244
- II.3. BRASSICA CROPS (
BRASSICA
SPP.)
SAFETY ASSESSMENT OF TRANSGENIC ORGANISMS: OECD CONSENSUS DOCUMENTS, VOLUME 5 © OECD 2016
Table 3.17.
Intertribal somatic hybrids in Brassiceae for the integratio
n and incorporation of desirable traits into
Brassica
crops
Somatic hybrid
Desirable trait for introgression
Reference
Arabidopsis thaliana
(n
=5) +
B. nigra
Resistance to flea beetles, co
ld tolerance, short life cycle
Siemens and Sacristan (1995*)
Arabidopsis thaliana
(n
=5)
+ B. oleracea
Plastome transformation
Nitovskaya and Shakhovskyi (1
998); Yamagishi and Nakagawa (2004); Nitovskaya et al.
(2006a)
Arabidopsis thaliana
(n
=5) +
B. rapa
Experimental demonstration
Gleba and Hoffmann (1980, 1979)
Arabidopsis thaliana
(n
=5) +
B. juncea
Phosphinothricin resistance
Ovcharenko et al. (2004)
Arabidopsis thaliana
(n
=5) +
B. napus
Herbicide resistance, Blackleg resistance
Baue
r-Weston et al. (1993*); Forsberg, Landgren and K. Glimelius
(1994*); Forsberg et al.
(1998); Yamagishi et al. (2002*)
Transposable element
Spm/dSpm
Ovcharenko et al. (2005*)
Armoracia rusticana
(n
=16) +
B. oleracea
Clubroot resistance
Navrátilová et al. (1997)
Barbarea vulgari
s (
n=8) +
B. oleracea
Cold tolerance
Ryschka et al. (1999)
Barbarea vulgari
s (
n=8) +
B. rapa
Cold tolerance
Oikarinen and Ryöppy (1992)
Barbarea vulgari
s (
n=8) +
B. napus
Cold tolerance
Fahleson, Eriksson and Glimelius (1994)
Barbarea stricta
(n
=8) +
B. rapa
Cold tolerance
Oikarinen and Ryöppy (1992)
Camelina sativa
(n
=20) +
B. oleracea
Alternaria resistance
Hansen (1998); Sigareva and Earle (1999)
Camelina sativa
(n
=20) +
B. carinata
Alternaria resistance
Narasimhulu et al. (1994)
Capsella bursa
- pastori
s (
n=16) +
B. oleracea
Resistance to flea beetles,
alternaria blight
Nitovskaya et al
. (1998); Sigareva and Earle (1999)
Crambe abyssinica
(n
=45) +
B. napus
High erucic acid content, insect resistance
Wang, Sonntag and Rudloff (2003*); Wang et al. (2004*)
Lepidium meyenii
(n
=32) +
B. oleracea
Glucosinolate content
Ryschka, Klocke and Schumann (2003)
Lesquerella fendleri
(n
=6) +
B. napus
High lesquerolic acid content, drought toleranceLesquerella
chloroplasts
Skarzhinskaya, Landgren and Glimelius (1996**); Skarzhinskaya et al. (1998)Schröder-Pontoppidan et al. (1
999); Nitovskaya et al. (2006b)
Lunaria annua
(n
=14) +
B. napus
High nervonic acid content
Craig and Millam (1995)
Matthiola incana
(n
=7) +
B. oleracea
Oil quality
Ryschka et al. (1999)
Orychophragmus violaceu
s (
n=12) +
B. napus
High linoleic and palmitic acid contentPhosphinothrin resistance Chlorosis correction
Hu et al. (2002* ,1999)Sakhno et al. (2007) Vasilenko et al. (2003)
Thlaspi perfoliatum
(n
=21) +
B. napus
High nervonic acid content
Fahleson et al. (1994**)
Thlaspi caerulescen
s (
n=7) +
B. napus
Zinc and cadmium tolerance
Brewer et al. (1999)
Thlaspi caerulescen
s (
n=7) +
B. juncea
High metal accumulation
Dushenkov et al. (2002)
Note:
* Denotes asymmetric hybrids; ** Both asymmetric and symmetric hybrids identified.
Source:
Prakash et al.
(2009).