PAG-X  Plant, Animal & Microbe Genomes X Conference

January 12-16, 2002
Town & Country Convention Center
San Diego, CA


Poster: Rice
            


CREATION OF A GENOME-WIDE COLLECTION OF INSERTIONAL MUTANTS IN RICE

Christophe Sallaud1 , Farid Regad1 , Celine Gay2 , Pierre Larmande1 , Emmanuelle Bourgeois 1 , Monique Raynal4 , Alain Ghesquière3 , Michel Delseny4 , Emmanuel Guiderdoni1

1 Biotrop programme, Cirad-Amis, Avenue Agropolis, TA 40/03 F-34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
2 INRA-ENSAM, 2, place Viala, F-34060 Montpellier cedex 01, France
3 Genetrop, IRD, BP5045, F-34032 Montpellier Cedex 01, France
4 Laboratoire Génome et Développement des Plantes, UMR5096, CNRS/UP, 52, avenue de Villeneuve, F-66860, Perpignan Cedex , France

With the full sequence of the rice genome becoming progressively available to the international scientific community, assigning a function for each gene is clearly the next challenge. Production of a large number of knock out lines by insertion mutagenesis is one tool to be developed to achieve this task. Several insertion elements such as Ac/Ds, Tos17 or T-DNA have recently been evaluated for rice functional genomic studies (ref. 1 to 4). Our project is to generate a large number of T-DNA insertion lines of rice cv. Nipponbare by the end of 2003. Our strategy is to identify all the flanking sequences of each T-DNA line (FST) to allow in silico reverse genetic analysis. At first, the T-DNA carry a gusA gene enhancer trap system to follow in vivo gene expression by GUS assay. This poster will summarize the status of the work. Histochemical assays conducted on vegetative and reproductive organs of more than 2,000 enhancer trap lines allowed detection of GUS-specific activity in different organs. First analysis on 2500 FSTs indicate that the average size of the FST is 245 bp in length. Using blast N search, we have found that the distribution of the assigned FST along the different chromosomes is well correlated to the amount of sequences available for each chromosome. These primary results indicate that T-DNA insertions are randomly distributed along the rice genome. As an example, we will present a map of the T-DNA insertion on the nearly completed sequence of the rice chromosome 1. All the data will be inserted in the future in a public database OryzaTagLine.
References:
1. Chin al., (1999) Molecular analysis of rice plants harboring an Ac/Ds transposable element-mediated gene trapping system. Plant J, 19:615-623.
2. Enoki et al., (1999) Ac as a tool for the functional genomics of rice. Plant J., 19:605-613.
3. Hirochika H et al. (2001) Contribution of the Tos17 retrotransposon to rice functional genomics. Current Opinion in Plant Biology 4 (2), 118-122.
4. Jeon et al. (2000) T-DNA insertional mutagenesis for functional genomics in rice. Plant J. 22:561-571.


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