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Plant Methods 2012
Striga parasitizes transgenic hairy roots of Zea mays and provides a tool for studying plant-plant interactionsKeywords: Maize, Striga hermonthica, Agrobacterium rhizogenes, Hairy roots, Composite plants Abstract: We used Agrobacterium rhizogenes strain K599 carrying a reporter gene construct, Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP), to generate transgenic composite maize plants that were challenged with the parasitic plant Striga hermonthica. Eighty five percent of maize plants produced transgenic hairy roots expressing GFP. Consistent with most hairy roots produced in other species, transformed maize roots exhibited a hairy root phenotype, the hallmark of A. rhizogenes mediated transformation. Transgenic hairy roots resulting from A. rhizogenes transformation were readily infected by S. hermonthica. There were no significant differences in the number and size of S. hermonthica individuals recovered from either transgenic or wild type roots.This rapid, high throughput, transformation technique will advance our understanding of gene function in parasitic plant-host interactions.
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