uses a variant Bt Cry3Bb1 insecticidal protein (Donovan et al., 1992). Cry3Bb1 is known to be biologically active The corn rootworm (CRW; Diabrotica spp.) is one of the most against several species within the Coleopteran family serious pests of corn in the USA. Chemical insecticides and crop rotation have been the only two options available to growers for Chrysomelidae, including the western corn rootworm, managing CRW. Unfortunately, both of these tactics can be ineffective Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte (Rupar et al., as a result of either resistance or behavioral modifications. In this 1991). The biological activity of this protein against D. paper, we describe transgenic maize (Zea mays L.) hybrids that control virgifera virgifera suggested its potential use in creating CRW. These hybrids were created with a Cry3Bb1 Bacillus thurintransgenic plants expressing Cry3Bb1 that would confer giensis (Bt) variant that is approximately eight times more lethal to protection to corn root tissue from larval feeding damcorn rootworm larvae than the wild-type protein. A DNA vector age. To further augment protection of the root system containing the modified cry3Bb1 gene was placed under control of a from larval feeding damage, modifications were introroot-enhanced promoter (4-AS1) and was introduced into embryonic duced in the cry3Bb1 gene that gave rise to an amino acid maize cells by microprojectile bombardment. Described here is the variant Cry3Bb1 protein with an eight-fold increase in molecular genetic characterization, protein expression levels, and field performance of the recently commercialized MON863 hybrids.
SummaryTransgenic plants of Florunner and Florigiant, two of the most widely cultivated peanut cultivars in the USA, have been developed using the ACCELL@ gene delivery method. Shoot meristems of mature embryonic axes were bombarded with gold beads coated with DNA encoding P-glucuronidase (gus), phosphinothricin acetyl transferase (bar), and tomato spotted wilt virus-nucleocapsid protein (tsww-np) genes. Transgenic shoots were identified by screening for GUS activity, and independent transformants were recovered from both cultivars.
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