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Plant Cell Rep ; 19(5): 435-442, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30754879

ABSTRACT

Genetically transformed plants of a phalaenopsis orchid [Doritaenopsis Coral Fantasy×Phalaenopsis (Baby Hat×Ann Jessica)] were regenerated after cocultivation of cell clumps with Agrobacterium tumefaciens strains LBA4404 (pTOK233) and EHA101 (pIG121Hm) that harbored genes for ß-glucuronidase (GUS) and hygromycin resistance. The efficiency of transformation was markedly increased by 10 h cocultivation of cell clumps with A. tumefaciens that had been induced with 200 µM acetosyringone, and by inclusion of 500 µM acetosyringone in the cocultivation medium. Hygromycin-resistant cell clusters (0.5-3 mm in diameter) were selected from the infected cell clumps after 4-6 weeks of culture on agar (8 g/l)-solidified new Dogashima medium (NDM) containing 20 g/l sucrose, 0.1 mg/l naphthaleneacetic acid, 1.0 mg/l benzyladenine (BA), 50 mg/l hygromycin and 300 mg/l cefotaxime. The cell clusters proliferated 4 weeks after transfer onto the same medium. To induce callus greening, the carbon source was changed from sucrose to maltose. The green calli obtained produced protocorm-like bodies (PLBs) after 4 weeks of culture on phytohormone-free NDM medium. Regeneration of transgenic plantlets was enhanced by incubating PLBs on NDM medium supplemented with 0.1 mg/l abscisic acid, followed by partial desiccation for 10-30 min. Successful transformation was confirmed by histochemical GUS assay, PCR analysis and Southern hybridization of transformants. With this transformation system, more than 100 hygromycin-resistant phalaenopsis plantlets were produced about 7 months following infection of the cell aggregates.

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