Phenotypic Screen For Plants

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20080057511
  • Publication Number
    20080057511
  • Date Filed
    August 31, 2007
    17 years ago
  • Date Published
    March 06, 2008
    16 years ago
Abstract
The present invention is directed to a method of identifying plants with enhanced agronomic traits within a larger population of plants grown from a randomly planted set of seeds.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

For transforming a plant with a desired DNA molecule, DNA that is capable of producing a functional protein or an antisense mRNA within a plant is cloned in a DNA construct also referred to as a vector. Two commonly used methods for transforming plants with such DNA constructs are Agrobacterium-mediated transformation and microprojectile bombardment. Microprojectile bombardment methods are illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,015,580; 5,550,318; 5,538,880; 5,914,451; 6,160,208; 6,399,861 and 6,403,865, and Agrobacterium-mediated transformation is described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,635,055; 5,824,877; 5,591,616; 5,981,840 and 6,384,301, all of which are incorporated herein by reference. For Agrobacterium tumefaciens based plant transformation systems, additional elements present on transformation constructs will include T-DNA left and right border sequences to facilitate incorporation of the recombinant DNA into the plant genome. In practice DNA is introduced into only a small percentage of target cells in any one experiment. Marker genes are used to provide an efficient system for identification of those cells that are stably transformed by receiving and integrating a transgenic DNA construct into their genomes. Preferred marker genes encode proteins that confer resistance to a selective agent, such as an antibiotic or herbicide. Potentially transformed cells are exposed to the selective agent. In the population of surviving cells, there will be those cells where, generally, the resistance-conferring gene has been integrated and expressed at sufficient levels to permit cell survival. Cells may be tested further to confirm stable integration of the exogenous DNA. Useful selectable marker genes include those conferring resistance to antibiotics. Examples of such selectable marker are illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,550,318; 5,633,435; 5,780,708 and 6,118,047, all of which are incorporated herein by reference. Cells that survive exposure to the selective agent or cells that have been scored positive in a screening assay, may be cultured in regeneration media and allowed to mature into plants by well known methods in the art. Transformed plants can be tracked by a number of screening methods involving detection of DNA molecules introduced in the plant genome by plant transformation. Commonly used methods for tracking newly introduced DNA include: PCR, southern and northern blot analyses, which are well known in the art. Similar methods can also be used to track markers in plant breeding methods.


The term trait, sometimes referred to as phenotypic trait or phenotype, is an observable trait of an organism resulting from an interaction between the genotype of the organism and the environment. Traits that are important to agricultural plants are also referred as agronomic traits. A phenotypic trait can be observed by the naked eye or by any other means of evaluation known in the art, for example microscopy, biochemical analysis, etc. The trait selected for using the methods of the current invention can be any quantitative or qualitative phenotypic trait. In some embodiments the trait is resistance or tolerance to one or more chemicals including herbicidal chemicals. Herbicidal chemicals include glyphosate herbicides, phosphinothricin herbicides, oxynil herbicides, imidazolinone herbicides, dinitroaniline herbicides, pyridine herbicides, sulfonylurea herbicides, bialaphos herbicides, sulfonamide herbicides, glufosinate herbicides, auxin like herbicides, 3,6-Dichloro-2-methoxybenzoic acid, (2,4-dichlorophenoxy)acetic acid, 4-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)butyric acid, 2-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)propanoic acid, (2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy)acetic acid, 2-(2,4,5-Trichlorophenoxy)Propionic Acid, 2-(2,4-dichloro-3-methylphenoxy)-N-phenylpropanamide, (4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy)acetic acid, 4-(4-chloro-o-tolyloxy)butyric acid, 2-(4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy)propanoic acid, 3,6-dichloro-2-pyridinecarboxylic acid, 4-amino-3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinecarboxylic acid, (2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy)acetic acid, 4-amino-3,5-dichloro-6-fluoro-2-pyridyloxyacetic acid, 3-amino-2,5-dichlorobenzoic acid, 3,7-dichloro-8-quinolinecarboxylic acid, and 7-chloro-3-methyl-8-quinolinecarboxylic acid.


In some embodiments, the trait is selected from the group consisting of root lodging, stalk lodging, plant lodging, plant height, plant morphology, ear development, tassel development, plant weight, plant maturity, total plant or plant part dry matter, fruit and seed size, harvest moisture, husk length, stand count at harvest time in a unit area or per plot, crop yield, metabolite quality or content which include oil, protein, carbohydrate or any other plant metabolite, insect or nematode resistance or tolerance, viral, bacterial or fungal disease resistance or tolerance, abiotic stress resistance or tolerance as represented by resistance or tolerance to drought, heat, chilling, freezing, excessive moisture, salt or oxidative stress, food or feed content and value, physical appearance, male sterility, and the like. As those skilled in the art will readily recognize, the invention may be practiced using any combination of phenotypic traits that is imparted by one or more transgenes introduced by plant transformation or statistically associated with more than one genomic locus, such as a QTL or a combination of both.


Often effects of the environment mask those of the genotype, so the phenotype provides an imperfect measure of a plant's biological or genetic potential. Because of this, a modified plant population is exposed to a common environment for practicing the invention. According to the present invention the common environment will be capable of exposing a subset of plants with an enhanced desired trait within the population. For example, drought tolerant plants within a population can be identified by exposing the plant population to drought; herbicide tolerant plants within a population can be identified by exposing the plant population to a specific herbicide; insect tolerant plants within a population can be identified by exposing the plant population to a specific insect; nitrogen deficit tolerant plants within a population can be identified by exposing the plant population to a nitrogen deficit; and plants with enhanced yield within a population can be identified by measuring plant height at various time points, determining chlorophyll fluorescence (SPAD measurement) or harvesting from individual plants to determine yield, such as grain yield. The common environment in the present invention is not necessarily a uniform environment. In a useful embodiment, the plants are planted and evaluated in one continuous field planting. Randomization of the seeds for planting allows the plants to be evaluated in a blind study and reduces the impact of the variability of specific locations within a field.


Plants harboring transgenes or mutations in this screen are compared to their neighbors to identify improved traits, and the genes present in the selected plants identified by sequence analysis. In this manner genes conferring better performing plants are identified and further analyzed to determine if the effect is due to a transgene expression or random occurrence. This is done through the leveraging of repetition of a transgene where one can accurately assess a clear association between the gene and the phenotype. The statistic is calculated using chi-square method based on the gene frequency in the planted population and the total number of transgene events selected as having improved traits.


The present invention provides a method of identifying enhanced traits within a population of plant species. In preferred embodiment plant species can be a plant species that can produce a crop. According to present invention crop plants are plants that can be grown and harvested extensively for profit or subsistence. Any crop species can be used in this invention. The method of the invention is especially useful for hybrid crop plants such as corn.


Variations of the methods provided herein may also find application for identification of genes which impart improved properties to transgenic plants. For example, plants may be planted in a random distribution, but under planting conditions such that the genetic identity of each individual plant is known at planting. In this manner, the number of replicates needed to detect biologically significant differences among a plant population can be reduced, and plants compared with their neighboring plants to identify trait improved plants. The genes which impart improved phenotypes to the transgenic plants can then be identified without sequencing or other analysis based on the known location of the test plants.


The following example illustrates one aspect of the invention by describing the selection of transgenic corn hybrid plants having improved drought tolerance from a population of over 13,000 hybrid corn plants representing 663 transgenic events prepared by transformation using 186 unique constructs. Exactly 20 hybrid corn seeds for each of the transgenic events were randomized in a tumbler to create a pool of seeds. Multiple sets of an identical pool were prepared for planting at different locations.


Prior to planting, each field was prepared with pre-emergent herbicide and all necessary fertilizers, which were applied and incorporated into the soil by following recommended label rates and normal tillage practices. Corn insect pest were monitored and proactively controlled, as needed, through the use of insecticide by following label rates. Seeds of identical pools were planted at multiple test locations at a density of 32,000 plants/acre. Plants were evenly spaced in the field to ensure that environmental effects are similar for each plant in the field. The plot structure was conventional corn rows on 30″ centers. Each row was planted with drip-tape to facilitate uniform water distribution of water to initiate germination. To generate water stress or drought conditions, the population stand was allowed to attain V8 stage of growth under normal watering conditions. At V8 stage, irrigation water was withheld until about 98% of the population exhibited extreme drought symptoms, e.g. very rolled leaves, poor internode expansion, light green leaves, reduced tassel emergence, little or no silk emergence, little or poor ear development. The duration of this water regime spanned the V8 leaf through the R2 reproductive stage.


To identify individual plants that show improved growth under stress conditions, at least two persons walk through the field at various times between the VT and R2 stages of plant development to allow for both identification and verification of drought tolerance. Plants that represented 1-2% of the population that best exhibited improved cumulative vegetative and reproductive characteristics, e.g. greenness, plant height/internode expansion, leaf flatness/wilting, ear development, silk development/vigor and tassel development/emergence were identified. Identified plants were tagged with an ID, photographed, and sampled for further analysis.


Leaf samples were taken from individual plants that had a positive growth response under water stress. Because the quality of the plant material is important for quality of molecular analysis, the youngest/freshest leaf material was collected for analysis. DNA was isolated from the tissue samples and used as template for amplification of the inserted transgenic DNA using commercially available sequencing kits producing sequence information that was compared to the known set of transgene coding region sequences used in the field study.


The null hypothesis is that the selection of plants is no better than selecting plants randomly. Chi square analysis was used to test the null hypothesis for each plant construct in the study. Since it was known how many plants for a given construct were planted in the field and how many plants were selected and sampled, we can calculate the expected frequency of randomly selecting a transgenic plant that contains a given construct. Sequence identification of the sampled plants allows us to calculate the observed frequency for a given construct in the sampled population. Chi square analysis indicates if the observed frequency for a construct was significantly different from random. If the frequency of identifying a particular construct is significantly higher than random (at P≦0.05), it indicates that the null hypothesis (the selection of plants is no better than selecting plants randomly) is not true. This is suggestive that a given gene has improved plant growth under stress conditions.


For example, the construct identified as pMON67819 was represented in three transgenic events with =b 60 =l plants randomly planted in a field of 13260 plants (assuming 100% germination). Therefore 0.45% of the plants will have sequences from construct pMON67819. If 190 samples are collected, about 1 plant would be randomly sampled from pMON67819. If 3 of the 190 samples were identified to have pMON67819 sequences then chi square analysis will show that this sampling is not random at a probability of p=0.023. Therefore, we have systematically selected plants that grow better under these drought conditions and these plants contain the gene in pMON67819. The data presented in Table 1 demonstrates the use of this method to identify additional genes that contributed to improved plant growth under these stress conditions.


This screen enabled the characterization of about 180 genes in a single experiment. Of the individual events, 57 were found to be related to the 14 genes listed on above table. Fourteen different genes were identified and shown to confer stress tolerance when over-expressed in corn. These 14 genes are useful for generating crop lines that are more drought and stress tolerant and have increased yield stability.















TABLE 1





Construct
ID
Gene Name
Events
Exp. Freq.
Obs. Freq.
Chi Test





















pMON68392
PHE0000457

Arabidopsis Transcription

14
4.08
8
0.052




Factor G 1543


pMON78941
PHE0001421
Maize Glutamate
5
1.46
4
0.035




Dehydrogenase


pMON68634
PHE0000593
Maize L5-Like
5
1.46
4
0.035


pMON73795
PHE0000854
Soy 14-3-3 22
3
0.87
3
0.023


pMON79160
PHE0001398
Maize Ran Binding protein
3
0.87
3
0.023




homolog


pMON68390
PHE0000459
Anabaena Sucrose
11
3.2
8
0.007




Phosphate Phosphatase


pMON75451
PHE0000540
Maize Tubby 4
4
1.16
4
0.009


pMON75335
PHE0000862
Maize 14-3-3 13 N-terminus
2
0.58
3
0.002


pMON75333
PHE0000860
Rice 14-3-3 15 N-terminus
1
0.29
2
0.002


pMON79672
PHE0001423
Maize Glutamate
1
0.29
2
0.002




Decarboxylase


pMON67819
PHE0000004
Maize HAP3 Like
3
0.87
3
0.023




Transcription Factor


pMON68862
PHE0000093

Arabidopsis Transcription

4
1.16
6
0




Factor G 682


pMON68606
PHE0000658

Arabidopsis Transcription

2
0.58
4
0




Factor G 1496


pMON68863
PHE0000135
Maize Putative Protein
1
0.29
3
0




Phosphatase type 2C





Table Legends:


Events: Total Number of transgenic plants containing a designated construct in the test,


Exp. Freq.: Expected Frequency of randomly selecting a transgenic plant that contains a given construct,


Obs. Freq.: Observed Frequency of identifying a transgenic plant that contains a given construct in a sample population selected as having improved plant growth,






Repeated testing in subsequent seasons using the methods described herein demonstrates the ability to consistently identify transgenes which impart stress tolerance to transgenic plants under various planting densities and under varying stress conditions and varying severity of stress.

Claims
  • 1. A method of identifying genes that confer enhanced traits within a population of plants comprising the steps of: a) collecting seeds from a group of plant lines with genetic variability;b) randomly planting said seeds to produce plants, wherein the same number of seeds is planted from each plant line;c) exposing said plants to a common environment;d) evaluating said plants to identify a sample population of plants exhibiting an enhanced trait;e) determining the genotype of said plants exhibiting an enhanced trait.
  • 2. The method of claim 1 wherein said seeds are mixed prior to planting to obtain a seed mixture having the same number of seeds from each plant line.
  • 3. The method of claim 2 wherein said method further comprises; f) determining the expected frequency of randomly selecting a plant line within said population of plants;g) determining the observed frequency of each plant line in the sample population of plants exhibiting an enhanced trait;h) applying a statistical test to compare the observed frequency with the expected frequency for plants from each plant line to assign significance for each comparison; andi) identifying plant lines where the observed frequency is greater than the expected frequency to select plant lines with an enhanced trait.
  • 4. The method of claim 1 wherein said plant lines are transgenic crop plant events and said genetic variability is due to one or more transgenes.
  • 5. The method of claim 1 wherein said genetic variability is due to one or more genetic markers.
  • 6. The method of claim 1 wherein said number of seeds planted from each plant line is at least two.
  • 7. The method of claim 1 wherein said seeds are randomly planted in a green house or growth chamber.
  • 8. The method of claim 1 wherein said seeds are randomly planted in a field.
  • 9. The method of claim 1 wherein said environment is capable of causing biotic or abiotic stress in a plant.
  • 10. The method of claim 1 wherein said environment is induced by application of one or more chemicals.
  • 11. The method of claim 5 wherein said genetic variability in plant lines is created by a method selected from a group consisting of: causing a mutation, causing recombination, and artificial breeding in parental plants used for creating plant lines.
  • 12. The method of claim 9 wherein said abiotic stress is caused by an excess or limitation of heat, minerals, acidity, water, light or gases.
  • 13. The method of claim 9 wherein said biotic stress is caused by, plants, fungi, bacteria, animals, or viruses.
  • 14. The method of claim 10 wherein said one or more chemicals are selected from the group consisting of glyphosate herbicides, phosphinothricin herbicides, oxynil herbicides, imidazolinone herbicides, dinitroaniline herbicides, pyridine herbicides, sulfonylurea herbicides, bialaphos herbicides, sulfonamide herbicides, glufosinate herbicides, auxin like herbicides, 3,6-Dichloro-2-methoxybenzoic acid, (2,4-dichlorophenoxy)acetic acid, 4-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)butyric acid, 2-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)propanoic acid, (2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy)acetic acid, 2-(2,4,5-Trichlorophenoxy)Propionic Acid, 2-(2,4-dichloro-3-methylphenoxy)-N-phenylpropanamide, (4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy)acetic acid, 4-(4-chloro-o-tolyloxy)butyric acid, 2-(4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy)propanoic acid, 3,6-dichloro-2-pyridinecarboxylic acid, 4-amino-3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinecarboxylic acid, (2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy)acetic acid, 4-amino-3,5-dichloro-6-fluoro-2-pyridyloxyacetic acid, 3-amino-2,5-dichlorobenzoic acid, 3,7-dichloro-8-quinolinecarboxylic acid, and 7-chloro-3-methyl-8-quinolinecarboxylic acid.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims the benefit of priority of prior filed U.S. Application Ser. No. 60/841383 filed Aug. 31, 2006, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.

Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60841383 Aug 2006 US