Marker assisted breeding for transformability in maize

被引:0
|
作者
Brenda A. Lowe
Melissa M. Way
Jennifer M. Kumpf
Jyoti Rout
Dave Warner
Richard Johnson
Charles L. Armstrong
Michael T. Spencer
Paul S. Chomet
机构
[1] Monsanto Company,
[2] Illinois Technology Center,undefined
[3] Monsanto Company,undefined
来源
Molecular Breeding | 2006年 / 18卷
关键词
Corn transformation; Marker assisted breeding; Tissue culture; Regeneration;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Corn lines with improved culturability and transformability were produced using Marker Assisted Breeding (MAB) to introgress specific regions from the highly transformable hybrid, Hi-II, into the elite line, FBLL that responds very poorly in culture. FBLL is a female inbred parental stiff-stalk line that has been used to produce a series of some of DEKALB’s historically best selling hybrids. Five unlinked regions important for culturability and transformability were identified by segregation distortion analysis and introgressed into FBLL to produce the highly transformable FBLL-MAB lines. Agrobacterium mediated transformation was used to screen the FBLL-MAB lines and select the most efficient lines for transformation using immature embryo explants. Two highly efficient transformation systems were developed using kanamycin and glyphosate as selective agents. To evaluate agronomics, two testcross hybrids were produced for each of the three lead FBLL-MAB lines. A 25-location, 3-replication yield trial was used to evaluate grain yield, yield stability, and agronomic characteristics of the hybrids. Yields were found to be 2–5% lower and more stable (across a diverse set of environments) among hybrids produced with the FBLL-MAB lines as compared to the same hybrids produced with FBLL.
引用
收藏
页码:229 / 239
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Molecular marker-assisted selection for potato breeding
    Amalia Barone
    American Journal of Potato Research, 2004, 81 : 111 - 117
  • [32] Marker assisted selection in commercial pig breeding programmes
    Visscher, P
    Haley, C
    PROGRESS IN PIG SCIENCE, 1997, : 57 - 76
  • [33] Optimisation of marker assisted selection for abalone breeding programs
    Hayes, Ben
    Baranski, Matt
    Goddard, Mike E.
    Robinson, Nick
    AQUACULTURE, 2007, 265 (1-4) : 61 - 69
  • [34] Money matters (I): costs of field and laboratory procedures associated with conventional and marker-assisted maize breeding at CIMMYT
    Kate Dreher
    Mireille Khairallah
    Jean-Marcel Ribaut
    Michael Morris
    Molecular Breeding, 2003, 11 : 221 - 234
  • [35] A cautiously optimistic vision for marker-assisted breeding
    Department of Plant Pathology, 495 Borlaug Hall, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108, United States
    Mol. Breed., 6 (505-510):
  • [36] Plant breeding with marker-assisted selection in Brazil
    Sakiyama, Ney Sussumu
    Cancela Ramos, Helaine Christine
    Caixeta, Eveline Teixeira
    Pereira, Messias Gonzaga
    CROP BREEDING AND APPLIED BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2014, 14 (01): : 54 - 60
  • [37] Marker assisted selection for seedlessness in table grape breeding
    Eda Karaagac
    Alba M. Vargas
    María Teresa de Andrés
    Iván Carreño
    Javier Ibáñez
    Juan Carreño
    José Miguel Martínez-Zapater
    José Antonio Cabezas
    Tree Genetics & Genomes, 2012, 8 : 1003 - 1015
  • [38] Marker-assisted introgression in backcross breeding programs
    Visscher, PM
    Haley, CS
    Thompson, R
    GENETICS, 1996, 144 (04) : 1923 - 1932
  • [39] Marker-assisted selection in fish breeding schemes
    Sonesson, AK
    Meuwissen, THE
    AQUACULTURE, 2005, 247 (1-4) : 30 - 30
  • [40] RosBREED Enables Marker-Assisted Breeding for Apple
    Peace, Cameron P.
    Luby, James
    Evans, Kate
    Brown, Susan K.
    Clark, Matthew
    Guan, Yingzhu
    Orcheski, Benjamin
    Schmitz, Cari
    Verma, Sujeet
    Bassil, Nahla V.
    van de Weg, Eric
    Iezzoni, Amy
    HORTSCIENCE, 2011, 46 (09) : S384 - S385