Gene transfer utilizing pollen-tubes of Albuca nelsonii and Tulbaghia violacea
Aloka Kumari, Ponnusamy Baskaran and Johannes Van Staden
Abstract: Developing a tissue culture-independent genetic transformation system would be an interesting technique for gene transfer in valuable medicinal and horticultural plants. Efficient gene delivery (Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain LBA 4404: harbouring PBI121 plasmid) was achieved with Km-resistant pollen grains (pollen tube technique) and were found to be GUS-positive for Albuca nelsonii (31.3%) and Tulbaghia violacea (32.6%). The Km-resistance (95.6% for A. nelsonii and 86.7% for T. violacea) and GUS-positive (100% for A. nelsonii and 97.5% for T. violacea) putative transgenic seedlings in vitro were obtained with 200 mg L-1 Km. The in vitro plants were obtained from leaf explants of putative transgenic seedlings and were confirmed to be Km-resistant and GUSpositive (T. violacea, 73.7% and A. nelsonii, 80.5%). The plants were successfully acclimatized in the greenhouse. We describe a tissue culture-independent gene transfer technique with high efficiency clonal transgenic plant production for A. nelsonii and T. violacea. This can also be applied to biotechnological crop improvement of the same species and potentially to other plants.