| Literature DB >> 31185678 |
Surbhi Kumawat1, Nitika Rana2, Ruchi Bansal3, Gautam Vishwakarma4, Sayaji T Mehetre5, Bikram Kishore Das6, Manish Kumar7, Satish Kumar Yadav8, Humira Sonah9, Tilak Raj Sharma10, Rupesh Deshmukh11.
Abstract
: Fast neutron (FN) radiation mediated mutagenesis is a unique approach among the several induced mutagenesis methods being used in plant science in terms of impacted mutations. The FN mutagenesis usually creates deletions from few bases to several million bases (Mb). A library of random deletion generated using FN mutagenesis lines can provide indispensable resources for the reverse genetic approaches. In this review, information from several efforts made using FN mutagenesis has been compiled to understand the type of induced mutations, frequency, and genetic stability. Concerns regarding the utilization of FN mutagenesis technique for a plant with different level of ploidy and genome complexity are discussed. We have highlighted the utility of next-generation sequencing techniques that can be efficiently utilized for the characterization of mutant lines as well as for the mapping of causal mutations. Pros and cons of mapping by mutation (MutMap), mutant chromosome sequencing (MutChromSeq), exon capture, whole genome sequencing, MutRen-Seq, and different tilling approaches that can be used for the detection of FN-induced mutation has also been discussed. Genomic resources developed using the FN mutagenesis have been catalogued wooing to meaningful utilization of the available resources. The information provided here will be helpful for the efficient exploration for the crop improvement programs and for better understanding of genetic regulations.Entities:
Keywords: deletagene; fast neutron irradiation; induced mutagenesis; mutation mapping; next-generation sequencing technologies; reverse genetics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31185678 PMCID: PMC6631465 DOI: 10.3390/plants8060164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Advantages and disadvantages of different mutagenic approaches.
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical mutagenesis | Identification of multiple alleles of genes. Heritable. | Isolation of mutated gene is difficult | [ |
| Insertional mutagenesis | Chemically and physically Stable through multiple generations. T-DNA can be used to study specific stages of cellular differentiation or cell fate. | Transactivation properties. Require transformation | [ |
| Fast neutron mutagenesis | Saturate the genome. Do not require transformation or tissue culture. Complete knockout of gene | Screening is time taking. Can delete multiple genes at a time | [ |
Figure 1Generalized flow chart showing steps involved in the development and evaluation of mutant population derived from the plants treated with fast neutron.
Study of fast neutron mutagenesis in different organisms.
| Organism | Objective | References |
|---|---|---|
| Mouse | Effect of chronic neutron- and γ-irradiation on spermatogonia | [ |
| Methanogenic bacteria (TDM, TRM, and SSM) | Effect of physical irradiation (y irradiation, neutron bombardment) and chemical mutagen (acridine orange and colchicine) on methane production | [ |
|
| Induced rates of mitotic crossing-over | [ |
| Yeast | Relative biological effectiveness of 14.5- MeV neutrons for the induction of gene conversion | [ |
|
| To compare effect of fast neutrons and gamma rays in producing sterility | [ |
|
| To study fast neutrons, gamma rays, X-rays relative biological effectiveness on nymph ovarioles | [ |
|
| Effect of fast neutron on productivity of young and old flour beetles | [ |
|
| Effect of FN on production of cellulose | [ |
| Chinese hamster | Response of ovary cells to fast neutron | [ |
| Mammalian cells | To study mutations induced by γ-rays and fast neutrons | [ |
| Enhancement of lipid productivity | [ |
Details of significant studies performed with fast neutron (FN) radiations and FN combined with other mutagens.
| Species | Mutagen | Dose | Number of Mutants | Reason | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soybean cv M92-220 | FN | 4–32 Gray units | 23,000 | Phenotypic screening and associated genomic characterization | [ |
|
| FN | 60 Gy | 300 | Screening of elongated hypocotyl mutants | [ |
| Rice | FN | 20 Gy | 2418 | For genome-wide profiling of mutations | [ |
| Peanut | FN + in vitro culture | 9.7–18.0 Gy | 19 | Somatic embryogenesis combined with plant regeneration | [ |
|
| Fast neutron bombardment (FNB) | 30–40 Gy | 1000 | creened for symbiotic nitrogen fixationSymbiotic nitrogen fixation mutant lines | [ |
| Fast neutron (FN) and UV-B | 280–320 nm 30–40 Gy | To study combined effect of oxidative stress and mutagenic potential | [ | ||
|
| FN | 8 Grey (Gy) | 58 | Non-nodulation mutant called FNN5-2 | [ |
| FN | 15 Gy | 865 | Functional genomic studies | [ | |
|
| FN + EMS | 10 Gy + 0.2% EMS | 14% | Mutation genetics and breeding study | Mehandjiev, Kosturkova and Mihov [ |
Figure 2Generalized flowchart of mapping by mutation (MutMap) approach being used for the localization of casual mutation in small plant genomes like rice.
Figure 3Schematic representation of MutMap+ strategy exploring next-generation sequencing for identification of casual SNP unique to bulk mutant.
Figure 4Generalized flowchart of MutMap-Gap approach in which reference parental genome created and gap regions in the parental/cultivar genome identified. Subsequently, MutMap approach needs to be followed as described in Figure 2.