Literature DB >> 24977384

Dealing with transgene flow of crop protection traits from crops to their relatives.

Jonathan Gressel1.   

Abstract

Genes regularly move within species, to/from crops, as well as to their con- specific progenitors, feral and weedy forms ('vertical' gene flow). Genes occasionally move to/from crops and their distantly related, hardly sexually interbreeding relatives, within a genus or among closely related genera (diagonal gene flow). Regulators have singled out transgene flow as an issue, yet non-transgenic herbicide resistance traits pose equal problems, which cannot be mitigated. The risks are quite different from genes flowing to natural (wild) ecosystems versus ruderal and agroecosystems. Transgenic herbicide resistance poses a major risk if introgressed into weedy relatives; disease and insect resistance less so. Technologies have been proposed to contain genes within crops (chloroplast transformation, male sterility) that imperfectly prevent gene flow by pollen to the wild. Containment does not prevent related weeds from pollinating crops. Repeated backcrossing with weeds as pollen parents results in gene establishment in the weeds. Transgenic mitigation relies on coupling crop protection traits in a tandem construct with traits that lower the fitness of the related weeds. Mitigation traits can be morphological (dwarfing, no seed shatter) or chemical (sensitivity to a chemical used later in a rotation). Tandem mitigation traits are genetically linked and will move together. Mitigation traits can also be spread by inserting them in multicopy transposons which disperse faster than the crop protection genes in related weeds. Thus, there are gene flow risks mainly to weeds from some crop protection traits; risks that can and should be dealt with.
© 2014 Society of Chemical Industry.

Keywords:  gene flow; herbicide resistance; pesticide resistance; transgene flow; transgenic mitigation

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24977384     DOI: 10.1002/ps.3850

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pest Manag Sci        ISSN: 1526-498X            Impact factor:   4.845


  13 in total

1.  Reduced weed seed shattering by silencing a cultivated rice gene: strategic mitigation for escaped transgenes.

Authors:  Huanxin Yan; Lei Li; Ping Liu; Xiaoqi Jiang; Lei Wang; Jia Fang; Zhimin Lin; Feng Wang; Jun Su; Bao-Rong Lu
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2017-05-19       Impact factor: 2.788

2.  Gene Introgression in Weeds Depends on Initial Gene Location in the Crop: Brassica napus-Raphanus raphanistrum Model.

Authors:  Katarzyna Adamczyk-Chauvat; Sabrina Delaunay; Anne Vannier; Caroline François; Gwenaëlle Thomas; Frédérique Eber; Maryse Lodé; Marie Gilet; Virginie Huteau; Jérôme Morice; Sylvie Nègre; Cyril Falentin; Olivier Coriton; Henri Darmency; Bachar Alrustom; Eric Jenczewski; Mathieu Rousseau-Gueutin; Anne-Marie Chèvre
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2017-05-22       Impact factor: 4.562

3.  Seed bank dynamics govern persistence of Brassica hybrids in crop and natural habitats.

Authors:  Danny A P Hooftman; James M Bullock; Kathryn Morley; Caroline Lamb; David J Hodgson; Philippa Bell; Jane Thomas; Rosemary S Hails
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2014-11-30       Impact factor: 4.357

4.  Pollen-mediated gene flow from glyphosate-resistant common waterhemp (Amaranthus rudis Sauer): consequences for the dispersal of resistance genes.

Authors:  Debalin Sarangi; Andrew J Tyre; Eric L Patterson; Todd A Gaines; Suat Irmak; Stevan Z Knezevic; John L Lindquist; Amit J Jhala
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-03-22       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  Examination of Genomic and Transcriptomic Alterations in a Morphologically Stable Line, MU1, Generated by Intergeneric Pollination.

Authors:  Wei-Long Meng; Meng-Jie Zhao; Xiang-Bo Yang; An-Xing Zhang; Ning-Ning Wang; Zhao-Shi Xu; Jian Ma
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2020-02-15       Impact factor: 4.096

Review 6.  Evolutionary and social consequences of introgression of nontransgenic herbicide resistance from rice to weedy rice in Brazil.

Authors:  Aldo Merotto; Ives C G R Goulart; Anderson L Nunes; Augusto Kalsing; Catarine Markus; Valmir G Menezes; Alcido E Wander
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2016-06-25       Impact factor: 5.183

7.  Ambient insect pressure and recipient genotypes determine fecundity of transgenic crop-weed rice hybrid progeny: Implications for environmental biosafety assessment.

Authors:  Hui Xia; Hongbin Zhang; Wei Wang; Xiao Yang; Feng Wang; Jun Su; Hanbing Xia; Kai Xu; Xingxing Cai; Bao-Rong Lu
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2016-03-02       Impact factor: 5.183

8.  Patterns of Gene Flow between Crop and Wild Carrot, Daucus carota (Apiaceae) in the United States.

Authors:  Jennifer R Mandel; Adam J Ramsey; Massimo Iorizzo; Philipp W Simon
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-09-07       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  The superwoman1-cleistogamy2 mutant is a novel resource for gene containment in rice.

Authors:  Fabien Lombardo; Makoto Kuroki; Shan-Guo Yao; Hiroyuki Shimizu; Tomohito Ikegaya; Mayumi Kimizu; Shinnosuke Ohmori; Takashi Akiyama; Takami Hayashi; Tomoya Yamaguchi; Setsuo Koike; Osamu Yatou; Hitoshi Yoshida
Journal:  Plant Biotechnol J       Date:  2016-07-18       Impact factor: 9.803

10.  Modeling pollen-mediated gene flow from glyphosate-resistant to -susceptible giant ragweed (Ambrosia trifida L.) under field conditions.

Authors:  Zahoor A Ganie; Amit J Jhala
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-12-06       Impact factor: 4.379

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