&CHAPTER 10
Transgenic Plant Production
JOHN FINER and TANIYA DHILLON
Department of Horticulture and Crop Science, OARDC/The Ohio State University, Wooster, Ohio
10.0. CHAPTER SUMMARY AND OBJECTIVES
10.0.1 Summary
Foreign genes are transferred into plants primarily using one of two methods:Agrobacterium
tumefaciens—or particle bombardment-mediated transformation, Agrobacterium-mediated
transformation relies on a natural genetic engineer: the causal agent of crown gall
disease in plants, which is one of the most intriguing stories in plant pathology particle
bombardment-mediated transformation relies on accelerating DNA-coated microscopic par-
ticles into plant cells to deliver DNA to the genome. There are other less widely used
methods and plenty of potential technological development opportunities to improve trans-
formation efficiency. Finally, there are scores of methods that researchers have reported
to be successful, but with little follow-up data, which might indicate that they are not
very effective.
10.0.2 Discussion Questions
- What is a transgene/transgenic plant?
- What part or parts of the plant cell provide the most resistance to DNA introduction?
- In the case of a successful DNA introduction, where in the target cell does the foreign
DNA end up? - What are some differences between physical and biological methods for DNA intro-
duction into plant cells? - What are some ways that the biological method for DNA introduction
(Agrobacterium) has been improved over the years? - How is gene introduction performed with the model plant,Arabidopsis? Is this tech-
nique widely applied to other plants? - What are the size and composition of the particles that are used for the particle bom-
bardment method?
Plant Biotechnology and Genetics: Principles, Techniques, and Applications, Edited by C. Neal Stewart, Jr.
Copyright#2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
245