03%, at least 0.035%, at least 0.04%, at least 0.05%, at least 0.06%, at least 0.07%, at least 0.08%, at least 0.09% or at least 0.1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level of at least 0.017%, at least 0.02%, at least 0.025%, at least 0.03%, at least 0.035%, at least 0.04%, at least 0.05%, at least 0.06%, at least 0.07%, at least 0.08%, at least 0.09% or at least 0.1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina.


In an aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a reduced level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a reduced level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a reduced level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a reduced level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a reduced level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a reduced level of nornicotine comprises a reduction of at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 20%, at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 35%, at least 40%, at least 45%, at least 50%, at least 55%, at least 60%, at least 65%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 85%, or at least 90% as compared to a control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an increased level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an increased level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an increased level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an increased level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an increased level of nornicotine as compared to a control plant grown under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, an increased level of nornicotine comprises an increase of at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 75%, at least 100%, at least 200%, at least 300%, at least 400%, at least 500%, or at least 600% as compared to the control tobacco plant.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least one PMT gene selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein the tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a nicotine level less than the nicotine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having the one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant is provided. In another aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level below 1%, below 2%, below 5%, below 8%, below 10%, below 12%, below 15%, below 20%, below 25%, below 30%, below 40%, below 50%, below 60%, below 70%, below 80%, below 90%, or below 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the single pmt mutation when grown in similar growth conditions. In a further aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level between 1% and 5%, between 5% and 10%, between 10% and 20%, between 20% and 30%, between 30% and 40%, between 40% and 50%, between 50% and 60%, between 60% and 70%, between 70% and 80%, between 80% and 90%, or between 90% and 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the single pmt mutation when grown in similar growth conditions.


In another aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least two PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4. In an aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant is provided. In another aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level below 1%, below 2%, below 5%, below 8%, below 10%, below 12%, below 15%, below 20%, below 25%, below 30%, below 40%, below 50%, below 60%, below 70%, below 80%, below 90%, or below 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the double pmt mutations when grown in similar growth conditions. In a further aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level between 1% and 5%, between 5% and 10%, between 10% and 20%, between 20% and 30%, between 30% and 40%, between 40% and 50%, between 50% and 60%, between 60% and 70%, between 70% and 80%, between 80% and 90%, or between 90% and 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the double pmt mutations when grown in similar growth conditions.


In a further aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least three PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4. In an aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant is provided. In another aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level below 1%, below 2%, below 5%, below 8%, below 10%, below 12%, below 15%, below 20%, below 25%, below 30%, below 40%, below 50%, below 60%, below 70%, below 80%, below 90%, or below 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the triple pmt mutations when grown in similar growth conditions. In a further aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level between 1% and 5%, between 5% and 10%, between 10% and 20%, between 20% and 30%, between 30% and 40%, between 40% and 50%, between 50% and 60%, between 60% and 70%, between 70% and 80%, between 80% and 90%, or between 90% and 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the triple pmt mutations when grown in similar growth conditions.


In another aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least four PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4. In an aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant is provided. In another aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level below 1%, below 2%, below 5%, below 8%, below 10%, below 12%, below 15%, below 20%, below 25%, below 30%, below 40%, below 50%, below 60%, below 70%, below 80%, below 90%, or below 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the quadruple pmt mutations when grown in similar growth conditions. In a further aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level between 1% and 5%, between 5% and 10%, between 10% and 20%, between 20% and 30%, between 30% and 40%, between 40% and 50%, between 50% and 60%, between 60% and 70%, between 70% and 80%, between 80% and 90%, or between 90% and 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the quadruple pmt mutations when grown in similar growth conditions.


In a further aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in five PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4. In an aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant is provided. In another aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level below 1%, below 2%, below 5%, below 8%, below 10%, below 12%, below 15%, below 20%, below 25%, below 30%, below 40%, below 50%, below 60%, below 70%, below 80%, below 90%, or below 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the quintuple pmt mutations when grown in similar growth conditions. In a further aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level between 1% and 5%, between 5% and 10%, between 10% and 20%, between 20% and 30%, between 30% and 40%, between 40% and 50%, between 50% and 60%, between 60% and 70%, between 70% and 80%, between 80% and 90%, or between 90% and 95% of the nicotine level of a control plant not having the quintuple pmt mutations when grown in similar growth conditions.


In an aspect, a single pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises a nicotine level of less than 1%, less than 0.75%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.25%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.01%, less than 0.005%, or less than 0.002% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a double pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises a nicotine level of less than 1%, less than 0.75%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.25%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.01%, less than 0.005%, or less than 0.002% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a triple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises a nicotine level of less than 1%, less than 0.75%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.25%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.01%, less than 0.005%, or less than 0.002% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a quadruple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises a nicotine level of less than 1%, less than 0.75%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.25%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.01%, less than 0.005%, or less than 0.002% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina. In an aspect, a quintuple pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises a nicotine level of less than 1%, less than 0.75%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.25%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.01%, less than 0.005%, or less than 0.002% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant is a single pmt mutant, a double pmt mutant, a triple mutant, a quadruple mutant, or a quintuple mutant as listed in Tables 8A to 8E. In another aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more pmt mutant alleles listed in Tables 5A to 5E and Tables 12A to 12E. Each and every combination of the pmt mutant alleles listed in Tables 5A to 5E and Tables 12A to 12E is also provided to give rise to a single pmt mutant, a double pmt mutant, a triple mutant, a quadruple mutant, or a quintuple mutant. Each of the mutated loci can be either homozygous or heterozygous, or comprises a heteroallelic combination. In another aspect, a tobacco plant comprises a pmt mutant genotype combination as shown for each individual line listed in Tables 4A to 4E and Table 10. In an aspect, a tobacco plant comprises a pmt mutant allele sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID Nos. 21 to 200, 410 to 441, 474 to 505, 538 to 569, 602 to 633, and 666 to 697. In another aspect, the present disclosure provides a double pmt mutant, a triple mutant, a quadruple mutant, or a quintuple mutant comprising pmt mutant allele sequences selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID Nos. 21 to 200, 410 to 441, 474 to 505, 538 to 569, 602 to 633, and 666 to 697.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a nicotine level less than 90%, 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, 40%, 30%, 20%, 15%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 7%, 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2%, 1%, 0.5%, or 0.25% of the nicotine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In another aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a nicotine level between 1% and 5%, between 5% and 10%, between 10% and 20%, between 20% and 30%, between 30% and 40%, between 40% and 50%, between 50% and 60%, between 60% and 70%, between 70% and 80%, between 80% and 90%, or between 90% and 95% of the nicotine level of a control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In another aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a total alkaloid level less than 90%, 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, 40%, 30%, 20%, 15%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 7%, 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2%, 1%, 0.5%, or 0.25% of the total alkaloid level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In another aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a total alkaloid level between 1% and 5%, between 5% and 10%, between 10% and 20%, between 20% and 30%, between 30% and 40%, between 40% and 50%, between 50% and 60%, between 60% and 70%, between 70% and 80%, between 80% and 90%, or between 90% and 95% of the total alkaloid level of a control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In a further aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a total alkaloid level less than 40%, 35%, 30%, 25%, 20%, 15%, 10%, or 5% of the total alkaloid level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a mutant pmt allele comprises a mutation in a PMT sequence region selected from the group consisting of a promoter, 5′ UTR, first exon, first intron, second exon, second intron, third exon, third intron, fourth exon, fourth intron, fifth exon, fifth intron, sixth exon, sixth intron, seventh exon, seventh intron, eighth exon, 3′ UTR, terminator, and any combination thereof. In another aspect, a mutant pmt allele comprises a mutation in a PMT genomic sequence region listed in Tables 1D to 1H.


In another aspect, a mutant pmt allele comprises one or more mutation types selected from the group consisting of a nonsense mutation, a missense mutation, a frameshift mutation, a splice-site mutation, and any combination thereof. In an aspect, a mutant pmt allele is a null allele or a knock-out allele.


In an aspect, a mutant pmt allele results in one or more of the following: a PMT protein truncation, a non-translatable PMT gene transcript, a non-functional PMT protein, a premature stop codon in a PMT gene, and any combination thereof.


In another aspect, a mutant pmt allele comprises a mutation selected from the group consisting of a substitution, a deletion, an insertion, a duplication, and an inversion of one or more nucleotides relative to a wild-type PMT gene.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant comprises a zygosity status selected from the group consisting of homozygous, heterozygous, and heteroallelic. In another aspect, a pmt mutant is homozygous or heteroallelic in at least 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 PMT genes. In an aspect, a pmt mutant is homozygous or heteroallelic in at least 4 PMT genes. In another aspect, a pmt mutant is homozygous or heteroallelic in all five PMT genes. In another aspect, a pmt mutant comprises mutations in PMT 1a and PMT3.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a nicotine level selected from the group consisting of less than 0.15%, less than 0.125%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.08%, less than 0.06%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.04%, less than 0.03%, less than 0.02%, and less than 0.01% dry weight.


In another aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of less than 1%, less than 0.8%, less than 0.7%, less than 0.6%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.4%, less than 0.3%, and less than 0.2% dry weight.


In a further aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing a cured leaf comprising a total tobacco-specific nitrosamine (TSNA) level of between 2 and 0.05, between 1.9 and 0.05, between 1.8 and 0.05, between 1.7 and 0.05, between 1.6 and 0.05, between 1.5 and 0.05, between 1.4 and 0.05, between 1.3 and 0.05, between 1.2 and 0.05, between 1.1 and 0.05, between 1.0 and 0.05, between 0.9 and 0.05, between 0.8 and 0.05, between 0.7 and 0.05, between 0.6 and 0.05, between 0.5 and 0.05, between 0.4 and 0.05, between 0.3 and 0.05, between 0.2 and 0.05, between 0.15 and 0.05, or between 0.1 and 0.05 ppm.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value selected from the group consisting of 50 or more, 55 or more, 60 or more, 65 or more, 70 or more, 75 or more, 80 or more, 85 or more, 90 or more, and 95 or more. In another aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value comparable to that of a control plant when grown and cured in similar conditions, where the control plant shares an essentially identical genetic background with the tobacco plant except for the modification. In a further aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value of at least about 65%, at least about 70%, at least about 75%, at least about 80%, at least about 85%, at least about 90%, at least about 95%, or at least about 98% of the USDA grade index value of a control plant when grown in similar conditions, where the control plant shares an essentially identical genetic background with the tobacco plant except the modification. In a further aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value of between 65% and 130%, between 70% and 130%, between 75% and 130%, between 80% and 130%, between 85% and 130%, between 90% and 130%, between 95% and 130%, between 100% and 130%, between 105% and 130%, between 110% and 130%, between 115% and 130%, or between 120% and 130% of the USDA grade index value of a control plant. In a further aspect, a tobacco plant is capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value of between 70% and 125%, between 75% and 120%, between 80% and 115%, between 85% and 110%, or between 90% and 100% of the USDA grade index value of a control plant.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant comprises nicotine at a level below 1%, below 2%, below 5%, below 8%, below 10%, below 12%, below 15%, below 20%, below 25%, below 30%, below 40%, below 50%, below 60%, below 70%, or below 80% of the nicotine level of a control plant when grown in similar growth conditions, where the control plant shares an essentially identical genetic background with the tobacco plant except for the modification.


In a further aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more pmt mutant alleles and further comprises a transgene or mutation directly suppressing the expression or activity of one or more genes encoding a product selected from the group consisting of MPO, QPT, BBL, A622, aspartate oxidase, agmatine deiminase (AIC), arginase, diamine oxidase, ornithine decarboxylase, arginine decarboxylase, nicotine uptake permease (NUP), and MATE transporter.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more pmt mutant alleles and further comprises a mutation in an ERF gene of Nic2 locus. In an aspect, a tobacco plant further comprises one or more mutations in two or more, three or more, four or more, five or more, six or more, or all seven genes selected from the group consisting of ERF189, ERF115, ERF221, ERF104, ERF179, ERF17, and ERF168. See Shoji et al., Plant Cell, (10):3390-409 (2010); and Kajikawa et al., Plant physiol. 2017, 174:999-1011. In an aspect, a tobacco plant further comprises one or more mutations in ERF189, ERF115, or both.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more qpt mutant alleles and further comprises a mutation in an ERF gene of Nic1 locus (or Nic1b locus as in PCT/US2019/013345 filed on Jan. 11, 2019, published as WO/2019/140297). See also WO/2018/237107. In an aspect, a tobacco plant further comprises one or more mutations in two or more, three or more, four or more, five or more, six or more, or seven or more genes selected from the group consisting of ERF101, ERF110, ERFnew, ERF199, ERF19, ERF130, ERF16, ERF29, ERF210, and ERF91L2. See Kajikawa et al., Plant physiol. 2017, 174:999-1011. In an aspect, a tobacco plant further comprises one or more mutations in one or more, two or more, three or more, four or more, five or more, or all six genes selected from the group consisting of ERFnew, ERF199, ERF19, ERF29, ERF210, and ERF91L2.


In an aspect, a low-nicotine tobacco plant (e.g., having one or more qpt mutant alleles) further comprises one of more genetic modifications providing a reduced level of anatabine. Exemplary genetic modifications that provide reduce anatabine can be found in US20160010103A1 and U.S. Ser. No. 10/375,910B2. In an aspect, a anatabine-reducing genetic modification comprising a mutation in a Quinolinate Synthase (QS) gene. In another aspect, a QS gene mutation comprising a mutation resulting in an amino acid substitution at a position corresponding to the cysteine residue at position 487 and/or the valine residue at position 516 of SEQ ID No: 8 of US20160010103A1. In another aspect, a anatabine-reducing genetic modification is present in, introgressed from or originates from tobacco plant line dMS932, wherein a representative sample of seed of said tobacco plant is deposited under ATCC Accession Number PTA-124990. In another aspect, a anatabine-reducing genetic modification is present in, introgressed from or originates from a tobacco plant line selected from the group consisting of MS108, MS445, MS170, and MS3908 from U.S. Ser. No. 10/375,910B2.


In an aspect, the present disclosure further provides a pmt mutant tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising a nicotine or total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of less than 3%, less than 2.75%, less than 2.5%, less than 2.25%, less than 2.0%, less than 1.75%, less than 1.5%, less than 1.25%, less than 1%, less than 0.9%, less than 0.8%, less than 0.7%, less than 0.6%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.4%, less than 0.3%, less than 0.2%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.025%, less than 0.01%, and less than 0.005%, where the tobacco plant is capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value of 50 or more 55 or more, 60 or more, 65 or more, 70 or more, 75 or more, 80 or more, 85 or more, 90 or more, and 95 or more. In another aspect, such pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises a nicotine level of less than 0.02% and are capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value of 70 or more. In a further aspect, such tobacco plant comprises a nicotine level of less than 0.01% and are capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value of 70 or more.


In an aspect, the present disclosure also provides a tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising a non-transgenic mutation, where the non-transgenic mutation reduces the nicotine or total alkaloid level of the tobacco plant to below 1%, below 2%, below 5%, below 8%, below 10%, below 12%, below 15%, below 20%, below 25%, below 30%, below 40%, below 50%, below 60%, below 70%, or below 80% of the nicotine level of a control plant when grown in similar growth conditions, where the tobacco plant is capable of producing leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value comparable to the USDA grade index value of the control plant, and where the control plant shares an essentially identical genetic background with the tobacco plant except the non-transgenic mutation.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant comprises a pmt mutation introduced by an approach selected from the group consisting of random mutagenesis and targeted mutagenesis. In another aspect, a pmt mutation is introduced by a targeted mutagenesis approach selected from the group consisting of meganuclease, zinc finger nuclease, TALEN, and CRISPR.


Unless specified otherwise, measurements of alkaloid or nicotine levels (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) or leaf grade index values mentioned herein for a tobacco plant, variety, cultivar, or line refer to average measurements, including, for example, an average of multiple leaves of a single plant or an average measurement from a population of tobacco plants from a single variety, cultivar, or line.


Unless specified otherwise, the nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured after topping in a pooled leaf sample collected from leaf number 3, 4, and 5 after topping. As used herein, whenever a comparison between leaves from two plants (e.g., a mutant plant versus a control plant) is mentioned, leaves from the same or comparable stalk position(s) and developmental stage(s) are intended so that the comparison can demonstrate effects due to genotype differences, not from other factors. As an illustration, leaf 3 of a wild-type control plant is intended as a reference point for comparing with leaf 3 of a pmt mutant plant. In an aspect, a tobacco plant comprising at least one pmt mutation is compared to a control tobacco plant of the same tobacco variety.


Nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant can also be measured in alternative ways. In an aspect, the nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured after topping in a leaf having the highest level of nicotine or alkaloid (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization). In an aspect, the nicotine or alkaloid level of a tobacco plant is measured after topping in leaf number 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, or 30. In another aspect, the nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured after topping in a pool of two or more leaves with consecutive leaf numbers selected from the group consisting of leaf number 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, and 30. In another aspect, the nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured after topping in a leaf with a leaf number selected from the group consisting of between 1 and 5, between 6 and 10, between 11 and 15, between 16 and 20, between 21 and 25, and between 26 and 30. In another aspect, the nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured after topping in a pool of two or more leaves with leaf numbers selected from the group consisting of between 1 and 5, between 6 and 10, between 11 and 15, between 16 and 20, between 21 and 25, and between 26 and 30. In another aspect, the nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured after topping in a pool of three or more leaves with leaf numbers selected from the group consisting of between 1 and 5, between 6 and 10, between 11 and 15, between 16 and 20, between 21 and 25, and between 26 and 30.


As used herein, leaf numbering is based on the leaf position on a tobacco stalk with leaf number 1 being the youngest leaf (at the top) after topping and the highest leaf number assigned to the oldest leaf (at the bottom).


A population of tobacco plants or a collection of tobacco leaves for determining an average measurement (e.g., alkaloid or nicotine level or leaf grading) can be of any size, for example, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, or 50. Industry-accepted standard protocols are followed for determining average measurements or grad index values.


As used herein, “topping” refers to the removal of the stalk apex, including the SAM, flowers, and up to several adjacent leaves, when a tobacco plant is near vegetative maturity and around the start of reproductive growth. Typically, tobacco plants are topped in the button stage (soon after the flower begins to appear). For example, greenhouse or field-grown tobacco plants can be topped when 50% of the plants have at least one open flower. Topping a tobacco plant results in the loss of apical dominance and also induces increased alkaloid production.


Unless indicated otherwise, the nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured 2 weeks after topping. Alternatively, other time points can be used. In an aspect, the nicotine or alkaloid level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured about 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 weeks after topping. In another aspect, the nicotine, alkaloid, or polyamine level (or another leaf chemistry or property characterization) of a tobacco plant is measured about 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 14, 17, 19 or 21 days after topping.


As used herein, “similar growth conditions” or “comparable growth conditions” refer to similar environmental conditions and/or agronomic practices for growing and making meaningful comparisons between two or more plant genotypes so that neither environmental conditions nor agronomic practices would contribute to or explain any difference observed between the two or more plant genotypes. Environmental conditions include, for example, light, temperature, water (humidity), and nutrition (e.g., nitrogen and phosphorus). Agronomic practices include, for example, seeding, clipping, undercutting, transplanting, topping, and suckering. See Chapters 4B and 4C of Tobacco, Production, Chemistry and Technology, Davis & Nielsen, eds., Blackwell Publishing, Oxford (1999), pp 70-103.


“Alkaloids” are complex, nitrogen-containing compounds that naturally occur in plants, and have pharmacological effects in humans and animals. “Nicotine” is the primary natural alkaloid in commercialized cigarette tobacco and accounts for about 90 percent of the alkaloid content in Nicotiana tabacum. Other major alkaloids in tobacco include cotinine, nornicotine, myosmine, nicotyrine, anabasine and anatabine. Minor tobacco alkaloids include nicotine-n-oxide, N-methyl anatabine, N-methyl anabasine, pseudooxynicotine, 2,3 dipyridyl and others.


As used herein, “comparable leaves” refer to leaves having similar size, shape, age, and/or stalk position.


Alkaloid levels can be assayed by methods known in the art, for example by quantification based on gas-liquid chromatography, high performance liquid chromatography, radio-immunoassays, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. For example, nicotinic alkaloid levels can be measured by a GC-FID method based on CORESTA Recommended Method No. 7, 1987 and ISO Standards (ISO TC 126N 394 E. See also Hibi et al., Plant Physiology 100: 826-35 (1992) for a method using gas-liquid chromatography equipped with a capillary column and an FID detector.


Unless specifically indicated otherwise, alkaloids and nicotine levels are measured using a method in accordance with CORESTA Method No 62, Determination of Nicotine in Tobacco and Tobacco Products by Gas Chromatographic Analysis, February 2005, and those defined in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Protocol for Analysis of Nicotine, Total Moisture and pH in Smokeless Tobacco Products, as published in the Federal Register Vol. 64, No. 55 Mar. 23, 1999 (and as amended in Vol. 74, No. 4, Jan. 7, 2009). Alternatively, tobacco total alkaloids can be measured using a segmented-flow colorimetric method developed for analysis of tobacco samples as adapted by Skalar Instrument Co (West Chester, Pa.) and described by Collins et al., Tobacco Science 13:79-81 (1969). In short, samples of tobacco can be dried, ground, and extracted prior to analysis of total alkaloids and reducing sugars. The method then employs an acetic acid/methanol/water extraction and charcoal for decolorization. Determination of total alkaloids is based on the reaction of cyanogen chloride with nicotine alkaloids in the presence of an aromatic amine to form a colored complex which is measured at 460 nm. Unless specified otherwise, total alkaloid levels or nicotine levels shown herein are on a dry weight basis (e.g., percent total alkaloid or percent nicotine).


In an aspect, a tobacco plant comprises an average nicotine or total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of about 0.01%, 0.02%, 0.05%, 0.75%, 0.1%, 0.15%, 0.2%, 0.3%, 0.35%, 0.4%, 0.5%, 0.6%, 0.7%, 0.8%, 0.9%, 1%, 1.1%, 1.2%, 1.3%, 1.4%, 1.5%, 1.6%, 1.7%, 1.8%, 1.9%, 2%, 2.1%, 2.2%, 2.3%, 2.4%, 2.5%, 2.6%, 2.7%, 2.8%, 2.9%, 3%, 3.1%, 3.2%, 3.3%, 3.4%, 3.5%, 3.6%, 3.7%, 3.8%, 3.9%, 4%, 5%, 6%, 7%, 8%, and 9% on a dry weight basis. In another aspect, a tobacco plant comprises an average nicotine or total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of about between 0.01% and 0.02%, between 0.02% and 0.05%, between 0.05% and 0.75%, between 0.75% and 0.1%, between 0.1% and 0.15%, between 0.15% and 0.2%, between 0.2% and 0.3%, between 0.3% and 0.35%, between 0.35% and 0.4%, between 0.4% and 0.5%, between 0.5% and 0.6%, between 0.6% and 0.7%, between 0.7% and 0.8%, between 0.8% and 0.9%, between 0.9% and 1%, between 1% and 1.1%, between 1.1% and 1.2%, between 1.2% and 1.3%, between 1.3% and 1.4%, between 1.4% and 1.5%, between 1.5% and 1.6%, between 1.6% and 1.7%, between 1.7% and 1.8%, between 1.8% and 1.9%, between 1.9% and 2%, between 2% and 2.1%, between 2.1% and 2.2%, between 2.2% and 2.3%, between 2.3% and 2.4%, between 2.4% and 2.5%, between 2.5% and 2.6%, between 2.6% and 2.7%, between 2.7% and 2.8%, between 2.8% and 2.9%, between 2.9% and 3%, between 3% and 3.1%, between 3.1% and 3.2%, between 3.2% and 3.3%, between 3.3% and 3.4%, between 3.4% and 3.5%, and between 3.5% and 3.6% on a dry weight basis. In a further aspect, a tobacco plant comprises an average nicotine or total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of about between 0.01% and 0.1%, between 0.02% and 0.2%, between 0.03% and 0.3%, between 0.04% and 0.4%, between 0.05% and 0.5%, between 0.75% and 1%, between 0.1% and 1.5%, between 0.15% and 2%, between 0.2% and 3%, and between 0.3% and 3.5% on a dry weight basis.


The present disclosure also provides a tobacco plant having an altered nicotine level without negative impacts over other tobacco traits, e.g., leaf grade index value. In an aspect, a low-nicotine or nicotine-free tobacco variety provides cured tobacco of commercially acceptable grade. Tobacco grades are evaluated based on factors including, but not limited to, the leaf stalk position, leaf size, leaf color, leaf uniformity and integrity, ripeness, texture, elasticity, sheen (related with the intensity and the depth of coloration of the leaf as well as the shine), hygroscopicity (the faculty of the tobacco leaves to absorb and to retain the ambient moisture), and green nuance or cast. Leaf grade can be determined, for example, using an Official Standard Grade published by the Agricultural Marketing Service of the US Department of Agriculture (7 U.S.C. § 511). See, e.g., Official Standard Grades for Burley Tobacco (U.S. Type 31 and Foreign Type 93), effective Nov. 5, 1990 (55 F.R. 40645); Official Standard Grades for Flue-Cured Tobacco (U.S. Types 11, 12, 13, 14 and Foreign Type 92), effective Mar. 27, 1989 (54 F.R. 7925); Official Standard Grades for Pennsylvania Seedleaf Tobacco (U.S. Type 41), effective Jan. 8, 1965 (29 F.R. 16854); Official Standard Grades for Ohio Cigar-Leaf Tobacco (U.S. Types 42, 43, and 44), effective Dec. 8, 1963 (28 F.R. 11719 and 28 F.R. 11926); Official Standard Grades for Wisconsin Cigar-Binder Tobacco (U.S. Types 54 and 55), effective Nov. 20, 1969 (34 F.R. 17061); Official Standard Grades for Wisconsin Cigar-Binder Tobacco (U.S. Types 54 and 55), effective Nov. 20, 1969 (34 F.R. 17061); Official Standard Grades for Georgia and Florida Shade-Grown Cigar-Wrapper Tobacco (U.S. Type 62), Effective April 1971. A USDA grade index value can be determined according to an industry accepted grade index. See, e.g., Bowman et al, Tobacco Science, 32:39-40(1988); Legacy Tobacco Document Library (Bates Document #523267826-523267833, Jul. 1, 1988, Memorandum on the Proposed Burley Tobacco Grade Index); and Miller et al., 1990, Tobacco Intern., 192:55-57 (all foregoing references are incorporated by inference in their entirety). In an aspect, a USDA grade index is a 0-100 numerical representation of federal grade received and is a weighted average of all stalk positions. A higher grade index indicates higher quality. Alternatively, leaf grade can be determined via hyper-spectral imaging. See e.g., WO 2011/027315 (published on Mar. 10, 2011, and incorporated by inference in its entirety).


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided herein comprises a similar level of one or more tobacco aroma compounds compared to a control tobacco plant when grown in similar growth conditions. In another aspect, a tobacco plant provided herein comprise a similar level of one or more tobacco aroma compounds selected from the group consisting of 3-methylvaleric acid, valeric acid, isovaleric acid, a labdenoid, a cembrenoid, a sugar ester, and a reducing sugar, compared to a control tobacco plant when grown in similar growth conditions.


As used herein, tobacco aroma compounds are compounds associated with the flavor and aroma of tobacco smoke. These compounds include, but are not limited to, 3-methylvaleric acid, valeric acid, isovaleric acid, cembrenoid and labdenoid diterpenes, and sugar esters. Concentrations of tobacco aroma compounds can be measured by any known metabolite profiling methods in the art including, without limitation, gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS), Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, liquid chromatography-linked mass spectrometry. See The Handbook of Plant Metabolomics, edited by Weckwerth and Kahl, (Wiley-Blackwell) (May 28, 2013).


As used herein, “reducing sugar(s)” are any sugar (monosaccharide or polysaccharide) that has a free or potentially free aldehdye or ketone group. Glucose and fructose act as nicotine buffers in cigarette smoke by reducing smoke pH and effectively reducing the amount of “free” unprotonated nicotine. Reducing sugars balances smoke flavor, for example, by modifying the sensory impact of nicotine and other tobacco alkaloids. An inverse relationship between sugar content and alkaloid content has been reported across tobacco varieties, within the same variety, and within the same plant line caused by planting conditions. Reducing sugar levels can be measured using a segmented-flow colorimetric method developed for analysis of tobacco samples as adapted by Skalar Instrument Co (West Chester, Pa.) and described by Davis, Tobacco Science 20:139-144 (1976). For example, a sample is dialyzed against a sodium carbonate solution. Copper neocuproin is added to the sample and the solution is heated. The copper neocuproin chelate is reduced in the presence of sugars resulting in a colored complex which is measured at 460 nm.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant comprises one or more non-naturally existing mutant alleles in one or more PMT gene loci which reduce or eliminate PMT enzymatic activity from the one or more PMT gene loci. In an aspect, these mutant alleles result in lower nicotine levels. Mutant pmt alleles can be introduced by any method known in the art including random or targeted mutagenesis approaches.


Such mutagenesis methods include, without limitation, treatment of seeds with ethyl methylsulfate (EMS) (Hildering and Verkerk, In, The use of induced mutations in plant breeding. Pergamon press, pp 317-320, 1965) or UV-irradiation, X-rays, and fast neutron irradiation (see, for example, Verkerk, Neth. J. Agric. Sci. 19:197-203, 1971; and Poehlman, Breeding Field Crops, Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York (3.sup.rd ed), 1987), transposon tagging (Fedoroff et al., 1984; U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,732,856 and 5,013,658), as well as T-DNA insertion methodologies (Hoekema et al., 1983; U.S. Pat. No. 5,149,645). EMS-induced mutagenesis consists of chemically inducing random point mutations over the length of the genome. Fast neutron mutagenesis consists of exposing seeds to neutron bombardment which causes large deletions through double stranded DNA breakage. Transposon tagging comprises inserting a transposon within an endogenous gene to reduce or eliminate expression of the gene. The types of mutations that may be present in a tobacco gene include, for example, point mutations, deletions, insertions, duplications, and inversions. Such mutations desirably are present in the coding region of a tobacco gene; however mutations in the promoter region, and intron, or an untranslated region of a tobacco gene may also be desirable.


In addition, a fast and automatable method for screening for chemically induced mutations, TILLING (Targeting Induced Local Lesions In Genomes), using denaturing HPLC or selective endonuclease digestion of selected PCR products is also applicable to the present disclosure. See, McCallum et al. (2000) Nat. Biotechnol. 18:455-457. Mutations that impact gene expression or that interfere with the function of genes can be determined using methods that are well known in the art. Insertional mutations in gene exons usually result in null-mutants. Mutations in conserved residues can be particularly effective in inhibiting the function of a protein. In an aspect, tobacco plants comprise a nonsense (e.g., stop codon) mutation in one or more PMT genes described herein.


It will be appreciated that, when identifying a mutation, the endogenous reference DNA sequence should be from the same variety of tobacco. For example, if a modified tobacco plant comprising a mutation is from the variety TN90, then the endogenous reference sequence must be the endogenous TN90 sequence, not a homologous sequence from a different tobacco variety (e.g., K326). Similarly, if a modified tobacco cell comprising a mutation is a TN90 cell, then the endogenous reference sequence must be the endogenous TN90 sequence, not a homologous sequence from a tobacco cell from a different tobacco variety (e.g., K326).


In an aspect, the present disclosure also provides a tobacco line with altered nicotine levels while maintaining commercially acceptable leaf quality. This line can be produced by introducing mutations into one or more PMT genes via precise genome engineering technologies, for example, Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs), meganuclease, zinc finger nuclease, and a clustered regularly-interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/Cas9 system, a CRISPR/Cpf1 system, a CRISPR/Csm1 system, and a combination thereof (see, for example, U.S. Patent Application publication 2017/0233756). See, e.g., Gaj et al., Trends in Biotechnology, 31(7):397-405 (2013).


The screening and selection of mutagenized tobacco plants can be through any methodologies known to those having ordinary skill in the art. Examples of screening and selection methodologies include, but are not limited to, Southern analysis, PCR amplification for detection of a polynucleotide, Northern blots, RNase protection, primer-extension, RT-PCR amplification for detecting RNA transcripts, Sanger sequencing, Next Generation sequencing technologies (e.g., Illumina, PacBio, Ion Torrent, 454), enzymatic assays for detecting enzyme or ribozyme activity of polypeptides and polynucleotides, and protein gel electrophoresis, Western blots, immunoprecipitation, and enzyme-linked immunoassays to detect polypeptides. Other techniques such as in situ hybridization, enzyme staining, and immunostaining also can be used to detect the presence or expression of polypeptides and/or polynucleotides. Methods for performing all of the referenced techniques are known.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant or plant genome provided herein is mutated or edited by a nuclease selected from the group consisting of a meganuclease, a zinc-finger nuclease (ZFN), a transcription activator-like effector nuclease (TALEN), a CRISPR/Cas9 nuclease, a CRISPR/Cpf1 nuclease, or a CRISPR/Csm1 nuclease.


As used herein, “editing” or “genome editing” refers to targeted mutagenesis of at least 1, at least 2, at least 3, at least 4, at least 5, at least 6, at least 7, at least 8, at least 9, or at least 10 nucleotides of an endogenous plant genome nucleic acid sequence, or removal or replacement of an endogenous plant genome nucleic acid sequence. In an aspect, an edited nucleic acid sequence provided has at least 99.9%, at least 99.5%, at least 99%, at least 98%, at least 97%, at least 96%, at least 95%, at least 94%, at least 93%, at least 92%, at least 91%, at least 90%, at least 85%, at least 80%, or at least 75% sequence identity with an endogenous nucleic acid sequence. In an aspect, an edited nucleic acid sequence provided has at least 99.9%, at least 99.5%, at least 99%, at least 98%, at least 97%, at least 96%, at least 95%, at least 94%, at least 93%, at least 92%, at least 91%, at least 90%, at least 85%, at least 80%, or at least 75% sequence identity with a polynucleotide selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NOs: 1 to 10, and fragments thereof. In another aspect, an edited nucleic acid sequence provided has at least 99.9%, at least 99.5%, at least 99%, at least 98%, at least 97%, at least 96%, at least 95%, at least 94%, at least 93%, at least 92%, at least 91%, at least 90%, at least 85%, at least 80%, or at least 75% sequence identity with a polynucleotide encoding a polypeptide selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NOs: 11 to 15.


Meganucleases, ZFNs, TALENs, CRISPR/Cas9, CRISPR/Csm1 and CRISPR/Cpf1 induce a double-strand DNA break at a target site of a genomic sequence that is then repaired by the natural processes of homologous recombination (HR) or non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ). Sequence modifications then occur at the cleaved sites, which can include deletions or insertions that result in gene disruption in the case of NHEJ, or integration of donor nucleic acid sequences by HR. In an aspect, a method provided comprises editing a plant genome with a nuclease provided to mutate at least 1, at least 2, at least 3, at least 4, at least 5, at least 6, at least 7, at least 8, at least 9, at least 10, or more than 10 nucleotides in the plant genome via HR with a donor polynucleotide. In an aspect, a mutation provided is caused by genome editing using a nuclease. In another aspect, a mutation provided is caused by non-homologous end-joining or homologous recombination.


Meganucleases, which are commonly identified in microbes, are unique enzymes with high activity and long recognition sequences (>14 bp) resulting in site-specific digestion of target DNA. Engineered versions of naturally occurring meganucleases typically have extended DNA recognition sequences (for example, 14 to 40 bp). The engineering of meganucleases can be more challenging than that of ZFNs and TALENs because the DNA recognition and cleavage functions of meganucleases are intertwined in a single domain. Specialized methods of mutagenesis and high-throughput screening have been used to create novel meganuclease variants that recognize unique sequences and possess improved nuclease activity.


ZFNs are synthetic proteins consisting of an engineered zinc finger DNA-binding domain fused to the cleavage domain of the FokI restriction endonuclease. ZFNs can be designed to cleave almost any long stretch of double-stranded DNA for modification of the zinc finger DNA-binding domain. ZFNs form dimers from monomers composed of a non-specific DNA cleavage domain of FokI endonuclease fused to a zinc finger array engineered to bind a target DNA sequence.


The DNA-binding domain of a ZFN is typically composed of 3-4 zinc-finger arrays. The amino acids at positions −1, +2, +3, and +6 relative to the start of the zinc finger ∞-helix, which contribute to site-specific binding to the target DNA, can be changed and customized to fit specific target sequences. The other amino acids form the consensus backbone to generate ZFNs with different sequence specificities. Rules for selecting target sequences for ZFNs are known in the art.


The FokI nuclease domain requires dimerization to cleave DNA and therefore two ZFNs with their C-terminal regions are needed to bind opposite DNA strands of the cleavage site (separated by 5-7 bp). The ZFN monomer can cute the target site if the two-ZF-binding sites are palindromic. The term ZFN, as used herein, is broad and includes a monomeric ZFN that can cleave double stranded DNA without assistance from another ZFN. The term ZFN is also used to refer to one or both members of a pair of ZFNs that are engineered to work together to cleave DNA at the same site.


Without being limited by any scientific theory, because the DNA-binding specificities of zinc finger domains can in principle be re-engineered using one of various methods, customized ZFNs can theoretically be constructed to target nearly any gene sequence. Publicly available methods for engineering zinc finger domains include Context-dependent Assembly (CoDA), Oligomerized Pool Engineering (OPEN), and Modular Assembly.


TALENs are artificial restriction enzymes generated by fusing the transcription activator-like effector (TALE) DNA binding domain to a FokI nuclease domain. When each member of a TALEN pair binds to the DNA sites flanking a target site, the FokI monomers dimerize and cause a double-stranded DNA break at the target site. The term TALEN, as used herein, is broad and includes a monomeric TALEN that can cleave double stranded DNA without assistance from another TALEN. The term TALEN is also used to refer to one or both members of a pair of TALENs that work together to cleave DNA at the same site.


Transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs) can be engineered to bind practically any DNA sequence. TALE proteins are DNA-binding domains derived from various plant bacterial pathogens of the genus Xanthomonas. The Xanthomonas pathogens secrete TALEs into the host plant cell during infection. The TALE moves to the nucleus, where it recognizes and binds to a specific DNA sequence in the promoter region of a specific DNA sequence in the promoter region of a specific gene in the host genome. TALE has a central DNA-binding domain composed of 13-28 repeat monomers of 33-34 amino acids. The amino acids of each monomer are highly conserved, except for hypervariable amino acid residues at positions 12 and 13. The two variable amino acids are called repeat-variable diresidues (RVDs). The amino acid pairs NI, NG, HD, and NN of RVDs preferentially recognize adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine/adenine, respectively, and modulation of RVDs can recognize consecutive DNA bases. This simple relationship between amino acid sequence and DNA recognition has allowed for the engineering of specific DNA binding domains by selecting a combination of repeat segments containing the appropriate RVDs.


Besides the wild-type FokI cleavage domain, variants of the FokI cleavage domain with mutations have been designed to improve cleavage specificity and cleavage activity. The FokI domain functions as a dimer, requiring two constructs with unique DNA binding domains for sites in the target genome with proper orientation and spacing. Both the number of amino acid residues between the TALEN DNA binding domain and the FokI cleavage domain and the number of bases between the two individual TALEN binding sites are parameters for achieving high levels of activity.


A relationship between amino acid sequence and DNA recognition of the TALE binding domain allows for designable proteins. Software programs such as DNA Works can be used to design TALE constructs. Other methods of designing TALE constructs are known to those of skill in the art. See Doyle et al., Nucleic Acids Research (2012) 40: W117-122.; Cermak et al., Nucleic Acids Research (2011). 39:e82; and tale-nt.cac.cornell.edu/about.


A CRISPR/Cas9 system, CRISPR/Csm1, or a CRISPR/Cpf1 system are alternatives to the Fold-based methods ZFN and TALEN. The CRISPR systems are based on RNA-guided engineered nucleases that use complementary base pairing to recognize DNA sequences at target sites.


CRISPR/Cas9, CRISPR/Csm1, and a CRISPR/Cpf1 systems are part of the adaptive immune system of bacteria and archaea, protecting them against invading nucleic acids such as viruses by cleaving the foreign DNA in a sequence-dependent manner. The immunity is acquired by the integration of short fragments of the invading DNA known as spacers between two adjacent repeats at the proximal end of a CRISPR locus. The CRISPR arrays, including the spacers, are transcribed during subsequent encounters with invasive DNA and are processed into small interfering CRISPR RNAs (crRNAs) approximately 40 nt in length, which combine with the trans-activating CRISPR RNA (tracrRNA) to activate and guide the Cas9 nuclease. This cleaves homologous double-stranded DNA sequences known as protospacers in the invading DNA. A prerequisite for cleavage is the presence of a conserved protospacer-adjacent motif (PAM) downstream of the target DNA, which usually has the sequence 5-NGG-3 but less frequently NAG. Specificity is provided by the so-called “seed sequence” approximately 12 bases upstream of the PAM, which must match between the RNA and target DNA. Cpf1 and Csm1 act in a similar manner to Cas9, but Cpf1 and Csm1 do not require a tracrRNA.


In still another aspect, a tobacco plant provided here comprises one or more pmt mutations and further comprises one or more mutations in one or more loci encoding a nicotine demethylase (e.g., CYP82E4, CYP82E5, CYP82E10) that confer reduced amounts of nornicotine (See U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,319,011; 8,124,851; 9,187,759; 9,228,194; 9,228,195; 9,247,706) compared to a control plant lacking one or more mutations in one or more loci encoding a nicotine demethylase. In an aspect, a tobacco plant described further comprises reduced nicotine demethylase activity compared to a control plant when grown and cured under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level more than 150% of the anabasine level of a leaf from a wild-type control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level more than 175%, 200%, 250%, 300%, 350%, 400%, 500%, or 600% of the anabasine level of a leaf from a wild-type control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level more than 2 folds of the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level more than 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, or 13 folds of the anatabine level of a leaf from a wild-type control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In another aspect, a tobacco plant provided here comprises one or more genetic modifications providing an increased anatabine levels and at least one genetic modifications providing a commercially acceptable leaf grade. In an aspect, one or more genetic modifications providing an increased anatabine levels are the same or overlap with at least one genetic modifications providing a commercially acceptable leaf grade. In an aspect, leaves with a commercially acceptable leaf grade refer to leaves, when cured, having a USDA grade index value of 50 or more 55 or more, 60 or more, 65 or more, 70 or more, 75 or more, 80 or more, 85 or more, 90 or more, and 95 or more.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a nornicotine level more than 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, or 13 folds of the nornicotine level of a leaf from a wild-type control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant further comprises a mutation capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level less than the anabasine level of a leaf from a wild-type control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant further comprises a mutation capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level less than 5%, 10%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, or 80% of the anabasine level of a leaf from a wild-type control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises a further mutation capable of producing a leaf comprising a more than 2 fold reduction of the anatabine level compared to a leaf from a control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant comprises a further mutation capable of producing a leaf comprising a more than 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, or 13 fold reduction of the anatabine level compared to a leaf from a wild-type control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions. In an aspect, a mutation providing lower level of anatabine is a mutation described in US Application Publication No. 2014/0283165 and US Application Publication No. 2016/0010103. In another aspect, a pmt mutant further comprises a mutation in a quinolate phosphoribosyl transferase (QPT) or quinolinate synthase (QS) gene. In a further aspect, a pmt mutant plant further comprises a transgene or mutation suppressing the expression or activity of a QPT or QS gene.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant further comprises a mutation capable of providing a nornicotine level less than 80%, 75%, 70%, 65%, 60%, 55%, 50%, 45%, 40%, or 35% of the nornicotine level of a leaf from a wild-type control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a cured leaf comprising a total N-nitrosonornicotine (NNN) level of less than 2, less than 1.9, less than 1.8, less than 1.7, less than 1.6, less than 1.5, less than 1.4, less than 1.3, less than 1.2, less than 1.1, less than 1.0, less than 0.9, less than 0.8, less than 0.7, less than 0.6, less than 0.5, less than 0.4, less than 0.3, less than 0.2, less than 0.15, less than 0.1, or less than 0.05 ppm.


In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a cured leaf comprising a total NNN level of between 2 and 0.05, between 1.9 and 0.05, between 1.8 and 0.05, between 1.7 and 0.05, between 1.6 and 0.05, between 1.5 and 0.05, between 1.4 and 0.05, between 1.3 and 0.05, between 1.2 and 0.05, between 1.1 and 0.05, between 1.0 and 0.05, between 0.9 and 0.05, between 0.8 and 0.05, between 0.7 and 0.05, between 0.6 and 0.05, between 0.5 and 0.05, between 0.4 and 0.05, between 0.3 and 0.05, between 0.2 and 0.05, between 0.15 and 0.05, or between 0.1 and 0.05 parts per million (ppm).


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a cured leaf comprising a total nicotine-derived nitrosamine ketone (NNK) level of less than 2, less than 1.9, less than 1.8, less than 1.7, less than 1.6, less than 1.5, less than 1.4, less than 1.3, less than 1.2, less than 1.1, less than 1.0, less than 0.9, less than 0.8, less than 0.7, less than 0.6, less than 0.5, less than 0.4, less than 0.3, less than 0.2, less than 0.15, less than 0.1, or less than 0.05 ppm.


In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant is capable of producing a cured leaf comprising a total NNK level of between 2 and 0.05, between 1.9 and 0.05, between 1.8 and 0.05, between 1.7 and 0.05, between 1.6 and 0.05, between 1.5 and 0.05, between 1.4 and 0.05, between 1.3 and 0.05, between 1.2 and 0.05, between 1.1 and 0.05, between 1.0 and 0.05, between 0.9 and 0.05, between 0.8 and 0.05, between 0.7 and 0.05, between 0.6 and 0.05, between 0.5 and 0.05, between 0.4 and 0.05, between 0.3 and 0.05, between 0.2 and 0.05, between 0.15 and 0.05, or between 0.1 and 0.05 ppm.


In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant further comprises a mutation or transgene providing an increased level of one or more antioxidants. In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant further comprises a genetic modification in an endogenous gene and further comprises an increased level of one or more antioxidants in a cured leaf compared to a control cured tobacco leaf lacking the genetic modification, where the endogenous gene encodes an antioxidant biosynthetic enzyme, a regulatory transcription factor of an antioxidant, an antioxidant transporter, an antioxidant metabolic enzyme, or a combination thereof. In a further aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant further comprises a transgene and further comprises an increased level of one or more antioxidants in a cured leaf compared to a control cured tobacco leaf lacking the transgene, where the transgene encodes or directly modulates an antioxidant biosynthetic enzyme, a regulatory transcription factor of an antioxidant, an antioxidant transporter, an antioxidant metabolic enzyme, or a combination thereof. In an aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant further comprises a transgene or a cisgenic construct expressing one or more genes selected from the group consisting of AtPAP1, NtAN2, NtAN1, NtJAF13, NtMyb3, chorismate mutase, and arogenate dehydrotase (ADT). In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco plant further comprises one or more transgenes or genetic modification for increasing antioxidants or decreasing one or more TSNAs as described in WIPO Publication No. 2018/067985 or US Publication No. 2018/0119163.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant described is a modified tobacco plant. As used herein, “modified”, in the context of a plant, refers to a plant comprising a genetic alteration introduced for certain purposes and beyond natural polymorphisms.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant described is a cisgenic plant. As used herein, “cisgenesis” or “cisgenic” refers to genetic modification of a plant, plant cell, or plant genome in which all components (e.g., promoter, donor nucleic acid, selection gene) have only plant origins (i.e., no non-plant origin components are used). In an aspect, a plant, plant cell, or plant genome provided is cisgenic. Cisgenic plants, plant cells, and plant genomes provided can lead to ready-to-use tobacco lines. In another aspect, a tobacco plant provided comprises no non-tobacco genetic material or sequences.


As used herein, “gene expression” or expression of a gene refers to the biosynthesis or production of a gene product, including the transcription and/or translation of the gene product.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided comprises one or more pmt mutations and further comprises reduced expression or activity of one or more genes involved in nicotine biosynthesis or transport. Genes involved in nicotine biosynthesis include, but are not limited to, arginine decarboxylase (ADC), methylputrescine oxidase (MPO), NADH dehydrogenase, ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), phosphoribosylanthranilate isomerase (PRAT), quinolate phosphoribosyl transferase (QPT), and S-adenosyl-methionine synthetase (SAMS). Nicotine Synthase, which catalyzes the condensation step between a nicotinic acid derivative and methylpyrrolinium cation, has not been elucidated although two candidate genes (A622 and NBB1) have been proposed. See US 2007/0240728 A1 and US 2008/0120737A1. A622 encodes an isoflavone reductase-like protein. In addition, several transporters may be involved in the translocation of nicotine. A transporter gene, named MATE, has been cloned and characterized (Morita et al., PNAS 106:2447-52 (2009)).


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided comprises one or more pmt mutations and further comprises a reduced level of mRNA, protein, or both of one or more genes encoding a product selected from the group consisting of MPO, QPT, ADC, ODC, PRAI, SAMS, BBL, MATE, A622, and NBB1, compared to a control tobacco plant. In another aspect, a tobacco plants provided comprises one or more pmt mutations and further comprises a transgene directly suppressing the expression of one or more genes encoding a product selected from the group consisting of MPO, QPT, ADC, ODC, PRAI, SAMS, BBL, MATE, A622, and NBB1. In another aspect, a tobacco plant provided comprises one or more pmt mutations and further comprises a transgene or mutation suppressing the expression or activity of one or more genes encoding a product selected from the group consisting of MPO, QPT, ADC, ODC, PRAI, SAMS, BBL, MATE, A622, and NBB1.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided is from a tobacco type selected from the group consisting of flue-cured tobacco, air-cured tobacco, dark air-cured tobacco, dark fire-cured tobacco, Galpao tobacco, and Oriental tobacco. In another aspect, a tobacco plant provided is from a tobacco type selected from the group consisting of Burley tobacco, Maryland tobacco, and dark tobacco. In an aspect, tobacco plants or seeds or modified tobacco plants or seeds provided here are of a tobacco variety selected from the group consisting of the tobacco varieties listed in Tables 16 to 22, and any variety essentially derived from any one of the foregoing varieties. See WO 2004/041006 A1.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided is in a flue-cured tobacco background or exhibits one or more flue-cured tobacco characteristic described here. Flue-cured tobaccos (also called Virginia or bright tobaccos) amount to approximately 40% of world tobacco production. Flue-cured tobaccos are often also referred to as “bright tobacco” because of the golden-yellow to deep-orange color it reaches during curing. Flue-cured tobaccos have a light, bright aroma and taste. Flue-cured tobaccos are generally high in sugar and low in oils. Major flue-cured tobacco growing countries are Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Tanzania and the U.S. In an aspect, a low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plant or seed provided is in a flue-cured tobacco background selected from the group consisting of CC 13, CC 27, CC 33, CC 37, CC 65, CC 67, CC 700, GF 318, GL 338, GL 368, GL 939, K 346, K 399, K326, NC 102, NC 196, NC 291, NC 297, NC 299, NC 471, NC 55, NC 606, NC 71, NC 72, NC 92, PVH 1118, PVH 1452, PVH 2110, SPEIGHT 168, SPEIGHT 220, SPEIGHT 225, SPEIGHT 227, SPEIGHT 236, and any variety essentially derived from any one of the foregoing varieties. In another aspect, a low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plant or seed provided is in a flue-cured tobacco background selected from the group consisting of Coker 48, Coker 176, Coker 371-Gold, Coker 319, Coker 347, GL 939, K 149, K326, K 340, K 346, K 358, K 394, K 399, K 730, NC 27NF, NC 37NF, NC 55, NC 60, NC 71, NC 72, NC 82, NC 95, NC 297, NC 606, NC 729, NC 2326, McNair 373, McNair 944, Ox 207, Ox 414 NF, Reams 126, Reams 713, Reams 744, RG 8, RG 11, RG 13, RG 17, RG 22, RG 81, RG H4, RG H51, Speight H-20, Speight G-28, Speight G-58, Speight G-70, Speight G-108, Speight G-111, Speight G-117, Speight 168, Speight 179, Speight NF-3, Va 116, Va 182, and any variety essentially derived from any one of the foregoing varieties. See WO 2004/041006 A1. In a further aspect, low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plants, seeds, hybrids, varieties, or lines are in any flue cured background selected from the group consisting of K326, K346, and NC196.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided is in an air-cured tobacco background or exhibits one or more air-cured tobacco characteristic described here. Air-cured tobaccos include Burley, Md., and dark tobaccos. The common factor is that curing is primarily without artificial sources of heat and humidity. Burley tobaccos are light to dark brown in color, high in oil, and low in sugar. Burley tobaccos are air-cured in barns. Major Burley growing countries are Argentina, Brazil, Italy, Malawi, and the U.S. Maryland tobaccos are extremely fluffy, have good burning properties, low nicotine and a neutral aroma. Major Maryland growing countries include the U.S. and Italy. In an aspect, a low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plant or seed provided is in a Burley tobacco background selected from the group consisting of Clay 402, Clay 403, Clay 502, Ky 14, Ky 907, Ky 910, Ky 8959, NC 2, NC 3, NC 4, NC 5, NC 2000, TN 86, TN 90, TN 97, R 610, R 630, R 711, R 712, NCBH 129, Bu 21×Ky 10, HBO4P, Ky 14×L 8, Kt 200, Newton 98, Pedigo 561, Pf561 and Va 509. In a further aspect, low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plants, seeds, hybrids, varieties, or lines are in any Burley background selected from the group consisting of TN 90, KT 209, KT 206, KT212, and HB 4488. In another aspect, a low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plant or seed provided is in a Maryland tobacco background selected from the group consisting of Md 10, Md 40, Md 201, Md 609, Md 872 and Md 341.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided is in a dark air-cured tobacco background or exhibits one or more dark air-cured tobacco characteristic described here. Dark air-cured tobaccos are distinguished from other types primarily by its curing process which gives dark air-cured tobacco its medium- to dark-brown color and distinct aroma. Dark air-cured tobaccos are mainly used in the production of chewing tobacco and snuff. In an aspect, a low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plant or seed provided is in a dark air-cured tobacco background selected from the group consisting of Sumatra, Jatim, Dominican Cubano, Besuki, One sucker, Green River, Va. sun-cured, and Paraguan Passado.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided is in a dark fire-cured tobacco background or exhibits one or more dark fire-cured tobacco characteristic described here. Dark fire-cured tobaccos are generally cured with low-burning wood fires on the floors of closed curing barns. Their leaves have low sugar content but high nicotine content. Dark fire-cured tobaccos are used for making pipe blends, cigarettes, chewing tobacco, snuff and strong-tasting cigars. Major growing regions for dark fire-cured tobaccos are Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia, USA. In an aspect, a low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plant or seed provided is in a dark fire-cured tobacco background selected from the group consisting of Narrow Leaf Madole, Improved Madole, Tom Rosson Madole, Newton's VH Madole, Little Crittenden, Green Wood, Little Wood, Small Stalk Black Mammoth, DT 508, DT 518, DT 592, KY 171, DF 911, DF 485, TN D94, TN D950, VA 309, and VA 359.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant provided is in an Oriental tobacco background or exhibits one or more Oriental tobacco characteristic described here. Oriental tobaccos are also referred to as Greek, aroma and Turkish tobaccos due to the fact that they are typically grown in eastern Mediterranean regions such as Turkey, Greece, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Syria, Lebanon, Italy, and Romania. The small plant and leaf size, characteristic of today's Oriental varieties, as well as its unique aroma properties are a result of the plant's adaptation to the poor soil and stressful climatic conditions in which it develop over many past centuries. In an aspect, a low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plant or seed provided is in an Oriental tobacco background selected from the group consisting of Izmir, Katerini, Samsun, Basma and Krumovgrad, Trabzon, Thesalian, Tasova, Sinop, Izmit, Hendek, Edirne, Semdinli, Adiyanman, Yayladag, Iskenderun, Duzce, Macedonian, Mavra, Prilep, Bafra, Bursa, Bucak, Bitlis, Balikesir, and any variety essentially derived from any one of the foregoing varieties.


In an aspect, low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plants, seeds, hybrids, varieties, or lines are essentially derived from or in the genetic background of BU 64, CC 101, CC 200, CC 27, CC 301, CC 400, CC 500, CC 600, CC 700, CC 800, CC 900, Coker 176, Coker 319, Coker 371 Gold, Coker 48, CU 263, DF911, Galpao tobacco, GL 26H, GL 350, GL 600, GL 737, GL 939, GL 973, HB 04P, K 149, K 326, K 346, K 358, K394, K 399, K 730, KDH 959, KT 200, KT204LC, KY 10, KY 14, KY 160, KY 17, KY 171, KY 907, KY907LC, KTY14×L8 LC, Little Crittenden, McNair 373, McNair 944, msKY 14×L8, Narrow Leaf Madole, NC 100, NC 102, NC 2000, NC 291, NC 297, NC 299, NC 3, NC 4, NC 5, NC 6, NC7, NC 606, NC 71, NC 72, NC 810, NC BH 129, NC 2002, Neal Smith Madole, OXFORD 207, ‘Perique’ tobacco, PVH03, PVH09, PVH19, PVH50, PVH51, R 610, R 630, R 7-11, R 7-12, RG 17, RG 81, RG H51, RGH 4, RGH 51, RS 1410, Speight 168, Speight 172, Speight 179, Speight 210, Speight 220, Speight 225, Speight 227, Speight 234, Speight G-28, Speight G-70, Speight H-6, Speight H20, Speight NF3, TI 1406, TI 1269, TN 86, TN86LC, TN 90, TN 97, TN97LC, TN D94, TN D950, TR (Tom Rosson) Madole, VA 309, or VA359, Maryland 609, HB3307PLC, HB4488PLC, KT206LC, KT209LC, KT210LC, KT212LC, R610LC, PVH2310, NC196, KTD14LC, KTD6LC, KTD8LC, PD7302LC, PD7305LC, PD7309LC, PD7318LC, PD7319LC, PD7312LC, ShireyLC, or any commercial tobacco variety according to standard tobacco breeding techniques known in the art.


All foregoing mentioned specific varieties of dark air-cured, Burley, Md., dark fire-cured, or Oriental type are listed only for exemplary purposes. Any additional dark air-cured, Burley, Md., dark fire-cured, Oriental varieties are also contemplated in the present application.


Also provided are populations of tobacco plants described. In an aspect, a population of tobacco plants has a planting density of between about 5,000 and about 8000, between about 5,000 and about 7,600, between about 5,000 and about 7,200, between about 5,000 and about 6,800, between about 5,000 and about 6,400, between about 5,000 and about 6,000, between about 5,000 and about 5,600, between about 5,000 and about 5,200, between about 5,200 and about 8,000, between about 5,600 and about 8,000, between about 6,000 and about 8,000, between about 6,400 and about 8,000, between about 6,800 and about 8,000, between about 7,200 and about 8,000, or between about 7,600 and about 8,000 plants per acre. In another aspect, a population of tobacco plants is in a soil type with low to medium fertility.


Also provided are containers of seeds from tobacco plants described. A container of tobacco seeds of the present disclosure may contain any number, weight, or volume of seeds. For example, a container can contain at least, or greater than, about 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000 or more seeds. Alternatively, the container can contain at least, or greater than, about 1 ounce, 5 ounces, 10 ounces, 1 pound, 2 pounds, 3 pounds, 4 pounds, 5 pounds or more seeds. Containers of tobacco seeds may be any container available in the art. By way of non-limiting example, a container may be a box, a bag, a packet, a pouch, a tape roll, a tube, or a bottle.


Also provided is cured tobacco material made from a low-alkaloid or low-nicotine tobacco plant described. Further provided is cured tobacco material made from a tobacco plant described with higher levels of total alkaloid or nicotine.


“Curing” is the aging process that reduces moisture and brings about the destruction of chlorophyll giving tobacco leaves a golden color and by which starch is converted to sugar. Cured tobacco therefore has a higher reducing sugar content and a lower starch content compared to harvested green leaf. In an aspect, green leaf tobacco provided can be cured using conventional means, e.g., flue-cured, barn-cured, fire-cured, air-cured or sun-cured. See, for example, Tso (1999, Chapter 1 in Tobacco, Production, Chemistry and Technology, Davis & Nielsen, eds., Blackwell Publishing, Oxford) for a description of different types of curing methods. Cured tobacco is usually aged in a wooden drum (e.g., a hogshead) or cardboard cartons in compressed conditions for several years (e.g., two to five years), at a moisture content ranging from 10% to about 25%. See, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,516,590 and 5,372,149. Cured and aged tobacco then can be further processed. Further processing includes conditioning the tobacco under vacuum with or without the introduction of steam at various temperatures, pasteurization, and fermentation. Fermentation typically is characterized by high initial moisture content, heat generation, and a 10 to 20% loss of dry weight. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,528,993, 4,660,577, 4,848,373, 5,372,149; U.S. Publication No. 2005/0178398; and Tso (1999, Chapter 1 in Tobacco, Production, Chemistry and Technology, Davis & Nielsen, eds., Blackwell Publishing, Oxford). Cure, aged, and fermented tobacco can be further processed (e.g., cut, shredded, expanded, or blended). See, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,528,993; 4,660,577; and 4,987,907. In an aspect, the cured tobacco material of the present disclosure is sun-cured. In another aspect, the cured tobacco material of the present disclosure is flue-cured, air-cured, or fire-cured.


The presence of mold on cured tobacco can significantly reduce the quality and marketability (e.g., leaf grade) of the cured leaves. Mold growth is a common problem that can occur during extended periods of high humidity (e.g., greater than 70% relative humidity) at temperatures between approximately 10° C. (50° F.) and 32.2° C. (90° F.). Mold tends to be more prevalent at higher temperatures.


Tobacco plants, varieties, and lines provided herein comprising a mutant allele in one or more PMT genes, two or more PMT genes, three or more PMT genes, four or more PMT genes, or five PMT genes exhibit reduced mold infection as compared to the low alkaloid tobacco variety LA Burley 21 (LA BU 21). Similarly, tobacco plants, varieties, and lines provided herein comprising an RNAi construct that downregulates expression or translation of one or more PMT genes, two or more PMT genes, three or more PMT genes, four or more PMT genes, or five PMT genes exhibit reduced mold infection as compared to the low alkaloid tobacco variety LA Burley 21 (LA BU 21).


LA BU 21 is a low total alkaloid tobacco line produced by incorporation of a low alkaloid gene(s) from a Cuban cigar variety into Burley 21 through several backcrosses (Legg et al., Crop Science, 10:212 (1970)). It has approximately 0.2% total alkaloids (dry weight) compared to the about 3.5% (dry weight) of its parent, Burley 21. LA BU 21 has a leaf grade well below commercially acceptable standards.


In an aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt1a comprises no observable mold infection. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt1b comprises no observable mold infection. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt2 comprises no observable mold infection. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt3 comprises no observable mold infection. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt4 comprises no observable mold infection. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt1a, a mutant allele of pmt1b, a mutant allele of pmt2, a mutant allele of pmt3, and a mutant allele of pmt4 comprises no observable mold infection.


In an aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt1a comprises a reduced mold infection as compared to a control cured tobacco leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt1b comprises a reduced mold infection as compared to a control cured tobacco leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt2 comprises a reduced mold infection as compared to a control cured tobacco leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt3 comprises a reduced mold infection as compared to a control cured tobacco leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt4 comprises a reduced mold infection as compared to a control cured tobacco leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf comprising a mutant allele of pmt1a, a mutant allele of pmt1b, a mutant allele of pmt2, a mutant allele of pmt3, and a mutant allele of pmt4 comprises a reduced mold infection as compared to a control cured tobacco leaf from the variety LA BU 21.


In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line provided in any one of Tables 4A to 4E, Table 10, or Table 14 comprises no observable mold infection. In another aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line provided in any one of Tables 4A to 4E, Table 10, or Table 14 comprises a reduced mold infection as compared to a control cured tobacco leaf from the variety LA BU 21.


In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising one or more pmt mutations provided in any one of Tables 5A to 5E and Tables 12A to 12E comprises no observable mold infection. In another aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising one or more pmt mutations provided in any one of Tables 5A to 5E and Tables 12A to 12E comprises a reduced mold infection as compared to a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21.


In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising a mutant allele of pmt1a comprises a higher leaf grade than a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising a mutant allele of pmt1b comprises a higher leaf grade than a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising a mutant allele of pmt2 comprises a higher leaf grade than a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising a mutant allele of pmt3 comprises a higher leaf grade than a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising a mutant allele of pmt4 comprises a higher leaf grade than a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21. In another aspect, a cured tobacco leaf from a plant, variety, or line comprising a mutant allele of pmt1a, a mutant allele of pmt1b, a mutant allele of pmt2, a mutant allele of pmt3, and a mutant allele of pmt4 comprises a higher leaf grade than a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21.


In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line provided in any one of Tables 4A to 4E, Table 10, or Table 14 comprises a higher leaf grade than a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21.


In an aspect, a cured leaf from a tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising one or more pmt mutations provided in any one of Tables 5A to 5E and Tables 12A to 12E comprises a higher leaf grade than a control cured leaf from the variety LA BU 21.


In an aspect, a “reduced mold infection” refers to a reduced area of infected leaf. In another aspect, a “reduced mold infection” refers to a reduced number of viable mold spores on an infected leaf Standard methods of detecting and counting viable mold spores are known and available in the art.


In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 1% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 2% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 3% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 4% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 5% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 10% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 15% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 20% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 25% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 30% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 35% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 40% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 50% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 60% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 70% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 75% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 80% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 90% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of at least 95% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of 100% as compared to a control leaf.


In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 90% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 80% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 70% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 60% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 50% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 40% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 30% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 20% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 1% and 10% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 10% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 20% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 30% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 40% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 50% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 60% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 70% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 80% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 90% and 100% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 10% and 75% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 25% and 75% as compared to a control leaf. In an aspect, a reduced mold infection comprises a reduction of infected leaf area of between 25% and 50% as compared to a control leaf.


In an aspect, mold infecting cured tobacco is of a genus selected from the group consisting of Cladosporium, Penicillium, Alternaria, Aspergillus, and Mucor.


Tobacco material obtained from the tobacco lines, varieties or hybrids of the present disclosure can be used to make tobacco products. As used herein, “tobacco product” is defined as any product made or derived from tobacco that is intended for human use or consumption.


Tobacco products provided include, without limitation, cigarette products (e.g., cigarettes and bidi cigarettes), cigar products (e.g., cigar wrapping tobacco and cigarillos), pipe tobacco products, products derived from tobacco, tobacco-derived nicotine products, smokeless tobacco products (e.g., moist snuff, dry snuff, and chewing tobacco), films, chewables, tabs, shaped parts, gels, consumable units, insoluble matrices, hollow shapes, reconstituted tobacco, expanded tobacco, and the like. See, e.g., U.S. Patent Publication No. US 2006/0191548.


As used herein, “cigarette” refers a tobacco product having a “rod” and “filler”. The cigarette “rod” includes the cigarette paper, filter, plug wrap (used to contain filtration materials), tipping paper that holds the cigarette paper (including the filler) to the filter, and all glues that hold these components together. The “filler” includes (1) all tobaccos, including but not limited to reconstituted and expanded tobacco, (2) non-tobacco substitutes (including but not limited to herbs, non-tobacco plant materials and other spices that may accompany tobaccos rolled within the cigarette paper), (3) casings, (4) flavorings, and (5) all other additives (that are mixed into tobaccos and substitutes and rolled into the cigarette).


As used herein, “reconstituted tobacco” refers to a part of tobacco filler made from tobacco dust and other tobacco scrap material, processed into sheet form and cut into strips to resemble tobacco. In addition to the cost savings, reconstituted tobacco is very important for its contribution to cigarette taste from processing flavor development using reactions between ammonia and sugars.


As used herein, “expanded tobacco” refers to a part of tobacco filler which is processed through expansion of suitable gases so that the tobacco is “puffed” resulting in reduced density and greater filling capacity. It reduces the weight of tobacco used in cigarettes.


Tobacco products derived from plants of the present disclosure also include cigarettes and other smoking articles, particularly those smoking articles including filter elements, where the rod of smokable material includes cured tobacco within a tobacco blend. In an aspect, a tobacco product of the present disclosure is selected from the group consisting of a cigarillo, a non-ventilated recess filter cigarette, a vented recess filter cigarette, a cigar, snuff, pipe tobacco, cigar tobacco, cigarette tobacco, chewing tobacco, leaf tobacco, hookah tobacco, shredded tobacco, and cut tobacco. In another aspect, a tobacco product of the present disclosure is a smokeless tobacco product. Smokeless tobacco products are not combusted and include, but not limited to, chewing tobacco, moist smokeless tobacco, snus, and dry snuff. Chewing tobacco is coarsely divided tobacco leaf that is typically packaged in a large pouch-like package and used in a plug or twist. Moist smokeless tobacco is a moist, more finely divided tobacco that is provided in loose form or in pouch form and is typically packaged in round cans and used as a pinch or in a pouch placed between an adult tobacco consumer's cheek and gum. Snus is a heat treated smokeless tobacco. Dry snuff is finely ground tobacco that is placed in the mouth or used nasally. In a further aspect, a tobacco product of the present disclosure is selected from the group consisting of loose leaf chewing tobacco, plug chewing tobacco, moist snuff, and nasal snuff. In yet another aspect, a tobacco product of the present disclosure is selected from the group consisting of an electronically heated cigarette, an e-cigarette, an electronic vaporing device.


In an aspect, a tobacco product of the present disclosure can be a blended tobacco product. In another aspect, a tobacco product of the present disclosure can be a low nicotine tobacco product. In a further aspect, a tobacco product of the present disclosure may comprise nornicotine at a level of less than about 3 mg/g. For example, the nornicotine content in such a product can be 3.0 mg/g, 2.5 mg/g, 2.0 mg/g, 1.5 mg/g, 1.0 mg/g, 750 μg/g, 500 pg/g, 250 pg/g, 100 pg/g, 75 pg/g, 50 pg/g, 25 pg/g, 10 pg/g, 7.0 pg/g, 5.0 pg/g, 4.0 pg/g, 2.0 pg/g, 1.0 pg/g, 0.5 pg/g, 0.4 pg/g, 0.2 pg/g, 0.1 pg/g, 0.05 pg/g, 0.01 pg/g, or undetectable.


In an aspect, cured tobacco material or tobacco products provided comprise an average nicotine or total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of about 0.01%, 0.02%, 0.05%, 0.75%, 0.1%, 0.15%, 0.2%, 0.3%, 0.35%, 0.4%, 0.5%, 0.6%, 0.7%, 0.8%, 0.9%, 1%, 1.1%, 1.2%, 1.3%, 1.4%, 1.5%, 1.6%, 1.7%, 1.8%, 1.9%, 2%, 2.1%, 2.2%, 2.3%, 2.4%, 2.5%, 2.6%, 2.7%, 2.8%, 2.9%, 3%, 3.1%, 3.2%, 3.3%, 3.4%, 3.5%, 3.6%, 3.7%, 3.8%, 3.9%, 4%, 5%, 6%, 7%, 8%, and 9% on a dry weight basis. In another aspect, cured tobacco material or tobacco products provided comprise an average nicotine or total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of about between 0.01% and 0.02%, between 0.02% and 0.05%, between 0.05% and 0.75%, between 0.75% and 0.1%, between 0.1% and 0.15%, between 0.15% and 0.2%, between 0.2% and 0.3%, between 0.3% and 0.35%, between 0.35% and 0.4%, between 0.4% and 0.5%, between 0.5% and 0.6%, between 0.6% and 0.7%, between 0.7% and 0.8%, between 0.8% and 0.9%, between 0.9% and 1%, between 1% and 1.1%, between 1.1% and 1.2%, between 1.2% and 1.3%, between 1.3% and 1.4%, between 1.4% and 1.5%, between 1.5% and 1.6%, between 1.6% and 1.7%, between 1.7% and 1.8%, between 1.8% and 1.9%, between 1.9% and 2%, between 2% and 2.1%, between 2.1% and 2.2%, between 2.2% and 2.3%, between 2.3% and 2.4%, between 2.4% and 2.5%, between 2.5% and 2.6%, between 2.6% and 2.7%, between 2.7% and 2.8%, between 2.8% and 2.9%, between 2.9% and 3%, between 3% and 3.1%, between 3.1% and 3.2%, between 3.2% and 3.3%, between 3.3% and 3.4%, between 3.4% and 3.5%, and between 3.5% and 3.6% on a dry weight basis. In a further aspect, cured tobacco material or tobacco products provided comprise an average nicotine or total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of about between 0.01% and 0.1%, between 0.02% and 0.2%, between 0.03% and 0.3%, between 0.04% and 0.4%, between 0.05% and 0.5%, between 0.75% and 1%, between 0.1% and 1.5%, between 0.15% and 2%, between 0.2% and 3%, and between 0.3% and 3.5% on a dry weight basis.


The present disclosure also provides methods for breeding tobacco lines, cultivars, or varieties comprising a desirable level of total alkaloid or nicotine, e.g., low nicotine or nicotine free. Breeding can be carried out via any known procedures. DNA fingerprinting, SNP mapping, haplotype mapping or similar technologies may be used in a marker-assisted selection (MAS) breeding program to transfer or breed a desirable trait or allele into a tobacco plant. For example, a breeder can create segregating populations in a F2 or backcross generation using F1 hybrid plants or further crossing the F1 hybrid plants with other donor plants with an agronomically desirable genotype. Plants in the F2 or backcross generations can be screened for a desired agronomic trait or a desirable chemical profile using one of the techniques known in the art or listed herein. Depending on the expected inheritance pattern or the MAS technology used, self-pollination of selected plants before each cycle of backcrossing to aid identification of the desired individual plants can be performed. Backcrossing or other breeding procedure can be repeated until the desired phenotype of the recurrent parent is recovered. A recurrent parent in the present disclosure can be a flue-cured variety, a Burley variety, a dark air-cured variety, a dark fire-cured variety, or an Oriental variety. Other breeding techniques can be found, for example, in Wernsman, E. A., and Rufty, R. C. 1987. Chapter Seventeen. Tobacco. Pages 669-698 In: Cultivar Development. Crop Species. W. H. Fehr (ed.), MacMillan Publishing Go., Inc., New York, N.Y., incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.


Results of a plant breeding program using the tobacco plants described includes useful lines, cultivars, varieties, progeny, inbreds, and hybrids of the present disclosure. As used herein, the term “variety” refers to a population of plants that share constant characteristics which separate them from other plants of the same species. A variety is often, although not always, sold commercially. While possessing one or more distinctive traits, a variety is further characterized by a very small overall variation between individuals within that variety. A “pure line” variety may be created by several generations of self-pollination and selection, or vegetative propagation from a single parent using tissue or cell culture techniques. A variety can be essentially derived from another line or variety. As defined by the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (Dec. 2, 1961, as revised at Geneva on Nov. 10, 1972; on Oct. 23, 1978; and on Mar. 19, 1991), a variety is “essentially derived” from an initial variety if: a) it is predominantly derived from the initial variety, or from a variety that is predominantly derived from the initial variety, while retaining the expression of the essential characteristics that result from the genotype or combination of genotypes of the initial variety; b) it is clearly distinguishable from the initial variety; and c) except for the differences which result from the act of derivation, it conforms to the initial variety in the expression of the essential characteristics that result from the genotype or combination of genotypes of the initial variety. Essentially derived varieties can be obtained, for example, by the selection of a natural or induced mutant, a somaclonal variant, a variant individual from plants of the initial variety, backcrossing, or transformation. A first tobacco variety and a second tobacco variety from which the first variety is essentially derived, are considered as having essentially identical genetic background. A “line” as distinguished from a variety most often denotes a group of plants used non-commercially, for example in plant research. A line typically displays little overall variation between individuals for one or more traits of interest, although there may be some variation between individuals for other traits.


In an aspect, this disclosure provides a tobacco plant, variety, line, or cell comprising one or more pmt mutations provided in any one of Tables 5A to 5E and Tables 12A to 12E.


In another aspect, this disclosure provides a tobacco plant, variety, line, or cell derived from any tobacco plant, variety, or line provided in any one of Tables 4A to 4E, Table 10, or Table 14.


In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH203 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH341 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1678 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1680 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1804 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1898 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH207 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH342 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH343 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH348 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH349 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH355 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH359 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH64 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH682 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH692 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH697 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH922 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH957 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1808 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1810 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1886 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1888 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1889 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH189 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1893 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1901 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1902 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH3 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH125 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH208 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH403 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH414 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH434 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH436 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH437 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH449 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH706 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH709 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH710 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH716 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH729 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH731 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH752 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH756 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH768 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH771 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH776 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH800 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH818 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH10 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH1004 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH1033 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH132 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH134 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH217 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH456 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH457 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH460 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH465 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH71 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH830 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH831 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH836 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH841 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH974 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH981 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH994 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1905 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH128 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH130 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH131 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH133 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH136 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH216 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH227 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH5 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH6 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH65 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH66 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH69 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH72 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH73 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH74 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH78 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH79 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH8 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH9 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1696 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1717 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1719 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1729 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1736 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1737 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1739 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1740 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1835 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1848 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1849 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1912 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1937 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1940 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1943 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1944 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH1051 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH22 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH34 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH473 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH49 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH50 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH848 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH850 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH851 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1699 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1708 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1722 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1724 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1725 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1845 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1846 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1847 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1911 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1912 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1915 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1918 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1928 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1932 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1933 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1936 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH20 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH28 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH31 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH47 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH51 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH52 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS107 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS106 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS115 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1809-13 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS111 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS112 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1678-60 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS131 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH709-01 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH709-08 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH414-11 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH414-19 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH437-04 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH437-08 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH437-32 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH437-39 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH449-26 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH449-33 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH125-48 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS102 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS103 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1719-30 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1740-36 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1698-22 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1700-13 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1702-17 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1849-01 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1849-48 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 17GH1737-24 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS118 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS133 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS120 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH1108-07 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH2162 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS164 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS163 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS146 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS147 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS150 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS151 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS148 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS149 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS152 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS153 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS143 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH2169 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH2171 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS165 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line CS118 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom. In an aspect, this disclosure provides the tobacco line 18GH2254-7 and F1 or F2 tobacco plants, or male sterile tobacco plants, derived therefrom.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a method of introgressing a low nicotine trait into a tobacco variety, the method comprising: (a) crossing a first tobacco variety comprising a low nicotine trait with a second tobacco variety without the low nicotine trait to produce one or more progeny tobacco plants; (b) genotyping the one or more progeny tobacco plants for a pmt mutant allele selected from those listed in Tables 4A to 4E, Tables 5A to 5E, Table 10, and Tables 12A to 12E; and (c) selecting a progeny tobacco plant comprising the pmt mutant allele. In another aspect, these methods further comprise backcrossing the selected progeny tobacco plant with the second tobacco variety. In a further aspect, these methods further comprise: (d) crossing the selected progeny plant with itself or with the second tobacco variety to produce one or more further progeny tobacco plants; and (e) selecting a further progeny tobacco plant comprising a low nicotine trait. In an aspect, the step (e) of selecting comprises marker-assisted selection. In an aspect, these methods produce a single gene conversion comprising a low nicotine trait. In an aspect, these methods produce a single gene conversion comprising a pmt mutant allele. In an aspect, the second tobacco variety is an elite variety. In another aspect, the genotyping step of these methods involve one or more molecular marker assays. In another aspect, the genotyping may involve a polymorphic marker comprising a polymorphism selected from the group consisting of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), insertions or deletions in DNA sequence (Indels), simple sequence repeats of DNA sequence (SSRs), a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), and a tag SNP.


As used herein, “locus” is a chromosomal locus or region where a polymorphic nucleic acid, trait determinant, gene, or marker is located. A “locus” can be shared by two homologous chromosomes to refer to their corresponding locus or region. As used herein, “allele” refers to an alternative nucleic acid sequence of a gene or at a particular locus (e.g., a nucleic acid sequence of a gene or locus that is different than other alleles for the same gene or locus). Such an allele can be considered (i) wild-type or (ii) mutant if one or more mutations or edits are present in the nucleic acid sequence of the mutant allele relative to the wild-type allele. A mutant allele for a gene may have a reduced or eliminated activity or expression level for the gene relative to the wild-type allele. For diploid organisms such as tobacco, a first allele can occur on one chromosome, and a second allele can occur at the same locus on a second homologous chromosome. If one allele at a locus on one chromosome of a plant is a mutant allele and the other corresponding allele on the homologous chromosome of the plant is wild-type, then the plant is described as being heterozygous for the mutant allele. However, if both alleles at a locus are mutant alleles, then the plant is described as being homozygous for the mutant alleles. A plant homozygous for mutant alleles at a locus may comprise the same mutant allele or different mutant alleles if heteroallelic or biallelic.


As used herein, “introgression” or “introgress” refers to the transmission of a desired allele of a genetic locus from one genetic background to another.


As used herein, “crossed” or “cross” means to produce progeny via fertilization (e.g. cells, seeds or plants) and includes crosses between plants (sexual) and self-fertilization (selfing).


As used herein, “backcross” and “backcrossing” refer to the process whereby a progeny plant is repeatedly crossed back to one of its parents. In a backcrossing scheme, the “donor” parent refers to the parental plant with the desired gene or locus to be introgressed.


The “recipient” parent (used one or more times) or “recurrent” parent (used two or more times) refers to the parental plant into which the gene or locus is being introgressed. The initial cross gives rise to the F1 generation. The term “BC1” refers to the second use of the recurrent parent, “BC2” refers to the third use of the recurrent parent, and so on. In an aspect, a backcross is performed repeatedly, with a progeny individual of each successive backcross generation being itself backcrossed to the same parental genotype.


As used herein, “single gene converted” or “single gene conversion” refers to plants that are developed using a plant breeding technique known as backcrossing, or via genetic engineering, where essentially all of the desired morphological and physiological characteristics of a variety are recovered in addition to the single gene transferred into the variety via the backcrossing technique or via genetic engineering.


As used herein, “elite variety” means any variety that has resulted from breeding and selection for superior agronomic performance.


As used herein, “selecting” or “selection” in the context of marker-assisted selection or breeding refer to the act of picking or choosing desired individuals, normally from a population, based on certain pre-determined criteria.


As used herein, the term “trait” refers to one or more detectable characteristics of a cell or organism which can be influenced by genotype. The phenotype can be observable to the naked eye, or by any other means of evaluation known in the art, e.g., microscopy, biochemical analysis, genomic analysis, an assay for a particular disease tolerance, etc. In some cases, a phenotype is directly controlled by a single gene or genetic locus, e.g., a “single gene trait.” In other cases, a phenotype is the result of several genes.


As used herein, “marker assay” means a method for detecting a polymorphism at a particular locus using a particular method, e.g., measurement of at least one phenotype (such as seed color, flower color, or other visually detectable trait), restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), single base extension, electrophoresis, sequence alignment, allelic specific oligonucleotide hybridization (ASO), random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD), microarray-based technologies, and nucleic acid sequencing technologies, etc.


As used herein, “marker assisted selection” (MAS) is a process by which phenotypes are selected based on marker genotypes. “Marker assisted selection breeding” refers to the process of selecting a desired trait or traits in a plant or plants by detecting one or more nucleic acids from the plant, where the nucleic acid is linked to the desired trait, and then selecting the plant or germplasm possessing those one or more nucleic acids.


As used herein, “polymorphism” means the presence of one or more variations in a population. A polymorphism may manifest as a variation in the nucleotide sequence of a nucleic acid or as a variation in the amino acid sequence of a protein. Polymorphisms include the presence of one or more variations of a nucleic acid sequence or nucleic acid feature at one or more loci in a population of one or more individuals. The variation may comprise but is not limited to one or more nucleotide base changes, the insertion of one or more nucleotides or the deletion of one or more nucleotides. A polymorphism may arise from random processes in nucleic acid replication, through mutagenesis, as a result of mobile genomic elements, from copy number variation and during the process of meiosis, such as unequal crossing over, genome duplication and chromosome breaks and fusions. The variation can be commonly found or may exist at low frequency within a population, the former having greater utility in general plant breeding and the latter may be associated with rare but important phenotypic variation. Useful polymorphisms may include single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), insertions or deletions in DNA sequence (Indels), simple sequence repeats of DNA sequence (SSRs), a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), and a tag SNP. A genetic marker, a gene, a DNA-derived sequence, a RNA-derived sequence, a promoter, a 5′ untranslated region of a gene, a 3′ untranslated region of a gene, microRNA, siRNA, a tolerance locus, a satellite marker, a transgene, mRNA, ds mRNA, a transcriptional profile, and a methylation pattern may also comprise polymorphisms. In addition, the presence, absence, or variation in copy number of the preceding may comprise polymorphisms.


As used herein, “SNP” or “single nucleotide polymorphism” means a sequence variation that occurs when a single nucleotide (A, T, C, or G) in the genome sequence is altered or variable. “SNP markers” exist when SNPs are mapped to sites on the genome.


As used herein, “marker” or “molecular marker” or “marker locus” is a term used to denote a nucleic acid or amino acid sequence that is sufficiently unique to characterize a specific locus on the genome. Any detectable polymorphic trait can be used as a marker so long as it is inherited differentially and exhibits linkage disequilibrium with a phenotypic trait of interest. Each marker is therefore an indicator of a specific segment of DNA, having a unique nucleotide sequence. The map positions provide a measure of the relative positions of particular markers with respect to one another. When a trait is stated to be linked to a given marker it will be understood that the actual DNA segment whose sequence affects the trait generally co-segregates with the marker. More precise and definite localization of a trait can be obtained if markers are identified on both sides of the trait. By measuring the appearance of the marker(s) in progeny of crosses, the existence of the trait can be detected by relatively simple molecular tests without actually evaluating the appearance of the trait itself, which can be difficult and time-consuming because the actual evaluation of the trait requires growing plants to a stage and/or under environmental conditions where the trait can be expressed.


It is understood that any tobacco plant of the present disclosure can further comprise additional agronomically desirable traits, for example, by transformation with a genetic construct or transgene using a technique known in the art. Without limitation, an example of a desired trait is herbicide resistance, pest resistance, disease resistance; high yield; high grade index value; curability; curing quality; mechanical harvestability; holding ability; leaf quality; height, plant maturation (e.g., early maturing, early to medium maturing, medium maturing, medium to late maturing, or late maturing); stalk size (e.g., a small, medium, or a large stalk); or leaf number per plant (e.g., a small (e.g., 5-10 leaves), medium (e.g., 11-15 leaves), or large (e.g., 16-21) number of leaves), or any combination. In an aspect, low-nicotine or nicotine-free tobacco plants or seeds disclosed comprise one or more transgenes expressing one or more insecticidal proteins, such as, for example, a crystal protein of Bacillus thuringiensis or a vegetative insecticidal protein from Bacillus cereus, such as VIP3 (see, for example, Estruch et al. (1997) Nat. Biotechnol. 15:137). In another aspect, tobacco plants further comprise an introgressed trait conferring resistance to brown stem rot (U.S. Pat. No. 5,689,035) or resistance to cyst nematodes (U.S. Pat. No. 5,491,081).


The present disclosure also provides pmt mutant tobacco plants comprising an altered nicotine or total alkaloid level but having a yield comparable to the yield of corresponding initial tobacco plants without such a nicotine level alternation. In an aspect, a pmt mutant variety provides a yield selected from the group consisting of about between 1200 and 3500, between 1300 and 3400, between 1400 and 3300, between 1500 and 3200, between 1600 and 3100, between 1700 and 3000, between 1800 and 2900, between 1900 and 2800, between 2000 and 2700, between 2100 and 2600, between 2200 and 2500, and between 2300 and 2400 lbs/acre. In another aspect, a pmt mutant tobacco variety provides a yield selected from the group consisting of about between 1200 and 3500, between 1300 and 3500, between 1400 and 3500, between 1500 and 3500, between 1600 and 3500, between 1700 and 3500, between 1800 and 3500, between 1900 and 3500, between 2000 and 3500, between 2100 and 3500, between 2200 and 3500, between 2300 and 3500, between 2400 and 3500, between 2500 and 3500, between 2600 and 3500, between 2700 and 3500, between 2800 and 3500, between 2900 and 3500, between 3000 and 3500, and between 3100 and 3500 lbs/acre. In a further aspect, pmt mutant tobacco plants provide a yield between 65% and 130%, between 70% and 130%, between 75% and 130%, between 80% and 130%, between 85% and 130%, between 90% and 130%, between 95% and 130%, between 100% and 130%, between 105% and 130%, between 110% and 130%, between 115% and 130%, or between 120% and 130% of the yield of a control plant having essentially identical genetic background except for pmt mutation(s). In a further aspect, pmt mutant tobacco plants provide a yield between 70% and 125%, between 75% and 120%, between 80% and 115%, between 85% and 110%, or between 90% and 100% of the yield of a control plant having essentially identical genetic background except for pmt mutations.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant disclosed (e.g., a low-nicotine, nicotine-free, or low-alkaloid tobacco variety) comprises a modification conferring a desired trait (e.g., low-nicotine, nicotine-free, or low-alkaloid) without substantially impacting a trait selected from the group consisting of yield, ripening and senescence, susceptibility to insect herbivory, polyamine content after topping, chlorophyll level, mesophyll cell number per unit leaf area, and end-product quality after curing.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant disclosed comprises a modification conferring a desired trait (e.g., low-nicotine, nicotine-free, or low-alkaloid) and further comprises a trait substantially comparable to an unmodified control plant, where the trait is selected from the group consisting of yield, ripening and senescence, susceptibility to insect herbivory, polyamine content after topping, chlorophyll level, mesophyll cell number per unit leaf area, and end-product quality after curing.


In an aspect, a tobacco plant disclosed comprises a modification conferring a desired trait (e.g., low-nicotine, nicotine-free, or low-alkaloid) and further comprises a yield which is more than 80%, more than 85%, more than 90%, more than 95%, more than 100%, more than 105%, more than 110%, more than 115%, more than 120%, more than 125%, more than 130%, more than 135%, or more than 140% relative to the yield of an unmodified control plant. In an aspect, a tobacco plant disclosed comprises a modification conferring a desired trait (e.g., low-nicotine, nicotine-free, or low-alkaloid) and further comprises a yield which is between 70% and 140%, between 75% and 135%, between 80% and 130%, between 85% and 125%, between 90% and 120%, between 95% and 115%, or between 100% and 110% relative to the yield of an unmodified control plant. In an aspect, a tobacco plant disclosed comprises a modification conferring a desired trait (e.g., low-nicotine, nicotine-free, or low-alkaloid) and further comprises a yield which is between 70% and 80%, between 75% and 85%, between 80% and 90%, between 85% and 95%, between 90% and 100%, between 95% and 105%, between 105% and 115%, between 110% and 120%, between 115% to 125%, between 120% and 130%, between 125 and 135%, or between 130% and 140% relative to the yield of an unmodified control plant.


In an aspect, a low-nicotine or nicotine-free tobacco variety disclosed is adapted for machine harvesting. In another aspect, a low-nicotine or nicotine-free tobacco variety disclosed is harvested mechanically.


In an aspect, tobacco plants provided are hybrid plants. Hybrids can be produced by preventing self-pollination of female parent plants (e.g., seed parents) of a first variety, permitting pollen from male parent plants of a second variety to fertilize the female parent plants, and allowing F1 hybrid seeds to form on the female plants. Self-pollination of female plants can be prevented by emasculating the flowers at an early stage of flower development. Alternatively, pollen formation can be prevented on the female parent plants using a form of male sterility. For example, male sterility can be produced by male sterility (MS), or transgenic male sterility where a transgene inhibits microsporogenesis and/or pollen formation, or self-incompatibility. Female parent plants containing MS are particularly useful. In aspects in which the female parent plants are MS, pollen may be harvested from male fertile plants and applied manually to the stigmas of MS female parent plants, and the resulting F1 seed is harvested.


Plants can be used to form single-cross tobacco F1 hybrids. Pollen from a male parent plant is manually transferred to an emasculated female parent plant or a female parent plant that is male sterile to form F1 seed. Alternatively, three-way crosses can be carried out where a single-cross F1 hybrid is used as a female parent and is crossed with a different male parent. As another alternative, double-cross hybrids can be created where the F1 progeny of two different single-crosses are themselves crossed. Self-incompatibility can be used to particular advantage to prevent self-pollination of female parents when forming a double-cross hybrid.


In an aspect, a low-nicotine or nicotine-free tobacco variety is male sterile. In another aspect, a low-nicotine or nicotine-free tobacco variety is cytoplasmic male sterile. Male sterile tobacco plants may be produced by any method known in the art. Methods of producing male sterile tobacco are described in Wernsman, E. A., and Rufty, R. C. 1987. Chapter Seventeen. Tobacco. Pages 669-698 In: Cultivar Development. Crop Species. W. H. Fehr (ed.), MacMillan Publishing Go., Inc., New York, N.Y. 761 pp.


In an aspect, this disclosure provides a male sterile tobacco plant, variety, or line comprising one or more pmt mutations provided in any one of Tables 5A to 5E and Tables 12A to 12E.


In another aspect, this disclosure provides a male sterile tobacco plant, variety, or line derived from any tobacco plant, variety, or line provided in any one of Tables 4A to 4E, Table 10, or Table 14.


In an aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dCS11. In another aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dCS12. In another aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dCS13. In another aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dCS14. In another aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dCS15. In another aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dCS16. In another aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dCS17. In another aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dCS18. In another aspect, this disclosure provides the male sterile line dS697.


In a further aspect, tobacco parts provided include, but are not limited to, a leaf, a stem, a root, a seed, a flower, pollen, an anther, an ovule, a pedicel, a fruit, a meristem, a cotyledon, a hypocotyl, a pod, an embryo, endosperm, an explant, a callus, a tissue culture, a shoot, a cell, and a protoplast. In an aspect, tobacco part provided does not include seed. In an aspect, this disclosure provides tobacco plant cells, tissues, and organs that are not reproductive material and do not mediate the natural reproduction of the plant. In another aspect, this disclosure also provides tobacco plant cells, tissues, and organs that are reproductive material and mediate the natural reproduction of the plant. In another aspect, this disclosure provides tobacco plant cells, tissues, and organs that cannot maintain themselves via photosynthesis. In another aspect, this disclosure provides somatic tobacco plant cells. Somatic cells, contrary to germline cells, do not mediate plant reproduction.


Cells, tissues and organs can be from seed, fruit, leaf, cotyledon, hypocotyl, meristem, embryos, endosperm, root, shoot, stem, pod, flower, infloresence, stalk, pedicel, style, stigma, receptacle, petal, sepal, pollen, anther, filament, ovary, ovule, pericarp, phloem, vascular tissue. In another aspect, this disclosure provides a tobacco plant chloroplast. In a further aspect, this disclosure provides epidermal cells, stomata cell, leaf or root hairs, a storage root, or a tuber. In another aspect, this disclosure provides a tobacco protoplast.


Skilled artisans understand that tobacco plants naturally reproduce via seeds, not via asexual reproduction or vegetative propagation. In an aspect, this disclosure provides tobacco endosperm. In another aspect, this disclosure provides tobacco endosperm cells. In a further aspect, this disclosure provides a male or female sterile tobacco plant, which cannot reproduce without human intervention.


In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a nucleic acid molecule comprising at least about 40%, 45%, 50%, 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or 100% identity to a sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NOs: 1 to 10, and fragments thereof. In an aspect, the present disclosure provides a polypeptide or protein comprising at least about 40%, 45%, 50%, 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or 100% identity to an amino acid sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NOs:11 to 15.


As used herein, the term “sequence identity” or “identity” in the context of two polynucleotides or polypeptide sequences makes reference to the residues in the two sequences that are the same when aligned for maximum correspondence over a specified comparison window. When percentage of sequence identity is used in reference to proteins it is recognized that residue positions which are not identical often differ by conservative amino acid substitutions, where amino acid residues are substituted for other amino acid residues with similar chemical properties (e.g., charge or hydrophobicity) and therefore do not change the functional properties of the molecule. When sequences differ in conservative substitutions, the percent sequence identity may be adjusted upwards to correct for the conservative nature of the substitution.


The present disclosure further provides a method manufacturing a tobacco product comprising tobacco material from tobacco plants disclosed. In an aspect, methods comprise conditioning aged tobacco material made from tobacco plants to increase its moisture content from between about 12.5% and about 13.5% to about 21%, blending the conditioned tobacco material to produce a desirable blend. In an aspect, the method of manufacturing a tobacco product further comprises casing or flavoring the blend. Generally, during the casing process, casing or sauce materials are added to blends to enhance their quality by balancing the chemical composition and to develop certain desired flavor characteristics. Further details for the casing process can be found in Tobacco Production, Chemistry and Technology, Edited by L. Davis and M. Nielsen, Blackwell Science, 1999.


Tobacco material provided can be also processed using methods including, but not limited to, heat treatment (e.g., cooking, toasting), flavoring, enzyme treatment, expansion and/or curing. Both fermented and non-fermented tobaccos can be processed using these techniques. Examples of suitable processed tobaccos include dark air-cured, dark fire cured, burley, flue cured, and cigar filler or wrapper, as well as the products from the whole leaf stemming operation. In an aspect, tobacco fibers include up to 70% dark tobacco on a fresh weight basis. For example, tobacco can be conditioned by heating, sweating and/or pasteurizing steps as described in U.S. Publication Nos. 2004/0118422 or 2005/0178398.


Tobacco material provided can be subject to fermentation. Fermenting typically is characterized by high initial moisture content, heat generation, and a 10 to 20% loss of dry weight. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,528,993; 4,660,577; 4,848,373; and 5,372,149. In addition to modifying the aroma of the leaf, fermentation can change either or both the color and texture of a leaf. Also during the fermentation process, evolution gases can be produced, oxygen can be taken up, the pH can change, and the amount of water retained can change. See, for example, U.S. Publication No. 2005/0178398 and Tso (1999, Chapter 1 in Tobacco, Production, Chemistry and Technology, Davis & Nielsen, eds., Blackwell Publishing, Oxford). Cured, or cured and fermented tobacco can be further processed (e.g., cut, expanded, blended, milled or comminuted) prior to incorporation into the oral product. The tobacco, in some cases, is long cut fermented cured moist tobacco having an oven volatiles content of between 48 and 50 weight percent prior to mixing with the copolymer and optionally flavorants and other additives.


In an aspect, tobacco material provided can be processed to a desired size. In an aspect, tobacco fibers can be processed to have an average fiber size of less than 200 micrometers. In an aspect, tobacco fibers are between 75 and 125 micrometers. In another aspect, tobacco fibers are processed to have a size of 75 micrometers or less. In an aspect, tobacco fibers include long cut tobacco, which can be cut or shredded into widths of about 10 cuts/inch up to about 110 cuts/inch and lengths of about 0.1 inches up to about 1 inch. Double cut tobacco fibers can have a range of particle sizes such that about 70% of the double cut tobacco fibers falls between the mesh sizes of −20 mesh and 80 mesh.


Tobacco material provided can be processed to have a total oven volatiles content of about 10% by weight or greater; about 20% by weight or greater; about 40% by weight or greater; about 15% by weight to about 25% by weight; about 20% by weight to about 30% by weight; about 30% by weight to about 50% by weight; about 45% by weight to about 65% by weight; or about 50% by weight to about 60% by weight. Those of skill in the art will appreciate that “moist” tobacco typically refers to tobacco that has an oven volatiles content of between about 40% by weight and about 60% by weight (e.g., about 45% by weight to about 55% by weight, or about 50% by weight). As used herein, “oven volatiles” are determined by calculating the percentage of weight loss for a sample after drying the sample in a pre-warmed forced draft oven at 110° C. for 3.25 hours. The oral product can have a different overall oven volatiles content than the oven volatiles content of the tobacco fibers used to make the oral product. The processing steps described can reduce or increase the oven volatiles content.


Having now generally described the disclosure, the same will be more readily understood through reference to the following examples that are provided by way of illustration, and are not intended to be limiting of the present disclosure, unless specified.


EXAMPLES
Example 1: Expression Profiling of Five PMT Genes

Nicotine biosynthesis starts with conversion of polyamine putrescine to N-methylputrescine by the enzyme putrescine N-methyl transferase (PMT). This is a step that commits precursor metabolites to nicotine biosynthesis. Genes encoding PMT (PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3 and PMT4) are present in the tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) genome. Table 1A lists genomic DNA sequences, cDNA sequences, and protein sequences of five PMT genes. Tables 1B and 1C provide sequence identities among five PMT genes. Pooled expression levels from before topping to harvest provide support that, without being limited by any particular theory, PMT1a and PMT3 represent two major PMT genes (FIG. 1).









TABLE 1A







Sequences of five tobacco PMT genes.











Genomic DNA Sequence





(including regions such





as promoter, 5′ UTR,
cDNA
Protein



introns, 3′ UTR, and
Sequence
Sequence



terminator) (SEQ ID
(SEQ ID
(SEQ ID


Gene Name
No.)
No.)
No.)













PMT1b
1
6
11


PMT1a
2
7
12


PMT2
3
8
13


PMT3
4
9
14


PMT4
5
10
15
















TABLE 1B







cDNA sequence identity among five tobacco PMT genes


determined by Clustal2.1.












cDNA %







identity
PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4















PMT1a
100






PMT1b
98.85
100





PMT2
91.81
91.71
100




PMT3
93.71
93.53
91.79
100



PMT4
94.24
94.06
92.75
94.59
100
















TABLE 1C







Protein sequence identity among five tobacco PMT


genes determined by Clustal2.1.












Protein %







identity
PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4















PMT1a
100






PMT1b
98.4
100





PMT2
95.42
95.75
100




PMT3
97.48
97.76
96.23
100



PMT4
96.27
96.8
96.32
97.63
100
















TABLE 1D







PMT1b genomic sequence (SEQ ID No. 1) annotation.










Element
location







5′ sequence
  1 . . . 1000



exon 1
1001 . . . 1292



intron 1
1293 . . . 1464



exon 2
1465 . . . 1541



intron 2
1542 . . . 1623



exon 3
1624 . . . 1851



intron 3
1852 . . . 1971



exon 4
1972 . . . 2044



intron 4
2045 . . . 2143



exon 5
2144 . . . 2215



intron 5
2216 . . . 2333



exon 6
2334 . . . 2529



intron 6
2530 . . . 3033



exon 7
3034 . . . 3166



intron 7
3167 . . . 3260



exon 8
3261 . . . 3317



3′ sequence
3318 . . . 4317

















TABLE 1E







PMT1b genomic sequence (SEQ ID No. 2) annotation.










Element
location







5′ sequence
  1 . . . 1000



exon 1
1001 . . . 1294



intron 1
1295 . . . 1422



exon 2
1423 . . . 1497



intron 2
1498 . . . 1579



exon 3
1580 . . . 1810



intron 3
1811 . . . 1932



exon 4
1933 . . . 2003



intron 4
2004 . . . 2102



exon 5
2103 . . . 2175



intron 5
2176 . . . 2293



exon 6
2294 . . . 2487



intron 6
2488 . . . 2925



exon 7
2926 . . . 3058



intron 7
3059 . . . 3153



exon 8
3154 . . . 3210



3′ sequence
3211 . . . 4210

















TABLE 1F







PMT2 genomic sequence (SEQ ID No. 3) annotation.










Element
location







5′ sequence
 1 . . . 792



exon 1
 793 . . . 1020



intron 1
1021 . . . 1201



exon 2
1202 . . . 1276



intron 2
1277 . . . 1358



exon 3
1359 . . . 1589



intron 3
1590 . . . 1694



exon 4
1695 . . . 1765



intron 4
1766 . . . 1875



exon 5
1876 . . . 1948



intron 5
1949 . . . 2037



exon 6
2038 . . . 2231



intron 6
2232 . . . 2397



exon 7
2398 . . . 2530



intron 7
2531 . . . 2629



exon 8
2630 . . . 2686



3′ sequence
2687 . . . 3686

















TABLE 1G







PMT3 genomic sequence (SEQ ID No. 4) annotation.










Element
location







5′ sequence
  1 . . . 1000



exon 1
1001 . . . 1312



intron 1
1313 . . . 1562



exon 2
1563 . . . 1637



intron 2
1638 . . . 1731



exon 3
1732 . . . 1962



intron 3
1963 . . . 2050



exon 4
2051 . . . 2121



intron 4
2122 . . . 2230



exon 5
2231 . . . 2303



intron 5
2304 . . . 2397



exon 6
2398 . . . 2591



intron 6
2592 . . . 2750



exon 7
2751 . . . 2883



intron 7
2884 . . . 2978



exon 8
2979 . . . 3035



3′ sequence
3036 . . . 4035

















TABLE 1H







PMT4 genomic sequence (SEQ ID No. 5) annotation.










Element
location







5′ sequence
  1 . . . 1000



exon 1
1001 . . . 1426



intron 1
1427 . . . 1609



exon 2
1610 . . . 1684



intron 2
1685 . . . 1766



exon 3
1767 . . . 1997



intron 3
1998 . . . 2112



exon 4
2113 . . . 2183



intron 4
2184 . . . 2290



exon 5
2291 . . . 2363



intron 5
2364 . . . 2452



exon 6
2453 . . . 2646



intron 6
2647 . . . 3146



exon 7
3147 . . . 3279



intron 7
3280 . . . 3374



exon 8
3375 . . . 3431



3′ sequence
3432 . . . 4431










Example 2: PMT Genome Editing and Tobacco Line Development

PMT knockout mutants are produced by editing various PMT genes. Tobacco protoplasts are transfected using polyethylene glycol (PEG) with plasmids encoding a genome editing technology 1 (GET 1) protein or a genome editing technology (GET) 2 protein and specific guide RNAs (gRNAs) targeting PMT genes at desired positions. Table 2 lists gRNA sequences used for PMT editing. Some gRNAs (e.g., Nos. 6 and 7) are pooled together for targeting multiple PMT genes in a single transfection.


Transfected protoplasts are then immobilized in 1% agarose bead and subjected to tissue culture. When calli grow up to ˜1 mm in diameter, they are spread on TOM2 plates. Calli are screened for insertions or deletions (indels) at the target positions using fragment analysis. Candidates, showing size shifts compared to wildtype control, are selected for further culture and the consequent shoots are tested by fragment analysis again to confirm the presence of indels. Rooted shoots are potted and sequenced for the target positions to determine the exact sequences deleted. Young leaf from each plant is harvested and PCR amplified for PMT fragments using phirekit. PMT Libraries for each line is indexed and 384 lines are pooled and sequenced using Miseq.


SNP analysis is carried out to determine both the exact edited pmt mutant allele sequences and the zygosity state at each PMT gene locus. Table 3 provides the zygosity information of representative edited plants. Tables 4A to 4E provide indels sequence information in each edited line of various tobacco varieties (e.g., K326, TN90, NLM, oriental). Tables 5A to 5E provide genomic sequences of about 40 nucleotides from each pmt mutant allele with the edited site in the middle of the genomic sequence (e.g., 20 nucleotides on each side of the deleted or inserted sequence site).









TABLE 2







gRNA sequences used in 2 genome editing 


technologies and their target genes.


“Y” represents that a gRNA targets that 


PMT gene, while“-” represents that a gRNA 


does not target that PMT gene.











Genome 





Editing





Techn-




gRNA
ology
gRNA
Target genes














No.
(GET)
sequence
PMT1b
PMT1a
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





1
GET 1
CCCATGAACG
Y
Y
-
-
-




GCCACCAAAA









(SEQ ID 









NO: 16)










2
GET 1
GGCACTTCCA
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y




AACACCAAAA









(SEQ ID 









NO: 17)










3
GET 1
GTTGTTCGGA
Y
Y
-
-
-




TGTCCCATTC









(SEQ ID 









NO: 18)










4
GET 1
CTAAACTCTG
Y
-
Y
Y
-




AAAACCAACC









(SEQ ID 









NO: 19)










5
GET 1
TTTCAGAGTT
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y




TAGCGCATTA









(SEQ ID 









NO: 20)










6
GET 2
GATGGAGCAA
Y
Y
-
-
-




TTCAACATAC









AGA









(SEQ ID 









NO: 21)










7
GET 2
GATGGAGCAA
-
-
Y
Y
Y




TTCAACACAC









AGA









(SEQ ID 









NO: 22)
















TABLE 3







Zygosity of individual PMT genic locus in selected pmt mutants


in various background produced by genome editing using


GET2. Number one (1) represents homozygous for a


single mutant allele. Numbers 2 to 5 represent a heteroallelic


combination having 2 to 5 Indels.


Hyphens indicate no data. Detailed genotype


information is shown in Tables 4A to 4D.













Variety
Line
PMT1b
PMT1a
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





Basma
18GH203
1
2
2
2
1


Basma
18GH341
1
2
2
2
1


K326
17GH1678
2
2
1
1
2


K326
17GH1680
1
2
1
1
1


K326
17GH1804
1
2
1
1
1


K326
17GH1898
1
2
1
1
1


K326
18GH207
1
2
1
1
1


K326
18GH342
1
2
1
1
1


K326
18GH343
1
2
1
1
1


K326
18GH348
1
1
1
1
1


K326
18GH349
1
1
1
1
1


K326
18GH355
1
2
2
3
2


K326
18GH359
1
2
1
1
1


K326
18GH64
2
1
2
1
1


K326
18GH682
1
2
2
2
2


K326
18GH692
1
2
2
2
1


K326
18GH697
1
1
1
1
1


K326
18GH922
1
1
1
1
1


K326
18GH957
1
1
2
1
1


K326
17GH1808
1
2
1
2
1


K326
17GH1810
1
1
1
2
2


K326
17GH1886


2
1



K326
17GH1888

1
1




K326
17GH1889

1
1




K326
17GH1892
3
1
2
2



K326
17GH1893
1
1
1
1
1


K326
17GH1901
1
1
1
2
2


K326
17GH1902
1
1
1
2
2


K326
18GH3

1
1
1



Katerini
18GH125
2
2
1
2
1


Katerini
18GH208
2
1
1
2
1


Katerini
18GH403
1
1
1
1



Katerini
18GH414
2
1
1
1
1


Katerini
18GH434
2
1
1
2
1


Katerini
18GH436
2
1
1
4
1


Katerini
18GH437
1
2
1
2
2


Katerini
18GH449
2
2
1
1
1


Katerini
18GH706
2
1
1
2
1


Katerini
18GH709
2
2
1
1
1


Katerini
18GH710
1
1
2
2
1


Katerini
18GH716
2
2
1
2
2


Katerini
18GH729
1
1
2
1
1


Katerini
18GH731
1
1
1
2
1


Katerini
18GH752
2
1
1
1
1


Katerini
18GH756
1
1
1
2
2


Katerini
18GH768
1
1
1
1
2


Katerini
18GH771
1
1
2
2
1


Katerini
18GH776
2
2
1
1
2


Katerini
18GH800
2
2
1
1
2


Katerini
18GH818
1
1
1
2



NLMz
18GH10
1
1
1
1
1


NLMz
18GH1004
2
1
1
2
2


NLMz
18GH1033
2
1
1
2
2


NLMz
18GH132
1
2
2
3
1


NLMz
18GH134
1
2
1
1
1


NLMz
18GH217
1
2
2
1
2


NLMz
18GH456
2
1
1
1
1


NLMz
18GH457
1
1
1
1
1


NLMz
18GH460
1
2
3
1
1


NLMz
18GH465
2
1
1
2
2


NLMz
18GH71
1
1
1
1
1


NLMz
18GH830
1
1
1
1
1


NLMz
18GH831
1
2
1

1


NLMz
18GH836
1
1
1
1
1


NLMz
18GH841
2
2
1

1


NLMz
18GH974
2
1
2
2
1


NLMz
18GH981
1
1
2
2
2


NLMz
18GH994
2
1
1
2
2


NLMz
17GH1905
1
2
1
2
2


NLMz
18GH128

2
2

1


NLMz
18GH130
2
2
1
1
1


NLMz
18GH131
1
3
2

1


NLMz
18GH133
2
3
2

1


NLMz
18GH136


1




NLMz
18GH216
2
2
1
1
2


NLMz
18GH227
1
1
1

1


NLMz
18GH5
1
2
1
2
2


NLMz
18GH6
1
2
3
1
1


NLMz
18GH65
2
2
2
2
1


NLMz
18GH66
1
2
1
2
2


NLMz
18GH69

1

2
1


NLMz
18GH72
2
2
2
2
1


NLMz
18GH73

2
2

1


NLMz
18GH74

1





NLMz
18GH78
1
1
1
3
2


NLMz
18GH79

2
2

1


NLMz
18GH8
1
2
2
1
2


NLMz
18GH9
1
2
1

1


TN90
17GH1696
1
1
1
1
1


TN90
17GH1717
1
2
2
2
1


TN90
17GH1719
1
2
1
1
1


TN90
17GH1729
2
1
1
1
1


TN90
17GH1736
1
1
2
1
1


TN90
17GH1737
1
2
2
2
1


TN90
17GH1739
1
1
1
1
2


TN90
17GH1740
1
2
1
2
1


TN90
17GH1835
2
2
2
1
1


TN90
17GH1848
1
2
1
1
1


TN90
17GH1849
1
1
1
2
2


TN90
17GH1912
1
2
1
1
1


TN90
17GH1937
1
2
1
2
1


TN90
17GH1940
1
2
1
1
1


TN90
17GH1943
1
1
1
1
2


TN90
17GH1944
1
1
1
1
2


TN90
18GH1051
2
2
2
1
2


TN90
18GH22
1
2
1
2
1


TN90
18GH34
1
1
1
1
2


TN90
18GH473
1
1
1
2
2


TN90
18GH49
1
1
1
1
1


TN90
18GH50
2
1
1
1
1


TN90
18GH848
2
2
2
1
2


TN90
18GH850
1
2
1
2
2


TN90
18GH851
1
2
1
2
2


TN90
17GH1699
3
2
2
2
1


TN90
17GH1708
1
3
1
2



TN90
17GH1722
2
1
2
2
1


TN90
17GH1724
2
1
1
2
1


TN90
17GH1725
2
1
1
2
1


TN90
17GH1845
2
2
1
2
2


TN90
17GH1846
2
1
2
2
1


TN90
17GH1847
2
1
2
2
1


TN90
17GH1911
1
2
1
1
1


TN90
17GH1912
1
2
1
1
1


TN90
17GH1915

1

1



TN90
17GH1918
2
2
1
1
5


TN90
17GH1928
2
2

2
1


TN90
17GH1932
2
2


1


TN90
17GH1933
2
2
2
5
1


TN90
17GH1936
2
2
2
1
2


TN90
18GH20

1
2
1
2


TN90
18GH28
2
1
2
1
2


TN90
18GH31
1
3
1
1
1


TN90
18GH47
1
3
1
1
1


TN90
18GH51



1



TN90
18GH52



1

















TABLE 4A







Mutant pmt alleles in K326 produced by genome editing using GET2. The position 


of each edited site (e.g.,, indels) is relative to the nucleotide number on the


corresponding cDNA sequence of each PMT gene. For example, line 17GH1678 has bi-


allelic mutations in PMT1b. One of the two alleles has a four-nucleotide dele-


tion which corresponds to nucleotides 416 to 419 of the PMT1b cDNA sequence.


The other allele has a two-nucleotide deletion which corresponds to nucleotides 


418 to 419 of the PMT1b cDNA sequence. SEQ ID Numbers are assigned and shown for


sequences of more than 10 nucleotides.















PMT1b
PMT1a
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





















Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted


VAR-


se-

se-

se-

se-

se-


IETY
LINE
Position
quence
Position
quence
Position
quence
Position
quence
Position
quence





K326
17GH
416 . . . 
ATAC
415 . . . 
CATACAG
348 . . . 
AC
432 . . . 
ACAC
547 . . . 
CACAC



1678
419

421

349

435

551





418 . . . 
AC
417 . . . 
TACA




548 . . . 
ACAC




419

420





551






K326
17GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
AC
432 . . . 
ACAC
546 . . . 
AC



1680
417

417

349

435

547







416 . . . 
AT












417












K326
17GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
411 . . . 
TCAACAT
348 . . . 
AC
433 . . . 
CACAC
548 . . . 
ACACA



1804
417

420
ACA
349

437

552








(379)












417 . . . 
TACA












420












K326
17GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
411 . . . 
TCAACAT
348 . . . 
AC
433 . . . 
CACAC
548 . . . 
ACACA



1898
417

420
ACA
349

437

552








(379)












417 . . . 
TACA












420












K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
415 . . . 
C
348 . . . 
ACAC
432 . . . 
AC
546 . . . 
ACAC



207
417

415

351

433

549







417 . . . 
T












417












K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
AC
432 . . . 
ACAC
546 . . . 
AC



343
417

417

349

435

547







416 . . . 
AT












417












K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
AC
429 . . . 
TCAACAC
546 . . . 
AC



348
417

417

349

439
ACAG
547












(396)







K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
AC
429 . . . 
TCAACAC
546 . . . 
AC



349
417

417

349

439
ACAG
547












(396)







K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
ACAC
431 . . . 
AACACAC
546 . . . 
AC



355
417

417

351

438
A
547







416 . . . 
AT
350 . . . 
AC
435 . . . 
CACA
550 . . . 
ACAG






417

351

438

553











440 . . . 
AGA












442








K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
411 . . . 
TCAACAT
348 . . . 
AC
433 . . . 
CACAC
548 . . . 
ACACA



359
417

420
ACA 
349

437

552








(379)












417 . . . 
TACA












420












K326
18GH
413 . . . 
AACATACA
414 . . . 
ACAT
349 . . . 
CACA
432 . . . 
AC
546 . . . 
ACAC



64
420

417

352

433

549





417 . . . 
TACA


354 . . . 
AGAGAA








420



359










K326
18GH
415 . . . 
CATACAG
413 . . . 
AACATAC
348 . . . 
ACAC
432 . . . 
ACACACA
543 . . . 
TCAACA



682
421

422
AGA 
351

439
G
554
CACAGA







(386)





(404)






417 . . . 
TACA
350 . . . 
AC
437 . . . 
CA
549 . . . 
CACA






420

351

438

552






K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACATACA
348 . . . 
ACAC
432 . . . 
ACACACA
546 . . . 
ACAC



692
417

420

351

439
G
549







416 . . . 
ATACA
350 . . . 
AC
437 . . . 
CA








420

351

438








K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
ACAC
430 . . . 
CAACACA
546 . . . 
ACAC



697
417

417

351

436

549






K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
ACAC
430 . . . 
CAACACA
546 . . . 
ACAC



922
417

417

351

436

549






K326
18GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
414 . . . 
ACAT
349 . . . 
CACACA
431 . . . 
AACACAC
546 . . . 
AC



957
417

417

355
G
438
A
547









351 . . . 
CACA












354










K326
17GH




346 . . . 
CAACA
432 . . . 
AC





1886




350

433











349 . . . 
CA












350










K326
17GH


418 . . . 
AC
348 . . . 
AC







1888


419

349










K326
17GH


418 . . . 
AC
348 . . . 
AC







1889


419

349










K326
17GH
413 . . . 
AACATAC
414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
ACAC
432 . . . 
ACAC





1892
419

417

351

435







414 . . . 
ACATAC


350 . . . 
AC
434 . . . 
AC






419



351

435







416 . . . 
ATAC












419














K326
17GH
416 . . . 
ATACAG
416 . . . 
ATACA
348 . . . 
AC
430 . . . 
CAACACA
546 . . . 
AC



1893
421

420

349

436

547






K326
17GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
417 . . . 
TACA
348 . . . 

432 . . . 
ACAC
548 . . . 
ACACA



1901
417

420

355

435

552










ACACAC
434 . . . 
AC
550 . . . 
ACA









AG
435

552






K326
17GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
417 . . . 
TACA
348 . . . 
ACACAC
432 . . . 
ACAC
548 . . . 
ACACA



1902
417

420

355
AG
435

552











434 . . . 
AC
550 . . . 
ACA










435

552






K326
17GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
413 . . . 
AACATAC
352 . . . 
ACA
432 . . . 
ACAC
546 . . . 
AC



1808
417

421
AG
354

435

547







418 . . . 
ACAG


434 . . . 
AC








421



435








K326
17GH
414 . . . 
ACAT
417 . . . 
TACA
348 . . . 
ACACAC
432 . . . 
ACAC
548 . . . 
ACACA



1810
417

420

355
AG
435

552











434 . . . 
AC
550 . . . 
ACA










435

552






K326
18GH


414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
AC
432 . . . 
ACAC





3


417

349

435








K326
18GH


414 . . . 
ACAT
348 . . . 
AC
429 . . . 
TCAACAC
546 . . . 
AC



4


417

349

439
ACAG
547












(396)
















TABLE 4B







Mutant pmt alleles in TN90 produced by genome editing using GET2.















PMT1b
PMT1a
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





















Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted


VARIETY
LINE
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence





TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
436 . . . 439
ACAG
546 . . . 547
AC



1696















TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
346 . . . 352
CAACACA
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC



1717


415 . . . 416
CA
349 . . . 352
CACA
434 . . . 435
AC







TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
417 . . . 420
TACA
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1719


417 . . . 423
TACAGA













G











TN90
17GH
412 . . . 421
CAACATA
412 . . . 418
CAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 547
AC



1729

CAG (380)

A










414 . . . 420
ACATACA













TN90
17GH
418 . . . 421
ACAG
414 . . . 417
ACAT
347 . . . 357
AACACACA
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 547
AC



1736





GAG (391)












351 . . . 354
CACA









TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
346 . . . 352
CAACACA
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC



1737


415 . . . 416
CA
349 . . . 352
CACA
434 . . . 435
AC







TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1739








548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
416 . . . 419
ATAC
348 . . . 351
ACAC
435 . . . 438
CACA
546 . . . 547
AC



1740


418 . . . 419
AC


436 . . . 439
ACAG







TN90
17GH
413 . . . 421
AACATAC
417 . . . 420
TACA
350 . . . 354
ACACA
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC



1835

AG












417 . . . 420
TACA
418 . . . 421
ACAG
351 . . . 362
CACAGAGA













ATGG (394)









TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
417 . . . 420
TACA
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1848


417 . . . 423
TACAGA













G











TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
430 . . . 436
CAACACA
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1849






433 . . . 436
CACA
548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
417 . . . 420
TACA
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1912


417 . . . 423
TACAGA













G











TN90
17GH
416 . . . 419
ATAC
412 . . . 421
CAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC







ACAG













(380)









1937


417 . . . 420
TACA


434 . . . 435
AC







TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
417 . . . 420
TACA
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1940


417 . . . 423
TACAGA













G











TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1943








548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1944








548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
18GH
414 . . . 418
ACATA
412 . . . 418
CAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1051



A










415 . . . 421
CATACAG
415 . . . 418
CATA
350 . . . 351
AC


548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
18GH
416 . . . 419
ATAC
412 . . . 421
CAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC



22



ACAG













(380)












417 . . . 420
TACA


434 . . . 435
AC







TN90
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



34








548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
430 . . . 436
CAACACA
546 . . . 549
ACAC



473






433 . . . 436
CACA
548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
18GH
412 . . . 421
CAACATA
412 . . . 418
CAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 547
AC



49

CAG (380)

A











TN90
18GH
412 . . . 421
CAACATA
412 . . . 418
CAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 547
AC



50

CAG (380)

A










414 . . . 420
ACATACA













TN90
18GH
414 . . . 418
ACATA
412 . . . 418
CAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC







A









848
415 . . . 421
CATACAG
415 . . . 418
CATA
350 . . . 351
AC


548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
416 . . . 422
ATACAG
348 . . . 349
AC
435 . . . 438
CACA
546 . . . 547
AC



850



A












417 . . . 420
TACA


436 . . . 439
ACAG
550 . . . 553
ACAG





TN90
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
416 . . . 422
ATACAG
348 . . . 349
AC
435 . . . 438
CACA
546 . . . 547
AC



851



A












417 . . . 420
TACA


436 . . . 439
ACAG
550 . . . 553
ACAG





TN90
17GH
419 . . . 420
CA
413 . . . 420
AACATA
348 . . . 351
ACAC
429 . . . 438
TCAACACAC
546 . . . 547
AC



1699



CA



A (395)






418 . . . 423
ACAGAG
419 . . . 420
CA
349 . . . 349
C
432 . . . 446
ACACACAG













(399)






427 . . . 427
G





AGAATGG







TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 415
AC
346 . . . 355
CAACACAC
432 . . . 437
ACACAC





1708


418 . . . 424
ACAGAG

AG (390)
440 . . . 443
AGAA









A












419 . . . 420
CA











TN90
17GH
415 . . . 420
CATACA
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1722
418 . . . 421
ACAG


350 . . . 351
AC
435 . . . 439
CACAG







TN90
17GH
416 . . . 421
ATACAG
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
550 . . . 553
ACAG



1724
417 . . . 420
TACA




434 . . . 435
AC







TN90
17GH
416 . . . 421
ATACAG
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
550 . . . 553
ACAG



1725
417 . . . 420
TACA




434 . . . 435
AC







TN90
17GH
416 . . . 418
ATA
412 . . . 418
CAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
433 . . . 437
CACAC
546 . . . 551
ACACAC







A









1845
418 . . . 419
AC
415 . . . 418
CATA


436 . . . 437
AC
550 . . . 551
AC





TN90
17GH
415 . . . 420
CATACA
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1846
418 . . . 421
ACAG


350 . . . 351
AC
435 . . . 439
CACAG







TN90
17GH
415 . . . 420
CATACA
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1847
418 . . . 421
ACAG


350 . . . 351
AC
435 . . . 439
CACAG







TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
417 . . . 420
TACA
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1911


417 . . . 423
TACAGA













G











TN90
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
417 . . . 420
TACA
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



1912


417 . . . 423
TACAGA













G











TN90
17GH


414 . . . 417
ACAT


432 . . . 435
ACAC





1915















TN90
17GH
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
417 . . . 420
TACA
353 . . . 361
CAGAGAAT
432 . . . 435
ACAC
544 . . . 550
CAACAC



1918









A









G


554 . . . 554
A




416 . . . 419
ATAC
418 . . . 421
ACAG




558 . . . 563
TGGTGG












565 . . . 566
TT












569 . . . 572
CATA





TN90
17GH
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
414 . . . 417
ACAT


432 . . . 448
ACACACAG
546 . . . 547
AC



1928







AGAATGGT













G (400)






415 . . . 418
CATA
419 . . . 421
CAG


437 . . . 438
CA







TN90
17GH
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
416 . . . 419
ATAC




546 . . . 551
ACACAC



1932
416 . . . 419
ATAC
418 . . . 419
AC











TN90
17GH
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
416 . . . 419
ATAC
350 . . . 355
ACACAG
413 . . . 414
CT
546 . . . 551
ACACAC



1933






418 . . . 419
GA






416 . . . 419
ATAC
418 . . . 419
AC
351 . . . 354
CACA
426 . . . 427
AA












431 . . . 432
AA












432 . . . 435
ACAC







TN90
17GH
413 . . . 421
AACATAC
416 . . . 419
ATAC
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
544 . . . 550
CAACAC



1936

AG







A




417 . . . 420
TACA
418 . . . 419
AC
350 . . . 351
AC


547 . . . 550
CACA





TN90
18GH


414 . . . 419
ACATAC
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



20




352 . . . 355
ACAG


548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
18GH
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
416 . . . 419
ATAC
348 . . . 349
AC
436 . . . 439
ACAG
546 . . . 549
ACAC



47


418 . . . 419
AC












424 . . . 425
AA











TN90
18GH
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
433 . . . 437
CACAC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



28
416 . . . 419
ATAC


350 . . . 351
AC


548 . . . 549
AC





TN90
18GH
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
416 . . . 419
ATAC
348 . . . 349
AC
436 . . . 439
ACAG
546 . . . 549
ACAC



31


418 . . . 419
AC












424 . . . 425
AA
















TABLE 4C







Mutant pmt alleles in NLMz produced by genome editing using GET2. NLMz refers to the Narrow Leaf Madole variety


containing triple loss-of-function mutations in three nicotine demethylase genes (CYP82E4, CYP82E5v2, and CYP82E10).















PMT1b
PMT1a
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





















Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted


VARIETY
LINE
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence





NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
350 . . . 351
AC
431 . . . 441
AACACACA
546 . . . 549
ACAC



10







GAG (391)







NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
348 . . . 349
AC
430 . . . 436
CAACACA
546 . . . 553
ACACACAG



1004
416 . . . 416
A




435 . . . 436
CA
551 . . . 552
CA





NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
348 . . . 349
AC
430 . . . 436
CAACACA
546 . . . 553
ACACACAG



1033
416 . . . 416
A




435 . . . 436
CA
551 . . . 552
CA





NLMz
18GH
417 . . . 418
TA
416 . . . 419
ATAC
348 . . . 352
ACACA
432 . . . 437
ACACAC
546 . . . 547
AC



132


418 . . . 419
AC
348 . . . 353
ACACAC
434 . . . 437
ACAC












436 . . . 437
AC







NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 423
ACATACAG
348 . . . 351
ACAC
433 . . . 439
CACACAG
550 . . . 556
ACAGAGA



134



AG (388)












419 . . . 420
CA











NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
415 . . . 419
CATAC
346 . . . 352
CAACACA
432 . . . 435
ACAC
545 . . . 557
AACACACA



217









GAGAA (407)






417 . . . 418
TA
351 . . . 352
CA


551 . . . 552
CA





NLMz
18GH
416 . . . 419
ATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



456
418 . . . 419
AC













NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



457















NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
409 . . . 420
ATTCAACA
350 . . . 363
ACACAGA
436 . . . 439
ACAG
550 . . . 553
ACAG



460



TACA (383)

GAATGGT













(393)










416 . . . 429

351 . . . 354
CACA











ATACAGAG
353 . . . 354
CA











AATGGT













(389)











NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
348 . . . 349
AC
430 . . . 436
CAACACA
546 . . . 553
ACACACAG



465
416 . . . 416
A




435 . . . 436
CA
551 . . . 552
CA





NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
550 . . . 553
ACAG



830















NLMz
18GH
413 . . . 428
AACATACAGA
413 . . . 428
AACATACA
348 . . . 351
ACAC


546 . . . 547
AC



831



GAGAATGG













(381)











GAATGG(381)
417 . . . 420
TACA











NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



836















NLMz
18GH
415 . . . 421
CATACAG
413 . . . 420
AACATACA
347 . . . 357
AACACAC


546 . . . 547
AC



841





(391)








419 . . . 420
CA
414 . . . 420
ACATACA

AGAG









NLMz
18GH
411 . . . 420
TCAACATACA
411 . . . 420
TCAACATA
351 . . . 354
CACA
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



974

(379)

CA (379)










417 . . . 420
TACA


353 . . . 354
CA
436 . . . 439
ACAG







NLMz
18GH
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
414 . . . 417
ACAT
346 . . . 352
CAACACA
429 . . . 439
TCAACACA
546 . . . 552
ACACACA



981







CAG (396)










349 . . . 352
CACA
431 . . . 441
AACACACA
546 . . . 553
ACACACAG











GAG (391)







NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
348 . . . 349
AC
430 . . . 436
CAACACA
546 . . . 553
ACACACAG



994
416 . . . 416
A




435 . . . 436
CA
551 . . . 552
CA





NLMz
18GH


414 . . . 420
ACATACA
348 . . . 351
ACAC


546 . . . 547
AC



128


417 . . . 421
TACAG
350 . . . 351
AC









NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 437
ACATACAGAG
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
349 . . . 355
CACACAG
430 . . . 436
CAACACA
546 . . . 549
ACAC



130

AATGGTGGAT













TTCC (382)












417 . . . 420
TACA
415 . . . 418
CATA











NLMz
18GH
417 . . . 418
TA
416 . . . 419
ATAC
348 . . . 353
ACACAC


546 . . . 547
AC



131


417 . . . 419
TAC
350 . . . 353
ACAC










418 . . . 419
AC











NLMz
18GH
413 . . . 419
AACATAC
414 . . . 420
ACATACA
348 . . . 351
ACAC


546 . . . 547
AC



133
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
417 . . . 420
TACA
350 . . . 351
AC










417 . . . 421
TACAG











NLMz
18GH




348 . . . 349
AC







136















NLMz
18GH
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
347 . . . 354
AACACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



216
415 . . . 418
CATA
416 . . . 419
ATAC

A


548 . . . 549
AC





NLMz
18GH
418 . . . 419
AC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC


546 . . . 549
ACAC



227















NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 420
ACATACA
352 . . . 355
ACAG
429 . . . 435
TCAACAC
546 . . . 551
ACACAC



5


415 . . . 421
CATACAG


432 . . . 435
ACAC
548 . . . 551
ACAC





NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
416 . . . 429
ATACAGAG
350 . . . 363
ACACAGA
436 . . . 439
ACAG
550 . . . 553
ACAG



6



AATGGT

GAATGGT











(389)

(393)










417 . . . 422
TACAGA
351 . . . 356
CACAGA












353 . . . 356
CAGA









NLMz
18GH
416 . . . 423
ATACAGAG
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
348 . . . 351
ACAC
433 . . . 437
CACAC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



65
418 . . . 420
ACA
417 . . . 419
TAC
350 . . . 351
AC
436 . . . 437
AC







NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 420
ACATACA
352 . . . 355
ACAG
429 . . . 435
TCAACAC
546 . . . 551
ACACAC



66


415 . . . 421
CATACAG


432 . . . 435
ACAC
548 . . . 551
ACAC





NLMz
18GH


411 . . . 420
TCAACATA


432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



69



CA (379)


436 . . . 439
ACAG







NLMz
18GH
416 . . . 423
ATACAGAG
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
348 . . . 351
ACAC
433 . . . 437
CACAC
546 . . . 549
ACAC



72
418 . . . 420
ACA
417 . . . 419
TAC
350 . . . 351
AC
436 . . . 437
AC







NLMz



414 . . . 420
ACATACA
348 . . . 351
ACAC


546 . . . 547
AC



18GH


417 . . . 421
TACAG
350 . . . 351
AC







73















NLMz
18GH


412 . . . 418
CAACATA









74















NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 419
ACATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
431 . . . 431
A
546 . . . 549
ACAC



78






434 . . . 438
ACACA
548 . . . 549
AC










435 . . . 438
CACA







NLMz
18GH


414 . . . 420
ACATACA
348 . . . 351
ACAC


546 . . . 547
AC



79


417 . . . 421
TACAG
350 . . . 351
AC









NLMz
18GH
417 . . . 420
TACA
416 . . . 421
ATACAG
348 . . . 354
ACACACA
435 . . . 447
CACAGAGA
549 . . . 552
CACA



8







(401)








417 . . . 420
TACA
350 . . . 354
ACACA

ATGGT
549 . . . 553
CACAG





NLMz
18GH
417 . . . 418
TA
416 . . . 419
ATAC
348 . . . 353
ACACAC


546 . . . 547
AC



9


418 . . . 419
AC











NLMz
18GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
431 . . . 441
AACACACA
546 . . . 549
ACAC



71







GAG (391)







NLMz
17GH
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 420
ACATACA
352 . . . 355
ACAG
429 . . . 435
TCAACAC
546 . . . 551
ACACAC



1905


415 . . . 421
CATACAG


432 . . . 435
ACAC
548 . . . 551
ACAC
















TABLE 4D







Mutant pmt alleles in oriental tobacco produced by genome editing using GET2.















PMT1b
PMT1a
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





















Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted


VARIETY
LINE
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence
Position
sequence





Katerini
18GH125
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
416 . . . 419
ATAC
348 . . . 355
ACACACAG
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC




414 . . . 418
ACATA
418 . . . 419
AC


434 . . . 435
AC







Basma
18GH203
414 . . . 417
ACAT
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
348 . . . 357
ACACACAG
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 549
ACAC









AG (392)










415 . . . 418
CATA
353 . . . 354
CA
434 . . . 435
AC







Katerini
18GH208
416 . . . 419
ATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
352 . . . 355
ACAG
432 . . . 441
ACACACAG
546 . . . 553
ACACAC











AG (392)






418 . . . 419
AC




435 . . . 438
CACA

AG





Basma
18GH341
414 . . . 417
ACAT
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
348 . . . 357
ACACACAG
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 549
ACAC









AG (392)










415 . . . 418
CATA
353 . . . 354
CA
434 . . . 435
AC







Katerini
18GH403
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 435
ACAC







Katerini
18GH414
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
430 . . . 436
CAACACA
546 . . . 547
AC




415 . . . 418
CATA













Katerini
18GH434
413 . . . 420
AACATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
351 . . . 357
CACAGAG
433 . . . 439
CACACAG
546 . . . 547
AC





A












417 . . . 420
TACA




437 . . . 438
CA







Katerini
18GH436
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
414 . . . 421
ACATACA
346 . . . 352
CAACACA
432 . . . 433
AC
546 . . . 547
AC







G


436 . . . 443
ACAGAGAA






415 . . . 416
CA




445 . . . 449
GGTGG












451 . . . 463
TTTCCATAC













ACTG (402)







Katerini
18GH437
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
433 . . . 439
CACACAG
544 . . . 553
CAACAC













ACAG













(390)






416 . . . 417
AT


435 . . . 438
CACA
551 . . . 552
CA





Katerini
18GH449
414 . . . 417
ACAT
413 . . . 419
AACATAC
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 549
ACAC




415 . . . 416
CA
418 . . . 419
AC











Katerini
18GH706
416 . . . 420
ATACA
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 439
ACACACAG
545 . . . 555
AACACA













(391)




419 . . . 420
CA




435 . . . 438
CACA

CAGAG





Katerini
18GH709
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC




417 . . . 418
TA
416 . . . 417
AT











Katerini
18GH710
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
351 . . . 354
CACA
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC








352 . . . 355
ACAG
434 . . . 435
AC







Katerini
18GH716
416 . . . 419
ATAC
417 . . . 420
TACA
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 439
ACACACAG
546 . . . 549
ACAC




418 . . . 419
AC
417 . . . 421
TACAG


435 . . . 438
CACA
548 . . . 549
AC





Katerini
18GH729
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
350 . . . 357
ACACAGAG
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC








353 . . . 354
CA









Katerini
18GH731
414 . . . 417
ACAT
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
433 . . . 433
C
544 . . . 553
CAACAC













(390)










435 . . . 439
CACAG

ACAG





Katerini
18GH752
416 . . . 419
ATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 349
AC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 549
ACAC




418 . . . 419
AC













Katerini
18GH756
416 . . . 419
ATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
353 . . . 354
CA
433 . . . 439
CACACAG
545 . . . 555
AACACA













CAGAG













(391)




416 . . . 419
ATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
353 . . . 354
CA
433 . . . 439
CACACAG
545 . . . 555
AACACA













CAGAG













(391)










437 . . . 438
CA
549 . . . 552
CACA





Katerini
18GH768
416 . . . 419
ATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 433
AC
544 . . . 550
CAACAC













A












547 . . . 550
CACA





Katerini
18GH771
416 . . . 419
ATAC
414 . . . 417
ACAT
346 . . . 352
CAACACA
432 . . . 435
ACAC
546 . . . 547
AC








349 . . . 352
CACA
434 . . . 435
AC







Katerini
18GH776
409 . . . 415
ATTCAAC
411 . . . 417
TCAACAT
348 . . . 351
ACAC
441 . . . 441
G
546 . . . 549
ACAC




418 . . . 419
AC
414 . . . 417
ACAT




548 . . . 549
AC





Katerini
18GH800
412 . . . 418
CAACATA
414 . . . 420
ACATACA
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
541 . . . 551
ATTCAAC













ACAC













(403)




415 . . . 418
CATA
416 . . . 420
ATACA




548 . . . 551
ACAC





Katerini
18GH818
414 . . . 417
ACAT
409 . . . 415
ATTCAAC
348 . . . 351
ACAC
432 . . . 435
ACAC
-
-










434 . . . 435
AC
















TABLE 4E







Mutant pmt alleles in NLM (Ph Ph) tobacco produced by genome editing using GET1.













PMT1b
PMT1a
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4



















Position

Position

Position

Position

Position


LINE
Modification
from ATG

from ATG

from ATG

from ATG

from ATG




















CS15
A-deleted
131
A-
132
A-deleted
 98
A-deleted
 98
A-del
131



T-deleted
262
inserted

T-deleted
196
T-deleted
282
















TABLE 5A







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT1b gene.


Mutant allele sequences listed here and Tables 5B to 5E


represent about 40-nucleotide-long genomic sequences from each


edited PMT gene with the edited site in the middle of the genomic


sequence (e.g., 20 nucleotides on each side of the deleted or


inserted sequence site). These mutant alleles corresponds to


those listed in Tables 4A to 4E.


PMT1b














Mutant

Reference




Deleted 
Allele

Allele




sequence
Sequence

Sequence
Reference



(SEQ ID
(SEQ
Mutant Allele
(SEQ ID
Allele


Position
No.)
ID No.)
Sequence
No.)
Sequence





131 . . . 131

A

23
TGGCATTTCCAAACACCA
201
TGGCATTTCCAAACACCAAAaCGGG








AACGGGCACCAGAATGG

CACCAGAATGGCACTT





CACTT







262 . . . 262
T
24
CCAACTCTATTAAGCCTG
202
CCAACTCTATTAAGCCTGGTtGGTTT








GTGGTTTTCAGAGTTTAG

TCAGAGTTTAGCGCA





CGCA







409 . . . 415
ATTCAAC
25
TTCTGACTTTGGATGGAG
203
TTCTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAattcaacA





CAATACAGAGAATGGTG

TACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT





GATTT







411 . . . 420
TCAACATACA
26
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCA
204
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATtcaacatac



(379)

ATGAGAATGGTGGATTTC

aGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CATA







412 . . . 418
CAACATA
27
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCA
205
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacataC





ATTCAGAGAATGGTGGA

AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





TTTCCA







412 . . . 421
CAACATACAG
28
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCA
206
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacataC



(380)

ATTAGAATGGTGGATTTC

agAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CATAC







413 . . . 419
AACATAC
29
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAA
207
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacatacA





TTCAGAGAATGGTGGATT

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





TCCAT







413 . . . 420
AACATACA
30
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAA
208
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacataca





TTCGAGAATGGTGGATTT

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CCATA







413 . . . 421
AACATACAG
31
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAA
209
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacataca





TTCAGAATGGTGGATTTC

gAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CATAC







413 . . . 428
AACATACAGAGA
32
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAA
210
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacataca



ATGG (381)

TTCTGGATTTCCATACAC

gagaatggTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





TGAAA







414 . . . 417
ACAT
33
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATT
211
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatAC





CAtACAGAGAATGGTGGA

AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC





TTTCC







414 . . . 418
ACATA
34
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATT
212
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacataCA





CACAGAGAATGGTGGAT

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





TTCCA







414 . . . 419
ACATAC
35
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATT
213
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacA





CAAGAGAATGGTGGATT

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





TCCAT







414 . . . 420
ACATACA
36
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATT
214
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacaG





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTT

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CCATA







414 . . . 437
ACATACAGAGAA
37
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATT
215
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacag



TGGTGGATTTCC

CAATACACTGAAATGATT

agaatggtggatttccATACACTGAA



(382)

GTTC

ATGATTGTTC





415 . . . 416
CA
38
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
216
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcaTACA





AATACAGAGAATGGTGG

GAGAATGGTGGATTTC





ATTTC







415 . . . 418
CATA
39
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
217
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcataCA





AACAGAGAATGGTGGAT

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





TTCCA







415 . . . 420
CATACA
40
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
218
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcatacaG





AAGAGAATGGTGGATTT

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CCATA







415 . . . 421
CATACAG
41
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
219
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcatacag





AAAGAATGGTGGATTTC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CATAC







416 . . . 416
A
42
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
220
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACaTACA





ACTACAGAGAATGGTGG

GAGAATGGTGGATTTC





ATTTC







416 . . . 418
ATA
43
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
221
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACataCAG





ACCAGAGAATGGTGGAT

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





TTCCA







416 . . . 419
ATAC
44
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
222
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacAG





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATT

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





TCCAT







416 . . . 420
ATACA
45
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
223
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacaGA





ACGAGAATGGTGGATTT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CCATA







416 . . . 421
ATACAG
46
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
224
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacagA





ACAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





ATAC







416 . . . 423
ATACAGAG
47
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
225
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacagag





ACAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





ACAC







417 . . . 418
TA
48
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
226
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtaCAGA





ACACAGAGAATGGTGGA

GAATGGTGGATTTCCA





TTTCCA







417 . . . 420
TACA
49
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
227
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtacaGA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





TCCATA







418 . . . 419
AC
50
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
228
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacAGA





CATAGAGAATGGTGGAT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





TTCCAT







418 . . . 420
ACA
51
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
229
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacaGAG





CATGAGAATGGTGGATTT

AATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CCATA







418 . . . 421
ACAG
52
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
230
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacagAG





CATAGAATGGTGGATTTC

AATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CATAC







418 . . . 423
ACAGAG
53
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
231
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacagagA





CATAATGGTGGATTTCCA

ATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





TACAC







419 . . . 420
CA
54
GGATGGAGCAATTCAAC
232
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACATAcaGAG





ATAGAGAATGGTGGATT

AATGGTGGATTTCCATA





TCCATA







427 . . . 427
G
55
CAATTCAACATACAGAG
233
CAATTCAACATACAGAGAATgGTGG





AATGTGGATTTCCATACA

ATTTCCATACACTGAA





CTGAA
















TABLE 5B







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT1a gene.


PMT1a














Mutant

Reference




Deleted
Allele

Allele




sequence
Sequence

Sequence




(SEQ ID
(SEQ ID

(SEQ ID



Position
No.)
No.)
Mutant Allele Sequence
No.)
Reference Allele Sequence















132 . . . .13

A inserted

56
GCACTTCCAAACACCAAAACa
234
GCACTTCCAAACACCAAAACGGGCA


2


GGGCACCAGAATGGCACTTT

CCAGAATGGCACTTT





409 . . . 415
ATTCAAC
57
TTCTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAA
235
TTCTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAattcaacAT





TACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT





409 . . . 420
ATTCAACA
58
TTCTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAG
236
TTCTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAattcaacatac



TACA (383)

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

aGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





411 . . . 417
TCAACAT
59
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATA
237
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATtcaacatAC





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC





411 . . . 420
TCAACATACA
60
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATG
238
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATtcaacataca



(384)

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





412 . . . 418
CAACATA
61
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
239
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacataCA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





412 . . . 421
CAACATACAG
62
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTA
240
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacatacag



(385)

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





413 . . . 419
AACATAC
63
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
241
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacatacA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





413 . . . 420
AACATACA
64
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCG
242
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacatacaG





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





413 . . . 421
AACATACAG
65
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
243
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacatacag





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





413 . . . 422
AACATACAGA
66
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCG
244
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacatacag



(386)

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

aGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





413 . . . 428
AACATA
67
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCT
245
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacatacag



CAGAG

GGATTTCCATACACTGAAA

agaatggTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA



AATGG







(387)









414 . . . 415
AC
68
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
246
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacATAC





TACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT

AGAGAATGGTGGATTT





414 . . . 417
ACAT
69
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
247
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCC





414 . . . 419
ACATAC
70
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
248
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacAG





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





414 . . . 420
ACATACA
71
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAG
249
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacaG





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





414 . . . 421
ACATACAG
72
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
250
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacagA





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





414 . . . 423
ACATA
73
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
251
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacaga



CAGAG

ATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC

gAATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC



(388)









415 . . . 415
C
74
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAA
252
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcATACA





TACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT

GAGAATGGTGGATTT





415 . . . 416
CA
75
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAT
253
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcaTACA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTC

GAGAATGGTGGATTTC





415 . . . 418
CATA
76
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC
254
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcataCAG





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





415 . . . 419
CATAC
77
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAA
255
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcatacAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





415 . . . 421
CATACAG
78
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAA
256
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcatacagA





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





416 . . . 417
AT
79
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACtA
257
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatACAGA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

GAATGGTGGATTTCC





416 . . . 419
ATAC
80
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA
258
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





416 . . . 420
ATACA
81
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACG
259
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacaGAG





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATA





416 . . . 421
ATACAG
82
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA
260
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacagAG





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





416 . . . 422
ATACAGA
83
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACG
261
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacagaG





AATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





416 . . . 429
ATACAG
84
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACG
262
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatacagaga



AGAAT

GATTTCCATACACTGAAAT

atggtGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT



GGT







(389)









417 . . . 417
T
85
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAA
263
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtACAGA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

GAATGGTGGATTTCC





417 . . . 418
TA
86
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC
264
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtaCAGA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA

GAATGGTGGATTTCCA





417 . . . 419
TAC
87
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAA
265
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtacAGAG





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

AATGGTGGATTTCCAT





417 . . . 420
TACA
88
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAG
266
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtacaGAG





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATA





417 . . . 421
TACAG
89
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAA
267
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtacagAG





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





417 . . . 422
TACAGA
90
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAG
268
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtacagaGA





AATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

ATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





417 . . . 423
TACAGAG
91
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAA
269
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtacagagA





ATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC

ATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





418 . . . 419
AC
92
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATA
270
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacAGAG





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

AATGGTGGATTTCCAT





418 . . . 421
ACAG
93
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATA
271
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacagAGA





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

ATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





418 . . . 424
ACAGAGA
94
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATA
272
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacagagaA





TGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

TGGTGGATTTCCATACACT





419 . . . 420
CA
95
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACATAG
273
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACATAcaGAGA





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

ATGGTGGATTTCCATA





419 . . . 421
CAG
96
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACATAA
274
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACATAcagAGA





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

ATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





424 . . . 425
AA
97
GAGCAATTCAACATACAGAGT
275
GAGCAATTCAACATACAGAGaaTGGT





GGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

GGATTTCCATACACTG
















TABLE 5C







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT2 gene.


PMT2














Mutant

Reference




Deleted
Allele

Allele




sequence
Sequence

Sequence




(SEQ
(SEQ ID

(SEQ ID



Position
ID No.)
No.)
Mutant Allele Sequence
No.)
Reference Allele Sequence















 98 . . . 98

A

98
TGGCACTTCCAAACACCA
276
TGGCACTTCCAAACACCAAAaCG





AACGGCCACAAGAATGGG

GCCACAAGAATGGGACTT





ACTT







196 . . . 196
T
99
CCAATTGTATTAAGCCTGG
277
CCAATTGTATTAAGCCTGGTtGG





TGGTTTTCAGAGTTTAGCG

TTTTCAGAGTTTAGCGCA





CA







346 . . . 350
CAACA
100
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAAT
278
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaac





TCACAGAGAATGGTGGAT

aCACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTC





TTC







346 . . . 352
CAACACA
101
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAAT
279
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaac





TCAGAGAATGGTGGATTTC

acaCAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





CA







346 . . . 355
CAACACACA
102
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAAT
280
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaac



G (390)

TAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

acacagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





AC

C





347 . . . 354
AACACACA
103
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATT
281
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaaca





CGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

cacaGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





ATA







347 . . . 357
AACACACAG
104
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATT
282
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaaca



AG (391)

CAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

cacagagAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





AC

AC





348 . . . 349
AC
105
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
283
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AACACAGAGAATGGTGGA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT





TTT







348 . . . 351
ACAC
106
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
284
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





AACAGAGAATGGTGGATT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC





TCC







348 . . . 352
ACACA
107
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
285
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT

aCAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





CCA







348 . . . 353
ACACAC
108
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
286
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





AAGAGAATGGTGGATTTC

acAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CAT







348 . . . 354
ACACACA
109
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
287
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

acaGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





ATA







348 . . . 355
ACACACAG
110
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
288
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





AAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

acagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





AC







348 . . . 357
ACACACAGA
111
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTC
289
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac



G (392)

AAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

acagagAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





AC

C





349 . . . 349
C
112
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
290
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcAC





AACACAGAGAATGGTGGA

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT





TTT







349 . . . 350
CA
113
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
291
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcaC





ACACAGAGAATGGTGGAT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTC





TTC







349 . . . 352
CACA
114
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
292
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcaca





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTT

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





CCA







349 . . . 355
CACACAG
115
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
293
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcaca





AAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

cagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





AC







350 . . . 351
AC
116
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
294
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacA





CACAGAGAATGGTGGATT

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC





TCC







350 . . . 353
ACAC
117
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
295
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacac





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTC

AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CAT







350 . . . 354
ACACA
118
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
296
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacac





CGAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

aGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





ATA







350 . . . 355
ACACAG
119
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
297
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacac





CAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

agAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





AC







350 . . . 357
ACACAGAG
120
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
298
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacac





CAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

agagAATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





AC







350 . . . 363
ACACAGAGA
121
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
299
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacac



ATGGT

CGGATTTCCATACACTGAA

agagaatggtGGATTTCCATACACTG



(393)

AT

AAAT





351 . . . 352
CA
122
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
300
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcaC





CACAGAGAATGGTGGATT

AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





TCCA







351 . . . 354
CACA
123
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
301
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcaca





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTC

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CATA







351 . . . 356
CACAGA
124
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
302
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcaca





CAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

gaGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





ACA







351 . . . 357
CACAGAG
125
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
303
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcaca





CAAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

gagAATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





CAC







351 . . . 362
CACAGAGAA
126
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAA
304
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcaca



TGG (394)

CATGGATTTCCATACACTG

gagaatggTGGATTTCCATACACT





AAA

GAAA





352 . . . 354
ACA
127
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC
305
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACaca





ACGAGAATGGTGGATTTC

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CATA







352 . . . 355
ACAG
128
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC
306
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACacag





ACAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





ATAC







353 . . . 354
CA
129
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACA
307
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAcaG





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CATA







353 . . . 356
CAGA
130
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACA
308
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAcaga





CAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





ACA







353 . . . 361
CAGAGAATG
131
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACA
309
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAcaga





CAGTGGATTTCCATACACT

gaatgGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA





GAA







354 . . . 359
AGAGAA
132
GATGGAGCAATTCAACAC
310
GATGGAGCAATTCAACACACagag





ACTGGTGGATTTCCATACA

aaTGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG





CTG


















TABLE 5D







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT3 gene.


PMT3













Deleted
Mutant

Reference




se-
Allele

Allele




quence
Sequence

Sequence




(SEQ
(SEQ ID

(SEQ ID



Position
ID No.)
No.)
Mutant Allele Sequence
No.)
Reference Allele Sequence





 98 . . . 98
A
133
TGGCACTTCCAAACACCAAACGGC
311
TGGCACTTCCAAACACCAAAaCGGCCA





CACCAGAATGGCACTT

CCAGAATGGCACTT





280 . . . 280
T
134
CCAACTCTATTAAGCCTGGTGGTTT
312
CCAACTCTATTAAGCCTGGTtGGTTTTC





TCAGAGTTTAGCGCA

AGAGTTTAGCGCA





413 . . . 414
CT
135
AACATATGGGAAGGTTCTGATTGG
313
AACATATGGGAAGGTTCTGActTTGGAT





ATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GGAGCAATTCAACA





418 . . . 419
GA
136
ATGGGAAGGTTCTGACTTTGTGGA
314
ATGGGAAGGTTCTGACTTTGgaTGGAGC





GCAATTCAACACACAG

AATTCAACACACAG





426 . . . 427
AA
137
GTTCTGACTTTGGATGGAGCTTCA
315
GTTCTGACTTTGGATGGAGCaaTTCAAC





ACACACAGAGAATGGT

ACACAGAGAATGGT





429 . . . 435
TCAACAC
138
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATACAG
316
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATtcaacacACA





AGAATGGTGGATTTCC

GAGAATGGTGGATTTCC





429 . . . 438
TCAACACA
139
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATGAGA
317
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATtcaacacacaG



CA (395)

ATGGTGGATTTCCATA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





429 . . . 439
TCAACACA
140
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATAGAA
318
CTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATtcaacacacag



CAG (396)

TGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





430 . . . 436
CAACACA
141
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA
319
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacacaCAG





GAATGGTGGATTTCCA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





431 . . . 431
A
142
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCACAC
320
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaACACACA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGAT

GAGAATGGTGGAT





431 . . . 432
AA
143
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCCACA
321
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaaCACACA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATT

GAGAATGGTGGATT





431 . . . 438
AACACACA
144
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCGAGA
322
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacacacaGA





ATGGTGGATTTCCATA

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





431 . . . 441
AACACACA
145
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAATG
323
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacacacagag



GAG (397)

GTGGATTTCCATACAC

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





432 . . . 433
AC
146
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC
324
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacACACAG





AGAGAATGGTGGATTT

AGAATGGTGGATTT





432 . . . 435
ACAC
147
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAG
325
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacACAGA





AGAATGGTGGATTTCC

GAATGGTGGATTTCC





432 . . . 437
ACACAC
148
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGAG
326
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacacAGA





AATGGTGGATTTCCAT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





432 . . . 439
ACACACAG
149
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGAA
327
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacacagAG





TGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





432 . . . 441
ACACACAG
150
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAATG
328
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacacagagA



AG (398)

GTGGATTTCCATACAC

ATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





432 . . . 446
ACACACAG
151
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCATGGA
329
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacacagaga



AGAATGG

TTTCCATACACTGAAA

atggTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA



(399)









432 . . . 448
ACACACAG
152
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGATT
330
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacacagaga



AGAATGGT

TCCATACACTGAAATG

atggtgGATTTCCATACACTGAAATG



G (400)









433 . . . 433
C
153
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAACAC
331
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcACACAG





AGAGAATGGTGGATTT

AGAATGGTGGATTT





433 . . . 436
CACA
154
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAGA
332
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcacaCAGAG





GAATGGTGGATTTCCA

AATGGTGGATTTCCA





433 . . . 437
CACAC
155
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAAGAG
333
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcacacAGAG





AATGGTGGATTTCCAT

AATGGTGGATTTCCAT





433 . . . 439
CACACAG
156
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAAGAA
334
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcacacagAGA





TGGTGGATTTCCATAC

ATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





434 . . . 435
AC
157
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAG
335
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacACAGAG





AGAATGGTGGATTTCC

AATGGTGGATTTCC





434 . . . 437
ACAC
158
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAGAG
336
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacacAGAG





AATGGTGGATTTCCAT

AATGGTGGATTTCCAT





434 . . . 438
ACACA
159
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACGAGA
337
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacacaGAGA





ATGGTGGATTTCCATA

ATGGTGGATTTCCATA





435 . . . 436
CA
160
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAGA
338
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcaCAGAGA





GAATGGTGGATTTCCA

ATGGTGGATTTCCA





435 . . . 438
CACA
161
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAGAGA
339
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcacaGAGA





ATGGTGGATTTCCATA

ATGGTGGATTTCCATA





435 . . . 439
CACAG
162
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAAGAA
340
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcacagAGAA





TGGTGGATTTCCATAC

TGGTGGATTTCCATAC





435 . . . 447
CACAGA
163
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAGGAT
341
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcacagagaatg



GAAT

TTCCATACACTGAAAT

gtGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT



GGT (401)









436 . . . 437
AC
164
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAGAG
342
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACacAGAGA





AATGGTGGATTTCCAT

ATGGTGGATTTCCAT





436 . . . 439
ACAG
165
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAGAA
343
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACacagAGAA





TGGTGGATTTCCATAC

TGGTGGATTTCCATAC





436 . . . 443
ACAGAGAA
166
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACTGGT
344
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACacagagaaTG





GGATTTCCATACACTG

GTGGATTTCCATACACTG





437 . . . 438
CA
167
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAGAG
345
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAcaGAGAA





AATGGTGGATTTCCATA

TGGTGGATTTCCATA





440 . . . 442
AGA
168
TGGAGCAATTCAACACACAGATGG
346
TGGAGCAATTCAACACACAGagaATGGT





TGGATTTCCATACACT

GGATTTCCATACACT





440 . . . 443
AGAA
169
TGGAGCAATTCAACACACAGTGGT
347
TGGAGCAATTCAACACACAGagaaTGGT





GGATTTCCATACACTG

GGATTTCCATACACTG





441 . . . 441
G
170
GGAGCAATTCAACACACAGAAATG
348
GGAGCAATTCAACACACAGAgAATGGT





GTGGATTTCCATACAC

GGATTTCCATACAC





445 . . . 449
GGTGG
171
CAATTCAACACACAGAGAATATTT
349
CAATTCAACACACAGAGAATggtggATTT





CCATACACTGAAATGA

CCATACACTGAAATGA





451 . . . 463
TTTCC
172
AACACACAGAGAATGGTGGAAAA
350
AACACACAGAGAATGGTGGAtttccatacact



ATACAC

TGATTGTTCATCTTCCA

gAAATGATTGTTCATCTTCCA



TG (402)




















TABLE 5E







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT4 gene.


PMT4













Deleted
Mutant

Reference




se-
Allele

Allele




quence
Sequence

Sequence




(SEQ
(SEQ ID

(SEQ ID



Position
ID No.)
No.)
Mutant Allele Sequence
No.)
Reference Allele Sequence





131 . . . 131
A
173
CGGCACTTCCAAACACCAAACG
351
CGGCACTTCCAAACACCAAAaCGGCCAC





GCCACCATAATGGCACTT

CATAATGGCACTT





541 . . . 551
ATTCAACA
174
TTTTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAAG
352
TTTTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAattcaacac



CAC (403)

GAGAATGTGGATTTCCAT

acAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





543 . . . 554
TCAACACA
175
TTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATGA
353
TTGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATtcaacacac



CAGA (404)

ATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

agaGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





544 . . . 550
CAACACA
176
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCA
354
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacacaCAG





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCA





544 . . . 553
CAACACAC
177
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTAGA
355
TGACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacacacagA



AG (405)

ATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





545 . . . 555
AACACACA
178
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAT
356
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacacacagag



GAG (406)

GGTGGATTTCCATACAC

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





545 . . . 557
AACAC
179
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCTGG
357
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacacac



ACAGA

TGGATTTCCATACACTG

agagaaTGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG



GAA (407)









546 . . . 547
AC
180
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA
358
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacACACAG





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTT

AGAATGGTGGATTT





546 . . . 549
ACAC
181
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA
359
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCC

GAATGGTGGATTTCC





546 . . . 551
ACACAC
182
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA
360
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacacAGAG





GAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

AATGGTGGATTTCCAT





546 . . . 552
ACACACA
183
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGAG
361
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacacaGAG





AATGGTGGATTTCCATA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATA





546 . . . 553
ACACACAG
184
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA
362
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacacacagAG





ATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





547 . . . 550
CACA
185
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAG
363
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcacaCAGAG





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCA

AATGGTGGATTTCCA





547 . . . 551
CACAC
186
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAAGA
364
CTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcacacAGAG





GAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

AATGGTGGATTTCCAT





548 . . . 549
AC
187
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACA
365
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacACAGAG





AGAGATGGTGGATTTCC

AATGGTGGATTTCC





548 . . . 551
ACAC
188
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAGA
366
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacacAGAGA





GAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

ATGGTGGATTTCCAT





548 . . . 552
ACACA
189
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACGAG
367
TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACacacaGAGA





AATGGTGGATTTCCATA

ATGGTGGATTTCCATA





549 . . . 552
CACA
190
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAGAG
368
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcacaGAGAA





AATGGTGGATTTCCATA

TGGTGGATTTCCATA





549 . . . 553
CACAG
191
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAAGA
369
TTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAcacagAGAA





ATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

TGGTGGATTTCCATAC





550 . . . 551
AC
192
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAGA
370
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACacAGAGAA





GAATGGTGGATTTCCAT

TGGTGGATTTCCAT





550 . . . 552
ACA
193
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACGAG
371
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACacaGAGAA





AATGGTGGATTTCCATA

TGGTGGATTTCCATA





550 . . . 553
ACAG
194
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAGA
372
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACacagAGAAT





ATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

GGTGGATTTCCATAC





550 . . . 556
ACAGAGA
195
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAT
373
TGGATGGAGCAATTCAACACacagagaATG





GGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GTGGATTTCCATACACT





551 . . . 552
CA
196
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAGA
374
GGATGGAGCAATTCAACACAcaGAGAAT





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

GGTGGATTTCCATA





554 . . . 554
A
197
TGGAGCAATTCAACACACAGGA
375
TGGAGCAATTCAACACACAGaGAATGGT





ATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

GGATTTCCATACA





558 . . . 563
TGGTGG
198
GCAATTCAACACACAGAGAAAT
376
GCAATTCAACACACAGAGAAtggtggATTT





TTCCATACACTGAAATGA

CCATACACTGAAATGA





565 . . . 566
TT
199
AACACACAGAGAATGGTGGATCC
377
AACACACAGAGAATGGTGGAttTCCATAC





ATACACTGAAATGATTG

ACTGAAATGATTG





569 . . . 572
CATA
200
CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAC
378
CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCcataCACTG





TGAAATGATTGTTCATC

AAATGATTGTTCATC









Example 3: Alkaloid Analysis of PMT Edited Lines

Genome edited tobacco plants along with controls are grown in 10″ pots in green house with 75 PPM fertilizer. At flowering stage, plants are topped and 2 weeks post topping lamina samples were collected from 3, 4, 5 leaves from top and alkaloid levels are measured (Tables 6A to 6C and 7) using a method in accordance with CORESTA Method No 62, Determination of Nicotine in Tobacco and Tobacco Products by Gas Chromatographic Analysis, February 2005, and those defined in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Protocol for Analysis of Nicotine, Total Moisture and pH in Smokeless Tobacco Products, as published in the Federal Register Vol. 64, No. 55 Mar. 23, 1999 (and as amended in Vol. 74, No. 4, Jan. 7, 2009).









TABLE 6A







Alkaloid levels in PMT edited lines in K326 (shown here and Tables


6B, 6C, and 7 as weight percentage per gram leaf lamina (dry weight))











% Alkaloids













Variety
Plant ID
Nicotine
Nornicotine
Anabasine
Anatabine
Total Alkaloids
















K326
17GH1811
1.17
0.023
0.0043
0.03
1.23


Control
17GH1822
1.63
0.032
0.0058
0.04
1.71



17GH1806
1.69
0.035
0.0058
0.04
1.76



17GH1899
1.7893
0.0395
0.0089
0.0817
1.9194



17GH1812
1.91
0.038
0.0072
0.05
2



17GH1900
2.088
0.049
0.0103
0.0916
2.239



17GH1821
2.16
0.043
0.0072
0.05
2.26



17GH1896
2.6006
0.0573
0.0098
0.0682
2.7359


K326
17GH1810
0.0013
0.019
0.0109
0.27
0.3


Edited
17GH1808
0.0044
0.014
0.0084
0.22
0.24



17GH1901
0.006
0.0448
0.0238
0.6212
0.6958



17GH1893
0.0072
0.0446
0.0265
0.6568
0.7351



17GH1804
0.0078
0.028
0.0145
0.39
0.44



17GH1902
0.008
0.037
0.0223
0.5572
0.6245



18GH4
0.0102
0.0174
0.0102
0.231
0.2688



17GH1892
0.0209
0.0131
0.0064
0.0877
0.1281
















TABLE 6B







Alkaloid levels in PMT edited lines in TN90











% Alkaloids













Variety
Plant ID
Nicotine
Nornicotine
Anabasine
Anatabine
Total Alkaloids
















TN90
17GH1838
1.88
0.042
0.0063
0.06
1.98


Control
17GH1923
2.0868
0.0619
0.0066
0.0582
2.2136



17GH1924
2.2099
0.0639
0.0071
0.0585
2.3394



17GH1718
2.29
0.056
0.0078
0.07
2.42



17GH1839
2.6
0.059
0.0083
0.08
2.74



17GH1909
2.7639
0.0863
0.0107
0.082
2.9429



17GH1910
2.9346
0.0872
0.0114
0.0951
3.1283


TN90
17GH1699
0.0011
0.032
0.0182
0.53
0.58


Edited
17GH1708
0.0014
0.033
0.0181
0.51
0.56



17GH1847
0.0016
0.031
0.019
0.55
0.6



17GH1848
0.0018
0.023
0.0135
0.38
0.42



17GH1724
0.0022
0.034
0.0186
0.53
0.59



17GH1846
0.0022
0.019
0.0126
0.37
0.41



17GH1722
0.0023
0.037
0.0196
0.56
0.62



17GH1725
0.003
0.04
0.0219
0.63
0.69



17GH1717
0.0035
0.033
0.023
0.64
0.7



17GH1719
0.0042
0.042
0.0231
0.68
0.75



17GH1845
0.0047
0.021
0.0129
0.41
0.45



17GH1943
0.007
0.0133
0.0112
0.315
0.3464



18GH47
0.0072
0.07
0.0424
0.926
1.0455



17GH1944
0.0074
0.0171
0.0131
0.3654
0.403



17GH1932
0.0074
0.0257
0.0151
0.4276
0.4758



17GH1936
0.0074
0.0837
0.0447
1.3036
1.4394



17GH1918
0.0075
0.0176
0.0142
0.4187
0.458



17GH1912
0.0078
0.0223
0.0167
0.4766
0.5234



18GH31
0.0079
0.0809
0.0411
0.9604
1.0902



18GH28
0.008
0.0649
0.0291
0.7728
0.8748



17GH1928
0.0081
0.0662
0.0369
0.9911
1.1024



17GH1933
0.0083
0.0368
0.0214
0.5853
0.6517



17GH1911
0.0088
0.0134
0.0102
0.2486
0.281
















TABLE 6C







Alkaloid levels in PMT edited lines in Narrow Leaf Madole (NLM)











% Alkaloids



















Total


Variety
Plant ID
Nicotine
Nornicotine
Anabasine
Anatabine
Alkaloids
















NLM Control
18GH126
2.0844
0.0133
0.0084
0.0674
2.1734



18GH7
3.3504
0.0173
0.016
0.1299
3.5136


NLM
18GH10
0.001
0.115
0.0392
0.99
1.14


Edited
18GH9
0.0012
0.066
0.0297
0.82
0.92



18GH6
0.0019
0.135
0.0431
1.28
1.46



18GH8
0.0022
0.166
0.0481
1.24
1.46



17GH1905
0.0032
0.145
0.0417
1.3
1.49



18GH5
0.0038
0.072
0.0262
0.82
0.92



18GH130
0.0041
0.0816
0.0306
0.7593
0.8756



18GH132
0.0044
0.0528
0.0228
0.5534
0.6335



18GH79
0.0045
0.0604
0.0197
0.5336
0.6182



18GH69
0.0069
0.062
0.0264
0.6542
0.7495



18GH71
0.007
0.0723
0.027
0.6664
0.7726



18GH131
0.0077
0.0383
0.0145
0.3684
0.4289



18GH66
0.0081
0.059
0.0247
0.6034
0.6951



18GH227
0.0086
0.0923
0.0268
0.7449
0.8726



18GH78
0.0086
0.0546
0.0239
0.575
0.662



18GH72
0.0087
0.0864
0.039
0.8708
1.0048



18GH216
0.0089
0.1574
0.047
1.0626
1.2758



18GH65
0.0094
0.0563
0.0259
0.6101
0.7018
















TABLE 7







Relative changes in individual and total alkaloid levels in quintuple pmt knock-out


mutants in various varieties. Average percent levels of individual and total alkaloids are


calculated based on percent level data from individual lines as shown in Tables 6A to 6C.


Relative changes reflect the individual or total alkaloid level in a quintuple pmt mutant


relative to its control.

















Total



Nicotine
Nornicotine
Anabasine
Anatabine
Alkaloids





K326 Control
1.880
0.040
0.007
0.056
1.982


K326 quintuple pmt
0.008
0.027
0.015
0.379
0.429


mutant







Relative change
0.44%
 68.78%
207.42%
671.96%
21.65%


TN90 Control
2.395
0.065
0.008
0.072
2.538


TN90 quintuple pmt
0.005
0.037
0.022
0.590
0.655


mutant







Relative change
0.22%
 57.15%
259.69%
820.44%
25.80%


NLM Control
2.717
0.015
0.012
0.099
2.844


NLM quintuple pmt
0.006
0.087
0.031
0.803
0.927


mutant







Relative change
0.20%
570.95%
253.32%
813.88%
32.59%









Briefly, approximately 0.5 g of tobacco is extracted using liquid/liquid extraction into an organic solvent containing an internal standard and analyzed by gas chromatography (GC) with flame ionization detection (FID). Results can be reported as weight percent (Wt %) on either an as is or dry weight basis. Reporting data on a dry weight basis requires an oven volatiles (OV) determination. Unless specified otherwise, total or individual alkaloid levels or nicotine levels shown herein are on a dry weight basis (e.g., percent total alkaloid or percent nicotine).


Plants are also planted in the field, harvested, and tested for alkaloids and TSNA levels in cured tobacco; leaf yield and leaf grade are also assessed for PMT edited plants. See FIGS. 16-39. In FIGS. 16-39, four biological replicates are averaged for each line, and error bars represent one standard deviation. Percentages shown are per gram of dried lamina tissue. Further, different mutant combinations of individual PMT genes are generated and tested (e.g., single, double, triple, or quadruple mutants).


Example 4: Comparing a Quintuple Pmt Knock-Out Mutant with Other Low-Alkaloid Tobacco Plants

A quintuple pmt knock-out mutant line CS15 (see Table 4E for genotype, in the NLM (Ph Ph) background) is grown side by side with a PMT RNAi transgenic line (in the VA359 background, as described in US 2015/0322451) and a low-nicotine KY171 (“LN KY171”) variety (the KY 171 background harboring nic1 and nic2 double mutations). Leaves are harvested and cured via a dark fire curing method. Each line is analyzed for various individual and total alkaloid level, individual and total TSNA level, leaf yield, and leaf quality (FIGS. 2 to 13). The data shows that suppressing PMT gene activity by editing all five PMT genes reduces nicotine level without comprising leaf yield or quality.


Example 5: Obtaining Tobacco Lines with Edited Mutant Alleles in One or More PMT Genes

Tobacco lines with mutations in individual PMT genes or selected combinations of PMT genes are obtained from the tobacco lines listed in Table 3. Crossing a quintuple, quadruple, triple, or double mutant (having mutations in five, four, three, or two PMT genes, respectively) to a non-mutated control line and selecting segregating progeny plants for specific PMT mutation combinations. Tables 8A to 8E represents possible mutant combinations being obtained. Each mutated gene can be either homozygous or heterozygous for the mutation. Each of the mutant alleles listed in Tables 4A to 4E and Table 10 can be used to generate single, double, triple, quintuple, or quadruple mutants. Exemplary individual pmt mutant alleles are listed in Tables 12A to 12E.


Example 6: Further Reduction of Total Alkaloids by Combining Pmt Mutations with Mutations in Other Genes

To further reduce total alkaloids and/or selected individual alkaloids, pmt mutants are combined with mutations in additional genes related to alkaloid biosynthesis in tobacco, such as quinolate phosphoribosyl transferase (QPT) or quinolinate synthase (QS). Briefly, gene editing is used to mutant selected QPT and/or QS genes in a desired pmt mutant background (e.g., a quadruple or quintuple pmt mutant). In the resulting combined qpt/pmt or qs/pmt mutants, alkaloids and TSNA levels are tested in cured tobacco. Both leaf yield and leaf grade are also assessed.









TABLE 8A







A list of mutants obtained with various genotypic combinations for


five PMT genes: single gene mutations













PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





1
Mutant
WT
WT
WT
WT


2
WT
Mutant
WT
WT
WT


3
WT
WT
Mutant
WT
WT


4
WT
WT
WT
Mutant
WT


5
WT
WT
WT
WT
Mutant
















TABLE 8B







A list of mutants obtained with various genotypic combinations for


five PMT genes: double gene mutations













PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4















1
Mutant
Mutant
WT
WT
WT


2
Mutant
WT
Mutant
WT
WT


3
Mutant
WT
WT
Mutant
WT


4
Mutant
WT
WT
WT
Mutant


5
WT
Mutant
Mutant
WT
WT


6
WT
Mutant
WT
Mutant
WT


7
WT
Mutant
WT
WT
Mutant


8
WT
WT
Mutant
Mutant
WT


9
WT
WT
Mutant
WT
Mutant


10
WT
WT
WT
Mutant
Mutant
















TABLE 8C







A list of mutants obtained with various genotypic combinations for


five PMT genes: triple gene combinations













PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4















1
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant
WT
WT


2
Mutant
Mutant
WT
Mutant
WT


3
Mutant
Mutant
WT
WT
Mutant


4
Mutant
WT
Mutant
Mutant
WT


5
Mutant
WT
Mutant
WT
Mutant


6
Mutant
WT
WT
Mutant
Mutant


7
WT
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant
WT


8
WT
Mutant
Mutant
WT
Mutant


9
WT
WT
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant


10
WT
Mutant
Mutant
WT
Mutant
















TABLE 8D







A list of mutants obtained with various genotypic combinations for


five PMT genes: quadruple gene combinations













PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





1
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant
WT


2
WT
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant


3
Mutant
WT
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant


4
Mutant
Mutant
WT
Mutant
Mutant


5
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant
WT
Mutant
















TABLE 8E







A list of mutants obtained with various genotypic combinations for


five PMT genes: quintuple gene combinations













PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





1
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant
Mutant









Example 7: PMT Genome Editing and Tobacco Line Development

Additional PMT knockout mutants are produced by editing all five PMT genes (PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4) in different tobacco lines. Tobacco protoplasts are transfected using polyethylene glycol (PEG) with plasmids encoding a a genome editing technology (GET2) protein and specific guide RNAs (gRNAs) targeting PMT genes at desired positions. Table 9 lists gRNA sequences used for PMT editing. Some gRNAs (e.g., Nos. 6 and 7) are pooled together for targeting multiple PMT genes in a single transfection.


Table 9: Guide RNAs for GET2 used in Example 7. “Y” indicates that a gRNA is capable of targeting that PMT gene, while “-” represents that a gRNA does not target that PMT gene.









TABLE 9







Guide RNAs for GET2 used in Example 7. “Y” indi-


cates that a gRNA is capable of targeting that


PMT gene, while “—” represents that a gRNA does


not target that PMT gene.












gRNA Sequence
PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4





GATGGAGCAATTCAACATACAGA
Y
Y





(SEQ ID NO: 730)










GATGGAGCAATTCAACACACAGA


Y
Y
Y


(SEQ ID NO: 731)









Transfected protoplasts are then immobilized in 1% agarose bead and subjected to tissue culture. When calli grow up to ˜1 mm in diameter, they are spread on TOM2 plates. Calli are screened for insertions or deletions (indels) at the target positions using fragment analysis. Candidates, showing size shifts compared to wildtype control, are selected for further culture and the consequent shoots are tested by fragment analysis again to confirm the presence of indels. Rooted shoots are potted and sequenced for the target positions to determine the exact sequences deleted. Young leaf from each plant is harvested and PCR amplified for PMT fragments using phirekit. PMT Libraries for each line is indexed and 384 lines are pooled and sequenced using Miseq.


SNP analysis is carried out to determine both the exact edited pmt mutant allele sequences and the zygosity state at each PMT gene locus. Table 10 provides indels sequence information in each edited line of various tobacco varieties (e.g., Basma, K326, Katerini, TN90, Izmir).









TABLE 10







Mutant pint alleles in various lines produced by genome editing using GET2.


The position of each edited site (e.g., indels) is relative to the


nucleotide number on the corresponding cDNA sequence of each PMT


gene (e.g., SEQ ID NO: 6 for PMT1a′, SEQ ID NO: 7 for PMT1b′,


SEQ ID NO: 8 for PMT2′, SEQ ID NO: 9 for PMT3′, SEQ ID NO: 10


for PMT4). SEQ ID Numbers are assigned and shown for sequences


of more than 10 nucleotides.















PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4




















Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted

Deleted



Genotype
Line
Sequence
Position
Sequence
Position
Sequence
Position
Sequence
Position
Sequence
Position





BASMA
CS107
CAACAT
412 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .




A
418

417

349

435

549





BASMA
CS106
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .





417

417

349

435

549





K326
CS115
TCAAC
411 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
CAC
433 . . .
ACACA
548 . . .




ATACA
420

417

349
AC
437

552




(SEQ













ID NO:













379)














K326
18GH
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
ACACAC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
ACACA
548 . . .



2162

417

417
AG
355

433

552





K326
CS111
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
CACAC
547 . . .





417

417

349

435

551





K326
CS112
CATACA
415 . . .
AC
418 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
CACAC
547 . . .




G
421

419

349

435

551





K326
17GH
CATACA
415 . . .
AC
418 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .



1678-
G
421

419

349

435

549



60















K326
CS131
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAC
348 . . .
AACAC
431 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .





417

417

351
ACAG
439

549





KATERINI
CS164
AT
416 . . .
CAACAT
412 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
AC
546 . . .





417
A
418

349

435

547





KATERINI
CS163
ACAT
414 . . .
AT
416 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
AC
546 . . .





417

417

349

435

547





KATERINI
CS146
GAGCAA
404 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
CAAC
430 . . .
AC
546 . . .




TTCAACA
422

417

349
ACA
436

547




TACAGA













(SEQ ID













NO: 408)














KATERINI
CS147
ACAT
414 . . .
CAACAT
412 . . .
AC
348 . . .
CAAC
430 . . .
AC
546 . . .





417
A
418

349
ACA
436

547





KATERINI
CS150
AT
416 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
CACA
433 . . .
AC
546 . . .





417

417

349
CAG
439

547





KATERINI
CS151
AT
416 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
CAACAC
544 . . .





417

417

349

435
ACAG
553












(SEQ ID













NO: 390)






KATERINI
CS148
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
CACA
433 . . .
AC
546 . . .





417

417

349
CAG
439

547





KATERINI
CS149
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
CAACAC
544 . . .





417

417

349

435
ACAG
553












(SEQ ID













NO: 390)






KATERINI
CS152
AC
418 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .





419

417

349

435

549





KATERINI
CS153
CAACAT
412 . . .
AC
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .




A
418

415

349

435

549





KATERINI
CS102
ACAT
414 . . .
AACAT
413 . . .
ACACAC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
AC
546 . . .





417

417
AG
355

433

547





KATERINI
CS103
AC
418 . . .
CAACAT
412 . . .
ACACAC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
AC
546 . . .





419
A
418
AG
355

433

547





TN90
CS143
TACA
417 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .




GAG
423

417

349

433

549





TN90
18GH
AC
418 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
AC
546 . . .



2169

419

417

351

435

547





TN90
CS120
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAG
418 . . .
ACAC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
AC
546 . . .





417

421

351

433

547





TN90
17GH
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
ACAG
436 . . .
AC
546 . . .



1698-

417

417

349

439

547



22















TN90
17GH
ACAT
414 . . .
AACAT
413 . . .
AC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .



1700-

417

417

349

433

549



13















TN90
17GH
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
CACAG
549 . . .



1702-

417

417

349

433

553



17















TN90
18GH
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAC
348 . . .
CAAC
430 . . .
AC
546 . . .



2171

417

417

351
ACA
436

547





TN90
CS165
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .





417

417

351

435

549





TN90
CS118
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
AC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
ACAC
546 . . .





417

417

349

433

549





TN90
CS133
GGAGCA
403 . . .
CAACAT
412 . . .
ACAC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
AC
546 . . .




ATTCAAC
415
ACAG
421

351

433

547




(SEQ ID

(SEQ ID











NO: 409)

NO: 380)












TN90
17GH
CA
415 . . .
ACAT
414 . . .
ACAC
348 . . .
AC
432 . . .
AC
546 . . .



1737-

416

417

351

433

547



24















IZMIR
18GH
CAAC
412 . . .
ATAGAG
416 . . .
ACAC
348 . . .
ACAC
432 . . .
ACACAC
546 . . .



2254-
ATA
418
AA
417

351

435
AG
553



7



&













420 . . .













425









Table 11 provides the length (in nucleotides) of each PMT indel for each gene in each line as provided in Table 10.









TABLE 11







The length (in nucleotides) of each indel for selected lines provided in Table 10.














Genotype
Line
Seed Ids
PMT1a
PMT1b
PMT2
PMT3
PMT4

















BASMA
CS107
CS107
7
4
2
4
4


BASMA
CS106
CS106
4
4
2
4
4


K326
CS115
CS115
10
4
2
5
5


K326
17GH1809-13
18GH2162
4
4
8
2
5


K326
CS111
CS111
4
4
2
4
5


K326
CS112
CS112
7
2
2
4
5


K326
17GH1678-60
17GH1678-60
7
2
2
4
4


K326
CS131
CS131
4
4
4
9
4


KATERINI
18GH709-01
CS164
2
7
2
4
2


KATERINI
18GH709-08
CS163
4
2
2
4
2


KATERINI
18GH414-11
CS146
19
4
2
7
2


KATERINI
18GH414-19
CS147
4
7
2
7
2


KATERINI
18GH437-04
CS150
2
4
2
7
2


KATERINI
18GH437-08
CS151
2
4
2
4
10


KATERINI
18GH437-32
CS148
4
4
2
7
2


KATERINI
18GH437-39
CS149
4
4
2
4
10


KATERINI
18GH449-26
CS152
2
4
2
4
4


KATERINI
18GH449-33
CS153
7
2
2
4
4


KATERINI
18GH125-48
CS162
2
7
8
2
2


KATERINI
CS102
CS102
4
5
8
2
2


KATERINI
CS103
CS103
2
7
8
2
2


TN90
17GH1719-30
CS143
7
4
2
2
4


TN90
17GH1740-36
18GH2169
2
4
4
4
2


TN90
17GH1698-22
17GH1698-22
4
4
2
4
2


TN90
17GH1700-13
17GH1700-13
4
5
2
2
4


TN90
17GH1702-17
17GH1702-17
4
4
2
2
5


TN90
17GH1849-01
18GH2171
4
4
4
7
2


TN90
17GH1849-48
CS165
4
4
4
4
4


TN90
17GH1737-24
17GH1737-24
2
4
4
2
2


TN90
CS118
CS118
4
4
2
2
4


TN90
CS133
CS133
13
10
4
2
2


TN90
CS120
CS120
4
4
4
2
2


IZMIR
18GH1108-07
18GH2254-7
7
8
4
4
8









Tables 12A to 12E provide genomic sequences of approximately 90 nucleotides from each pmt mutant allele with the edited site in the middle of the genomic sequence (e.g., 45 nucleotides on each side of the deleted or inserted sequence site).









TABLE 12A







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT1a gene. Mutant allele sequences listed here represent approximately 90-nucleotide-


long genomic sequences from each edited PMT1a gene with the edited site in the middle of the genomic sequence (e.g., 45 nucleotides on each side of the


deleted sequence site). The mutant allele corresponds to the indel provided for each line in Table 10. The lowercase letters in the reference allele sequence


(SEQ ID NO: 6) denote which nucleotides are deleted in the mutant allele.















Mutant

Reference





Allele

 Allele





SEQ ID

SEQ ID


Genotype
Line
Mutant Allele Sequence
NO.
Reference Allele Sequence
NO.





BASMA
CS107
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
410
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
442




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGAG

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacaGAG





AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT





ATGATTGTTCATCTA

GATTGTTCATCTA









BASMA
CS106
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
411
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
443




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









K326
CS115
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
412
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
444




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATGAGAAT

TTTGGATGGAGCAATtcaacatacaGAGA





GGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAATG

ATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAATG





ATTGTTCATCTA

ATTGTTCATCTA









K326
18GH2162
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
413
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
445




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









K326
CS111
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
414
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
446




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









K326
CS112
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
415
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
447




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAAG

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcatacagAG





AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT





ATGATTGTTCATCTA

GATTGTTCATCTATCAAAGAATGG









K326
17GH1678-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
416
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
448



60
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAAG

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcatacagAG





AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT





ATGATTGTTCATCTA

GATTGTTCATCTATCAAAGAATGG









K326
CS131
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
417
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
449




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS164
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
418
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
450




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatACAG





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ATGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS163
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
419
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
451




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS146
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
420
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
452




ACTTTGGATGGAATGGTGGATTTC

TTTGGATGGAgcaattcaacatacaga





CATACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATC

gaATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT





TA

GATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS147
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
421
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
453




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS150
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
422
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
454




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatACAG





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ATGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS151
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
423
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
455




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACatACAG





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ATGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS148
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
424
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
456




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS149
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
425
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
457




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS152
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
426
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
458




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAT

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacAG





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ATGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS153
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
427
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
459




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGAG

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacaGAG





AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT





ATGATTGTTCATCTA

GATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS102
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
428
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
460




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









KATERINI
CS103
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
429
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
461




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAT

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacAG





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ATGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
CS143
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
430
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
462




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAtacagag





AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT





ATGATTGTTCATCTA

GATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
18GH2169
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
431
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
463




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAT

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACATacAG





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ATGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
CS120
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
432
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
464




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
17GH1698-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
433
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
465



22
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
17GH1700-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
434
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
466



13
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
17GH1702-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
435
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
467



17
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
18GH2171
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
436
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
468




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
CS165
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
437
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
469




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
CS118
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
438
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
470




ACTTTGGATATACAGAGAATGGT

TTTGGATggagcaattcaacATACAGA





GGATTTCCATACACTGAAATGATT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT





GTTCATCTA

GATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
CS113
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
439
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
471




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatACAGA





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGATTGTTCATCTA









TN90
17GH1737-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
440
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
472



24
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAATAC

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcaTACAG





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ATGATTGTTCATCTA









IZMIR
18GH2254-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
441
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTGAC
473



7
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGAG

TTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatacaGAG





AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAA

AATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAAT





ATGATTGTTCATCTA

GATTGTTCATCTA
















TABLE 12B







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT1b gene. Mutant allele sequences


listed here represent approximately 90-nucleotide-long genomic sequences


from each edited PMT1b gene with the edited site in the middle of the


genomic sequence (e.g., 45 nucleotides on each side of the


deleted sequence site). The mutant allele corresponds to the indel


provided for each line in Table 10. The lowercase letters in the


reference allele sequence (SEQ ID NO: 7) denote


which nucleotides are deleted in the mutant allele.















Mutant

Reference 





Allele

Allele


Geno-

Mutant Allele
SEQ ID

SEQ ID


type
Line
Sequence
NO.
Reference Allele Sequence
NO.





BASMA
CS107
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
474
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
506




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






BASMA
CS106
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
475
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
507




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






K326
CS115
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
476
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
508




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






K326
18GH2162
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
477
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
509




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






K326
CS111
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
478
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
510




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






K326
CS112
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
479
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
511




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAT





ATAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

acAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






K326
17GH1678-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
480
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
512



60
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAT





ATAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

acAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






K326
CS131
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
481
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
513




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS164
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
482
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
514




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatac





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

aGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





AAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS163
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
483
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
515




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACat





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS146
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
484
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
516




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS147
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
485
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
517




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatac





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

aGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





AAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS150
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
486
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
518




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS151
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
487
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
519




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS148
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
488
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
520




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS149
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
489
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
521




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS152
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
490
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
522




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS153
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
491
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
523




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAT

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcaT





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS102
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
492
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
524




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCACA

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacataC





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC

AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





TGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






KATERINI
CS103
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
493
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
525




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatac





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

aGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





AAATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
CS143
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
494
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
526




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
18GH2169
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
495
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
527




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
CS120
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
496
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
528




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAT





ATAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

acagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
17GH1698-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
497
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
529



22
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
17GH1700-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
498
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
530



13
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacataC





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACAC

AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





TGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
17GH1702-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
499
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
531



17
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
18GH2171
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
500
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
532




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
CS165
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
501
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
533




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
CS118
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
502
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
534




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTAGAA

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacataca





TGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA

gAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT





TGATTGTTCATCTA

GAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
CS113
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
503
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
535




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAT





ATAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

acagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






TN90
17GH1737-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
504
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
536



24
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacatA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA






IZMIR
18GH2254-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
505
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
537



7
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAcata





ACTGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGA

cagagACTGGTGGATTTCCATACAC





AATGATTGTTCATCTA

TGAAATGATTGTTCATCTA
















TABLE 12C







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT2 gene.


Mutant allele sequences listed here represent approximately


90-nucleotide-long genomic sequences from each


edited PMT2 gene with the edited site in the middle of


the genomic sequence (e.g., 45 nucleotides on each side


of the deleted sequence site). The mutant allele


corresponds to the indel provided for each line in


Table 10. The lowercase letters in the reference allele


sequence (SEQ ID NO: 8) denote which nucleotides


are deleted in the mutant allele.















Mutant

Reference 





Allele

Allele





SEQ ID

SEQ ID


Genotype
Line
Mutant Allele Sequence
NO.
Reference Allele Sequence
NO.





BASMA
CS107
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
538
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
570




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






BASMA
CS106
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
539
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
571




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS115
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
540
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
572




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
18GH2162
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
541
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
573




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





ATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA

cacagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





TGATTGTTCATCTT

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS111
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
542
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
574




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS112
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
543
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
575




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
17GH1678-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
544
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
576



60
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS131
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
545
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
577




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS164
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
546
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
578




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS163
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
547
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
579




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS146
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
548
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
580




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS147
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
549
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
581




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS150
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
550
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
582




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS151
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
551
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
583




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS148
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
552
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
584




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS149
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
553
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
585




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS152
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
554
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
586




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS153
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
555
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
587




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS102
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
556
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
588




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





ATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA

cacagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





TGATTGTTCATCTT

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS103
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
557
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
589




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





ATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA

cacagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





TGATTGTTCATCTT

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS143
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
558
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
590




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
18GH2169
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
559
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
591




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS120
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
560
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
592




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1698-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
561
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
593



22
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1700-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
562
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
594



13
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1702-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
563
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
595



17
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





CAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
18GH2171
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
564
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
596




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS165
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
565
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
597




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS118
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
566
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
598




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS113
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
567
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
599




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1737-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
568
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
600



24
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






IZMIR
18GH2254-
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCTG
569
TCAGCAACTTATGGGAAGGTTCT
601



7
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT
















TABLE 12D







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT3 gene. Mutant allele


sequences listed here represent approximately 90-nucleotide-long


genomic sequences from each edited PMT3 gene with the edited site in the


deleted middle of the genomic sequence (e.g., 45 nucleotides on each side of the


sequence site). The mutant allele corresponds to the indel provided for each


 line in Table 10. The lowercase letters in the reference allele sequence (SEQ ID


NO: 9) denote which nucleotides are deleted in the mutant allele.















Mutant

Reference





Allele

Allele





SEQ ID
Reference Allele
SEQ ID


Genotype
Line
Mutant Allele Sequence
NO.
Sequence
NO.





BASMA
CS107
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
602
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
634




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






BASMA
CS106
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
603
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
635




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS115
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
604
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
636




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

acacAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





GCTAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
18GH2162
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
605
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
637




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS111
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
606
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
638




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS112
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
607
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
639




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
17GH1678-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
608
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
640



60
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS131
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
609
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
641




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCaacac





ATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA

acagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





TGATTGTTCATCTT

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS164
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
610
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
642




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS163
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
611
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
643




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS146
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
612
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
644




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacac





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGA

aCAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





AATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS147
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
613
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
645




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacac





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGA

aCAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





AATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS150
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
614
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
646




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAca





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGA

cacagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





AATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS151
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
615
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
647




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS148
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
616
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
648




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAca





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGA

cacagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





AATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS149
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
617
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
649




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS152
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
618
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
650




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS153
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
619
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
651




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS102
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
620
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
652




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS103
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
621
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
653




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS143
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
622
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
654




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
18GH2169
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
623
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
655




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS120
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
624
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
656




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1698-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
625
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
657



22
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

ACacagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1700-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
626
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
658



13
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1702-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
627
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
659



17
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
18GH2171
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
628
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
660




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacac





GAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGA

aCAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





AATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS165
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
629
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
661




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS118
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
630
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
662




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS113
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
631
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
663




GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1737-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
632
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
664



24
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






IZMIR
18GH2254-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
633
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTCT
665



7
GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAaca





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

cACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT
















TABLE 12E







A list of exemplary mutant alleles obtained in the PMT4 gene.


Mutant allele sequences listed here represent approximately


90-nucleotide-long genomic sequences from each edited


PMT4 gene with the edited site in the middle of the genomic


sequence (e.g., 45 nucleotides on each side of the deleted


sequence site). The mutant allele corresponds to the indel


provided for each line in Table 10. The lowercase letters


in the reference allele sequence (SEQ ID NO: 10)


denote which nucleotides are deleted in the mutant allele.















Mutant

Reference





Allele

Allele





SEQ
Reference Allele
SEQ ID


Genotype
Line
Mutant Allele Sequence
ID NO.
Sequence
NO.





BASMA
CS107
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
666
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
698




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






BASMA
CS106
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
667
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
699




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS115
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
668
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
700




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACG

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACa





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

cacaGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





AAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
18GH2162
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
669
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
701




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACG

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACa





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

cacaGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATAC





AAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS111
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
670
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
702




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAAG

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACa





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

cacAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





AAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS112
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
671
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
703




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAAG

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAca





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

cacAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





AAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
17GH1678-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
672
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
704



60
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






K326
CS131
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
673
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
705




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS164
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
674
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
706




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS163
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
675
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
707




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS146
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
676
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
708




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS147
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
677
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
709




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS150
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
678
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
710




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS151
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
679
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
711




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTAGAAT

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacaca





GGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAATG

cagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





ATTGTTCATCTT

CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS148
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
680
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
712




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS149
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
681
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
713




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTAGAAT

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTcaacaca





GGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAATG

cagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





ATTGTTCATCTT

CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS152
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
682
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
714




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS153
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
683
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
715




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS102
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
684
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
716




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






KATERINI
CS103
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
685
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
717




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS143
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
686
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
718




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
18GH2169
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
687
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
719




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS120
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
688
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
720




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1698-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
689
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
721



22
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1700-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
690
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
722



13
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1702-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
691
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
723



17
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAC





AGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTG

AcacagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





AAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
18GH2171
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
692
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
724




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS165
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
693
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
725




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





GAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACACT

ACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATA





GAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

CACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS118
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
694
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
726




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
CS113
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
695
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
727




ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






TN90
17GH1737-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
696
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
728



24
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAACAC

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacA





AGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA

CACAGAGAATGGTGGATTTCCAT





CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT

ACACTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT






IZMIR
18GH2254-
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTTG
697
TCAGCAACATATGGGAAGGTTTT
729



7
ACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAAGA

GACTTTGGATGGAGCAATTCAacac





ATGGTGGATTTCCATACACTGAAA

acagAGAATGGTGGATTTCCATACA





TGATTGTTCATCTT

CTGAAATGATTGTTCATCTT









Example 8. Alkaloid Analysis of PMT Edited Lines

Homozygous genome edited tobacco lines from Example 7, along with control lines, are grown in in a field. At flowering stage, plants are topped and two-weeks post topping, lamina samples are collected from the third, fourth, and fifth leaves from the top of the plant and alkaloid levels are measured (see Tables 13A-13C) using a method in accordance with CORESTA Method No 62, Determination of Nicotine in Tobacco and Tobacco Products by Gas Chromatographic Analysis, February 2005, and those defined in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Protocol for Analysis of Nicotine, Total Moisture and pH in Smokeless Tobacco Products, as published in the Federal Register Vol. 64, No. 55 Mar. 23, 1999 (and as amended in Vol. 74, No. 4, Jan. 7, 2009).


Approximately 0.5 g of tobacco is extracted using liquid/liquid extraction into an organic solvent containing an internal standard and analyzed by gas chromatography (GC) with flame ionization detection (FID). Results can be reported as weight percent (Wt %) on either on as is or dry weight basis. Reporting data on a dry weight basis requires an oven volatiles (OV) determination. Unless specified otherwise, total or individual alkaloid levels or nicotine levels shown herein are on a dry weight basis (e.g., percent total alkaloid or percent nicotine).


Plants are also planted in the field, harvested, and tested for alkaloids and TSNA levels in cured tobacco. Both leaf yield and leaf grade are also assessed for PMT edited plants.









TABLE 13A







Nicotine analysis of K326 and TN90 PMT edited lines after


two weeks after flowering.















Nicotine



Variety
Line
Replicate
(mg/g tissue)
















K 326
CS111
1
0.023





2
0.024




CS131
1
0.022





2
0.018





3
0.021




CS115
1
0.023





2
0.015




Control
1
16.8





2
17.2





3
16.6



TN 90 LC
CS116
1
0.029





2
0.022




CS133
1
0.016





2
0.018




CS135
1
0.027





2
0.031




CS120
1
0.022





2
0.045




CS137
1
0.07





2
0.048




Control
1
29.5





2
29.8





3
24.2

















TABLE 13C







Nicotine analysis of Katerini and Basma PMT edited lines after


two-weeks after flowering.













Nicotine


Variety
Group
Replicate
(mg/g tissue)













Katerini
CS102
1
0.032




2
0.028



CS103
1
0.017



Control
1
26.109




2
26.466




3
27.091


Basma
CS107
1
0.029



CS108
1
0.014




2
0.018



Control
1
21.979




2
20.88




3
23.499









Example 9. Development of Male Sterile PMT Edited Lines

PMT edited hybrid lines are developed using the lines from Example 7. Hybrid lines are grown in the field and used as progenitors for male sterile lines. See Table 14.









TABLE 14







PMT edited very low nicotine male sterile lines












Pollen source
F1 hybrid seed



Male Sterile Variety
(line)
(line)







MS Katerini
CS102
dCS11




CS103
dCS12



MS Basma
CS106
dCS13




CS107
dCS14



MS K326
CS111
dCS15




CS115
dCS16



MS TN90
CS118
dCS17




CS120
dCS18



MS Izmir
18GH2254
dS2697










Example 10. PMT Edited Lines Resist Mold During Curing

Tobacco leaf harvested from several low alkaloid tobacco lines is subjected to standard air curing practices. The tobacco leaves are examined for mold after the completion of curing.


Tobacco from the LA BU 21exhibits more mold infestation than TN90 LC, a TN90 variety comprising an RNAi construct to downregulate all five PMT genes, a TN90 variety comprising an RNAi construct to downregulate the alkaloid biosynthesis gene PR50, and four PMT edited lines (CS47, CS59, CS63, and CS64) in a TN90 genetic background. See Table 15 and FIGS. 14A to 14E and 15.









TABLE 15







Mold damage exhibited by tobacco lines. “G” refers to little/no mold; “S” refers


to some mold; and “B” refers to significant mold. Percentage of Mold refers to


the percentage of air cured sticks of tobacco exhibited each category of mold damage.











Percentage of Mold












Mold Rating
Significant
Some
Little/














Variety
Replicate 1
Replicate 2
Replicate 3
Replicate 4
Mold
Mold
No Mold

























TN90 LC
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
0%
0%
100%


LA BU 21
G
S
G
B
S
G
S
S
S
B
S
S
17% 
58% 
 25%


TN90 (PMT RNAi)
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
0%
0%
100%


TN90 (PR50 RNai)
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
0%
0%
100%


CS47
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
0%
0%
100%


CS59
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
0%
0%
100%


CS63
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
0%
0%
100%


CS64
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
S
S
G
0%
17% 
 83%
















TABLE 16





Flue-cured Tobacco Varieties

















400 (TC 225)
K 346
Reams 134


401 (TC 226)
K 346 (TC 569)
Reams 158


401 Cherry Red (TC 227)
K 358
Reams 713


401 Cherry Red Free (TC
K 394 (TC 321)
Reams 744


228)
K 399
Reams M1


Cash (TC 250)
K 399 (TC 322)
RG 11 (TC 600)


Cash (TI278)
K 730
RG 13 (TC 601)


CC 101
Lonibow (TI 1573)
RG 17 (TC 627)


CC 1063
Lonibow (TI 1613)
RG 22 (TC 584)


CC 13
McNair 10 (TC 330)
RG 8 (TC 585)


CC 143
McNair 135 (TC 337)
RG 81 (TC618)


CC 200
McNair 30 (TC 334)
RGH 51


CC 27
McNair 373 (TC 338)
RG4H 217


CC 301
McNair 944 (TC 339)
RGH 12


CC 33
MK94 (TI 1512)
RGH 4


CC 35
MS K 326
RGH 51


CC 37
MS NC 71
RGH 61


CC 400
MS NC 72
SC 58 (TC 400)


CC 500
NC 100
SC 72 (TC 403)


CC 600
NC 102
Sp. G-168


CC 65
NC 1071 (TC 364)
SPEIGHT 168


CC 67
NC 1125-2
Speight 168 (TC 633)


CC 700
NC 12 (TC 346)
Speight 172 (TC 634)


CC 800
NC 1226
Speight 178


CC 900
NC 196
Speight 179


Coker 139 (TC 259)
NC 2326 (TC 365)
Speight 190


Coker 139 yb1, yb2
NC 27 NF (TC 349)
Speight 196


Coker 140 (TC 260)
NC 291
SPEIGHT 220


Coker 176 (TC 262)
NC 297
SPEIGHT 225


Coker 187 (TC 263)
NC 299
SPEIGHT 227


Coker 187-Hicks (TC 265)
NC 37 NF (TC 350)
SPEIGHT 236


Coker 209 (TC 267)
NC 471
Speight G-10 (TC 416)


Coker 258 (TC 270)
NC 55
Speight G-102


Coker 298 (TC 272)
NC 567 (TC 362)
Speight G-108


Coker 316 (TC 273)
NC 60 (TC 352)
Speight G-111


Coker 319 (TC 274)
NC 606
Speight G-117


Coker 347 (TC 275)
NC 6140
Speight G-126


Coker 371-Gold (TC 276)
NC71
Speight G-15 (TC418)


Coker 411 (TC 277)
NC 72
Speight G-23


Coker 48 (TC 253)
NC 729 (TC 557)
Speight G-28 (TC 420)


Coker 51 (TC 254)
NC 810 (TC 659)
Speight G-33


Coker 86 (TC 256)
NC 82 (TC 356)
Speight G-41


CU 263 (TC619)
NC 8640
Speight G-5


CU 561
NC 89 (TC 359)
Speight G-52


DH95-1562-1
NC 92
Speight G-5 8


Dixie Bright 101 (TC 290)
NC 925
Speight G-70


Dixie Bright 102 (TC 291)
NC 95 (TC 360)
Speight G-70 (TC 426)


Dixie Bright 244 (TC 292)
NC 98 (TC 361)
Speight G-80 (TC 427)


Dixie Bright 27 (TC 288)
NC EX 24
Speight NF3 (TC 629)


Dixie Bright 28 (TC 289)
NC PY 10 (TC 367)
STNCB


GF 157
NC TG 61
VA 182


GF 318
Oxford 1 (TC 369)
VA 45 (TC 559)


GL 26H
Oxford 1-181 (TC 370)
Vesta 30 (TC 439)


GL 338
Oxford 2 (TC 371)
Vesta 33 (TC 440)


GL 350
Oxford 207 (TC 632)
Vesta 5 (TC 438)


GL 368
Oxford 26 (TC 373)
Vesta 62 (TC 441)


GL 395
Oxford 3 (TC 372)
Virginia (TI 220)


GL 600
Oxford 414 NF
Virginia (TI 273)


GL 737
PD 611 (TC 387)
Virginia (TI 877)


GL 939
PVH 03
Virginia 115 (TC 444)


GL 939 (TC 628)
PVH 09
Virginia 21 (TC 443)


Hicks (TC 310)
PVH 1118
Virginia Bright (TI 964)


Hicks Broadleaf (TC 311)
PVH 1452
Virginia Bright Leaf (TC 446)


K 149 (TC 568)
PVH 1600
Virginia Gold (TC 447)


K 317
PVH 2110
White Stem Orinoco (TC 451)


K 326
PVH 2275



K 326 (TC 319)
R83 (Line 256-1) (TI 1400)



K 340 (TC 320)
















TABLE 17





Burley Tobacco Varieties

















4407 LC
HB 4108P
KY 54 (TC71)


AA-37-1
HB 4151P
KY 56 (TC 72)


Burley 21 (TC 7)
HB 4192P
KY 56 (TC 72)


Burley 49 (TC 10)
HB 4194P
KY 57 (TC 73)


Burley 64 (TC 11)
HB 4196
KY 58 (TC 74)


Burley Mammoth KY 16 (TC 12)
HB 4488
KY 8654 (TC 77)


Clay 402
HB 4488P
KY 8959


Clay 403
HB 04P
KY 9 (TC 54)


Clay 502
HB 4488 LC
KY 907 LC


Clays 403
HIB 21
KY 908 (TC 630)


GR 10 (TC 19)
HPB 21
NBH 98 (Screened)


GR 10 (TC 19)
HY 403
NC 1206


GR 10A (TC 20)
Hybrid 403 LC
NC 129


GR 13 (TC 21)
Hybrid 404 LC
NC 2000 LC


GR 14 (TC 22)
Hybrid 501 LC
NC 2002 LC


GR 149 LC
KDH-959 (TC 576)
NC 3 LC


GR 153
KDH-960 (TC 577)
NC 5 LC


GR 17 (TC 23)
KT 200 LC
NC 6 LC


GR 17B (TC 24)
KT 204 LC
NC 7 LC


GR 18 (TC 25)
KT 206 LC
NC BH 129 LC


GR 19 (TC 26)
KT 209 LC
NC03-42-2


GR 2 (TC 15)
KT 210 LC
Newton 98


GR 24 (TC 27)
KT 212 LC
R 610 LC


GR 36 (TC 28)
KT 215 LC
R 630 LC


GR 38 (TC 29)
KY 1 (TC 52)
R7-11


GR 38A (TC30)
KY 10 (TC 55)
R7-12LC


GR 40 (TC 31)
KY 12 (TC 56)
RG 17


GR 42 (TC 32)
KY 14 (TC 57)
TKF 1801 LC


GR 42C (TC 33)
KY 14 × L8 LC
TKF 2002 LC


GR 43 (TC 34)
KY 15 (TC 58)
TKF 4024 LC


GR 44 (TC 35)
KY 16 (TC 59)
TKF 4028 LC


GR 45 (TC 36)
KY 17 (TC 60)
TKF 6400 LC


GR 46 (TC 37)
KY 19 (TC 61)
TKF 7002 LC


GR 48 (TC 38)
KY 21 (TC 62)
TKS 2002 LC


GR 5 (TC 16)
KY 22 (TC 63)
TN 86 (TC 82)


GR 53 (TC 39)
KY 24 (TC 64)
TN 90 LC


GR 6 (TC 17)
KY 26 (TC 65)
TN 97 Hybrid LC


GR 9 (TC 18)
KY 33 (TC 66)
TN 97 LC


GR139 NS
KY 34 (TC 67)
VA 116


GR139 S
KY 35 (TC 68)
VA 119


HB 04P
KY 41A (TC 69)
Virgin A Mutante (TI 1406)


HB 04P LC
KY 5 (TC 53)
Virginia 509 (TC 84)


HB 3307P LC
KY 52 (TC 70)
















TABLE 18





Maryland Tobacco Varieties















Maryland 10 (TC 498)


Maryland 14 D2 (TC 499)


Maryland 201 (TC 503)


Maryland 21 (TC 500)


Maryland 341 (TC 504)


Maryland 40


Maryland 402


Maryland 59 (TC 501)


Maryland 601


Maryland 609 (TC 505)


Maryland 64 (TC 502)


Maryland 872 (TC 506)


Maryland Mammoth (TC 507)
















TABLE 19





Dark Fire-Cured Tobacco Varieties

















Black Mammoth (TC 461)
KY 171 (TC 475)
PD 7309 LC


Black Mammoth Small Stalk (TC 641)
KY 171 LC
PD 7312 LC


Certified Madole (TC 463)
KY 171 NS
PD 7318 LC


D-534-A-1 (TC 464)
KY 180 (TC 573)
PD 7319 LC


DAC ULT 302
KY 190 (TC 574)
Petico M PG04


DAC ULT 303
Little Crittenden
PYKY 160 (TC612)


DAC ULT 306
Little Crittenden (TC 476)
PYKY 171 (TC 613)


DAC ULT 308
Little Crittenden LC (certified)
Shirey


DAC ULT 312
Little Crittenden PhPh
TI 1372


DF 300 (TC 465)
Lizard Tail Turtle Foot
TN D94


DF 485 (TC 466)
Madole (TC 478)
TN D94 (TC 621)


DF 516(TC 467)
Madole (TC 479)
TN D950


DF 911 (TC 468)
MS KY 171
TN D950 (PhPh)


DT 508
MS NL Madole LC
TN D950


DT 518 (Screened)
MS TN D950 LC
TN D950 (TC 622)


DT 538 LC
Nance (TC 616)
TR Madole (TC 486)


DT 592
Narrow Leaf Madole LC (certified)
VA 309


Improved Madole (TC 471)
Neal Smith Madole (TC 646)
VA 309 (TC 560)


Jernigan's Madole (TC 472)
Newtons VH Madole
VA 309 LC (certified)


KT 14 LC
NL Madole
VA 310 (TC 487)


KT D17LC
NL Madole (PhPh)
VA 331 (TC 592)


KT D4 LC
NL Madole (TC 484)
VA 355 (TC 638)


KT D6 LC
NL Madole LC
VA 359


KT D8 LC
NL Madole LC (PhPh)
VA 359 (Screened)


KY 153 (TC 216)
NL Madole NS
VA 359 (TC 639)


KY 157 (TC 217)
One Sucker (TC 224)
VA 359 LC (certified)


KY 160
OS 400
VA 403 (TC 580)


KY 160 (TC 218)
PD 302H
VA 405 (TC581)


KY 163 (TC 219)
PD 312H
VA 409 (TC 562)


KY 165 (TC 220)
PD 318H
VA 510 (TC 572)


KY 170 (TC 474)
PD 7302 LC



KY 171 (PhPh)
PD 7305
















TABLE 20





Oriental Tobacco Varieties.

















Bafra (TI 1641)
Edirne (TI 1671)
Samsun (TC 536)


Bahce (TI 1730)
Ege (TI 1642)
Samsun 959 (TI 1570)


Bahia (TI 1416)
Ege-64 (TI 1672)
Samsun Evkaf (TI 1723)


Bahia (TI 1455)
Izmir (Akhisar) (TI 1729)
Samsun Holmes NN (TC 540)


Baiano (TI 128)
Izmir (Gavurkoy) (TI 1727)
Samsun Maden (TI 1647)


Basma
Izmir Ege 64
Samsun NO 15 (TC 541)


Basma (TI 1666)
Izmir-Incekara (TI 1674)
Samsun-BLK SHK Tol (TC 542)


Basma Drama
Izmir-Ozbas (TI 1675)
Samsun-Canik (TI 1678)


Basma Hybrid (PhPh)
Jaka Dzebel (TI 1326)
Samsun-Maden (TI 1679)


Basma Zihna 1
Kaba-Kulak
Saribaptar 407-Izmir Region


Bitlis (TI 1667)
Kagoshima Maruba (TI 158)
Smyrna (TC 543)


Bitlis (TI 1725)
Katerini
Smyrna No. 23 (TC 545)


Bubalovac (TI 1282)
Katerini S53
Smyrna No. 9 (TC 544)


Bursa (TI 1650)
Krumovgrad 58
Smyrna-Blk Shk Tol (TC 546)


Bursa (TI 1668)
MS Basma
Trabzon (TI 1649)


Canik (TI 1644)
MS Katerini S53
Trabzon (TI 1682)


Djebel 174 (TI 1492)
Nevrokop 1146
Trapezund 161 (TI 1407)


Djebel 359 (TI 1493)
Ozbas (TI 1645)
Turkish (TC 548)


Djebel 81
Perustitza (TI 980)
Turkish Angshit (TI 90)


Dubec 566 (TI 1409)
Prilep (TI 1291)
Turkish Samsum (TI 92)


Dubec 7 (TI 1410)
Prilep (TI 1325)
Turkish Tropizoid (TI 93)


Dubek 566 (TI 1567)
Prilep 12-2/1
Turkish Varotie (TI 89)


Duzce (TI 1670)
Prilep 23
Xanthi (TI 1662)
















TABLE 21





Cigar Tobacco Varieties

















Bahai (TI 62)
Castillo Negro, Blanco, Pina (TI 449)
Enshu (TI 1586)


Beinhart 1000
Caujaro (TI 893)
Florida 301


Beinhart 1000 (TI 1562)
Chocoa (TI 289)
Florida 301 (TC 195)


Beinhart 1000-1 (TI 1561)
Chocoa (TI313)
PA Broadleaf (TC 119)


Bergerac C
Connecticut 15 (TC 183)
Pennsylvania Broadleaf


Bergerac C (TI 1529)
Connecticut Broadleaf
Pennsylvania Broadleaf (TC 119)


Big Cuban (TI 1565)
Connecticut Broadleaf (TC 186)
Petite Havana SR1


Castillo Negro, Blanco, Pina (TI 448)
Connecticut Shade (TC 188)
Petite Havana SR1 (TC 105)


Castillo Negro, Blanco, Pina (TI 448A)
Criollo, Colorado (TI 1093)
Enshu (TI 1586)
















TABLE 22





Other Tobacco Varieties















Chocoa (TI 319)


Hoja Parada (TI 1089)


HojaParado (Galpoa) (TI 1068)


Perique (St. James Parrish)


Perique (TC 556)


Perique (TI 1374)


Sylvestris (TI 984)


TI 179








Claims
  • 1. A tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least one PMT gene selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions.
  • 2. A tobacco plant, or part thereof, comprising one or more mutant alleles in at least one PMT gene selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from a control tobacco plant not having said one or more mutant alleles when grown and processed under comparable conditions.
  • 3. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 1 or 2, wherein said tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least two PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4.
  • 4. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 1 or 2, wherein said tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least three PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4.
  • 5. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 1 or 2, wherein said tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in at least four PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4.
  • 6. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 1 or 2, wherein said tobacco plant comprises one or more mutant alleles in five PMT genes selected from the group consisting of PMT1a, PMT1b, PMT2, PMT3, and PMT4.
  • 7. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 75%, at least 100%, at least 150%, at least 200%, at least 300%, at least 400%, at least 500%, at least 600%, at least 700%, at least 800%, or at least 900% greater than the anatabine level of a leaf from the control tobacco plant.
  • 8. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1-7, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anatabine level of at least 0.13%, at least 0.2%, at least 0.3%, at least 0.4%, at least 0.5%, at least 0.6%, at least 0.7%, at least 0.8%, at least 0.9%, or at least 1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina.
  • 9. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 8, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 20% at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 40%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 100%, at least 125%, at least 150%, at least 175%, at least 200%, at least 225%, at least 250%, or at least 300% greater than the anabasine level of a leaf from the control tobacco plant.
  • 10. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1-9, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an anabasine level of at least 0.017%, at least 0.02%, at least 0.025%, at least 0.03%, at least 0.035%, at least 0.04%, at least 0.05%, at least 0.06%, at least 0.07%, at least 0.08%, at least 0.09% or at least 0.1% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina.
  • 11. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1-10, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a reduced level of nornicotine as compared to the control tobacco plant.
  • 12. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1-10, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising an increased level of nornicotine as compared to the control tobacco plant.
  • 13. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 11, wherein said reduced level of nornicotine comprises a reduction of at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 20%, at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 35%, at least 40%, at least 45%, at least 50%, at least 55%, at least 60%, at least 65%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 85%, or at least 90% as compared to the control tobacco plant.
  • 14. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 12, wherein said increased level of nornicotine comprises an increase of at least 1%, at least 2%, at least 5%, at least 10%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 75%, at least 100%, at least 200%, at least 300%, at least 400%, at least 500%, or at least 600% as compared to the control tobacco plant.
  • 15. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 14, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a nicotine level less than the nicotine level of a leaf from the control tobacco plant.
  • 16. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 15, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a nicotine level less than 90%, 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, 40%, 30%, 20%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 7%, 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2%, 1%, 0.5%, or 0.25% of the nicotine level of a leaf from the control tobacco plant.
  • 17. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 15, wherein said tobacco plant comprises a nicotine level of less than 1%, less than 0.75%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.25%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.01%, less than 0.005%, or less than 0.002% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina.
  • 18. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 17, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a total alkaloid level less than 90%, 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, 40%, 30%, 20%, 15%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 7%, 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2%, 1%, 0.5%, or 0.25% of the total alkaloid level of a leaf from said control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.
  • 19. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of claim 18, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a total alkaloid level less than 40%, 35%, 30%, 25%, 20%, 15%, 10%, or 5% of the total alkaloid level of a leaf from said control tobacco plant when grown and processed under comparable conditions.
  • 20. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 19, wherein said tobacco plant comprises a total alkaloid level of less than 1.2%, less than 1.1%, less than 1.0%, less than 0.9%, less than 0.8%, less than 0.7%, less than 0.6%, or less than 0.5% dry weight per gram of leaf lamina.
  • 21. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 19, wherein said one or more mutant alleles comprise a mutation in a sequence region selected from the group consisting of a promoter, 5′ UTR, first exon, first intron, second exon, second intron, third exon, 3′ UTR, terminator, and any combination thereof.
  • 22. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 21, wherein said one or more mutant alleles comprise one or more mutation types selected from the group consisting of a nonsense mutation, a missense mutation, a frameshift mutation, a splice-site mutation, and any combination thereof.
  • 23. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 22, wherein said one or more mutant alleles result in one or more of the following: a PMT protein truncation, a non-translatable PMT gene transcript, a non-functional PMT protein, a premature stop codon in a PMT gene, and any combination thereof.
  • 24. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 23 wherein said one or more mutant alleles comprise a mutation selected from the group consisting of a substitution, a deletion, an insertion, a duplication, and an inversion of one or more nucleotides relative to a wild-type PMT gene.
  • 25. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 24, wherein said one or more mutant alleles comprise a zygosity status selected from the group consisting of homozygous, heterozygous, and heteroallelic.
  • 26. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 24, wherein said one or more mutant alleles are homozygous or heteroallelic in at least 1-5 PMT genes.
  • 27. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 24, wherein said one or more mutant alleles are homozygous or heteroallelic in at least 4 PMT genes.
  • 28. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 24, wherein said one or more mutant alleles are homozygous or heteroallelic in all five PMT genes.
  • 29. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 28, wherein said at least two PMT genes are PMT1a and PMT3.
  • 30. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 29, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a nicotine level selected from the group consisting of less than 0.15%, less than 0.125%, less than 0.1%, less than 0.08%, less than 0.06%, less than 0.05%, less than 0.04%, less than 0.03%, less than 0.02%, and less than 0.01% dry weight.
  • 31. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 30, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a leaf comprising a total alkaloid level selected from the group consisting of less than 1%, less than 0.8%, less than 0.7%, less than 0.6%, less than 0.5%, less than 0.4%, less than 0.3%, and less than 0.2% dry weight.
  • 32. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1 to 31, wherein said tobacco plant is capable of producing a cured leaf comprising a total tobacco-specific nitrosamine level of between 2 and 0.05, between 1.9 and 0.05, between 1.8 and 0.05, between 1.7 and 0.05, between 1.6 and 0.05, between 1.5 and 0.05, between 1.4 and 0.05, between 1.3 and 0.05, between 1.2 and 0.05, between 1.1 and 0.05, between 1.0 and 0.05, between 0.9 and 0.05, between 0.8 and 0.05, between 0.7 and 0.05, between 0.6 and 0.05, between 0.5 and 0.05, between 0.4 and 0.05, between 0.3 and 0.05, between 0.2 and 0.05, between 0.15 and 0.05, or between 0.1 and 0.05 ppm.
  • 33. The tobacco plant, or part thereof, of any one of claims 1-32, wherein leaves of the tobacco plant, when cured, have a USDA grade index value selected from the group consisting of 50 or more, 55 or more, 60 or more, 65 or more, 70 or more, 75 or more, 80 or more, 85 or more, 90 or more, and 95 or more.
  • 34. A population of the tobacco plants of any one of claims 1 to 33.
  • 35. Cured tobacco material from the tobacco plant of any one of claims 1 to 33.
  • 36. The cured tobacco material of claim 35, wherein said cured tobacco material is made by a curing process selected from the group consisting of flue curing, air curing, fire curing, and sun curing.
  • 37. The cured tobacco material of claim 35, wherein said cured tobacco material comprises tobacco leaf, and wherein said tobacco leaf exhibits reduced mold infection as compared to control cured tobacco material from the variety LA Burley 21.
  • 38. A tobacco blend comprising said cured tobacco material of claim 35.
  • 39. The tobacco blend of claim 38, wherein said cured tobacco material constitutes about at least 10%, at least 15%, at least 20%, at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 35%, at least 40%, at least 45%, at least 50%, at least 55%, at least 60%, at least 65%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, or at least 95% of cured tobacco in said tobacco blend by weight.
  • 40. The tobacco blend of claim 38, wherein said cured tobacco material constitutes about at least 10%, at least 15%, at least 20%, at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 35%, at least 40%, at least 45%, at least 50%, at least 55%, at least 60%, at least 65%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, or at least 95% of cured tobacco in said tobacco blend by volume.
  • 41. A tobacco product comprising the cured tobacco material of claim 35.
  • 42. The tobacco product of claim 41, wherein said tobacco product is selected from the group consisting of a cigarette, a cigarillo, a non-ventilated recess filter cigarette, a vented recess filter cigarette, a cigar, snuff, pipe tobacco, cigar tobacco, cigarette tobacco, chewing tobacco, leaf tobacco, shredded tobacco, and cut tobacco.
  • 43. The tobacco product of claim 41, wherein said tobacco product is a smokeless tobacco product.
  • 44. The tobacco product of claim 43, wherein said smokeless tobacco product is selected from the group consisting of loose leaf chewing tobacco, plug chewing tobacco, moist snuff, and nasal snuff.
  • 45. A reconstituted tobacco comprising the cured tobacco material of claim 35.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS AND INCORPORATION OF SEQUENCE LISTING

This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/966,259, filed Jan. 27, 2020, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. A sequence listing contained in the file named “P34801US01_SEtxt” which is 200,342 bytes (measured in MS-Windows®) and created on Jan. 26, 2021, is filed electronically herewith and incorporated by reference in its entirety.

PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/US2021/015105 1/26/2021 WO
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
62966259 Jan 2020 US