• Chinese Journal of Lasers
  • Vol. 27, Issue 3, 278 (2000)
[in Chinese]1, [in Chinese]2, [in Chinese]3, [in Chinese]4, [in Chinese]5, [in Chinese]1, and [in Chinese]1
Author Affiliations
  • 1[in Chinese]
  • 2[in Chinese]
  • 3[in Chinese]
  • 4[in Chinese]
  • 5[in Chinese]
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    [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese]. Studies on Verticillium and Fusarium Wilt Resistant Cotton Plants with Trangenosis by Laser Microbeam Puncture[J]. Chinese Journal of Lasers, 2000, 27(3): 278 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    By the method of laser microbeam puncture, the maturing embryoes of cotton were transformed with plant bivalent expression vector pBLGC including β-1,3-glucanase and chitinase genes. Fungal challenge of T1 generation with Verticillium albo-atrum were carried out by dipping their roots into hyphal and spores solution. The survived T1 seedings were subjected to Kan-resistant assay, and the results showed that 9 out of 29 T1 plants showed obvious Kanamycin resistance (Kan 1%). Upon PCR analysis, 7 out of 9 Kan-resistant plants produced a PCR fragment with expected size, indicating that they are probably transgenic. After T1 plants in disease-inducing plot were subjected to the period, in which the Veritcillium wilt serious took place, 7 PCR positive plants showed obvious resistance to this fungus, at last, flowered and bore cotton bolls normally, while the other T1 plants and the non-transformants all died of infection. This result primarily suggested that the foreign genes had integreted in cotton genome, and the transgenic plants showed high resistance to Verticillium wilt.
    [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese], [in Chinese]. Studies on Verticillium and Fusarium Wilt Resistant Cotton Plants with Trangenosis by Laser Microbeam Puncture[J]. Chinese Journal of Lasers, 2000, 27(3): 278
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