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Contact:
Dr. Dionne Shepherd
dionne.shepherd@uct.ac.za
Brian Hyps
bhyps@aspb.org
301-251-0560, ext. 114
Dr. Beatrice Grabowski
bgrabowski@earthlink.net
301-871-1962
First All-African Produced Genetically Engineered Maize Is Resistant to Maize
Streak Virus
Summary:
In research that will be presented at the annual meeting of the American Society
of Plant Biologists in Chicago (July 7-11, 2007), South African scientists developed
a transgenic maize variety resistant to maize streak virus (MSV). The transmission
of MSV by a leafhopper is exacerbated during drought conditions, resulting in
devastated crops over large areas. The technology can potentially be adapted
to other crops that are also infected by geminiviruses like MSV.
Full Release:
Maize streak viruses (MSV), geminiviruses that can destroy most of a maize crop,
are endemic to sub-Saharan Africa and adjacent Indian Ocean islands where they
are transmitted by leafhoppers in the genus Cicadulina. Maize can supply 50%
of the caloric intake in sub-Saharan Africa but, in certain years, a farmer's
entire crop can be wiped out. Now, scientists at the University of Cape Town,
South Africa, along with colleagues at the South African seed company, PANNAR
Pty Ltd, have developed a resistant variety of maize that they hope will help
alleviate food shortages as well as promote the reputation of genetically engineered
(GE) foods in Africa. Dr. Dionne Shepherd of the University of Cape Town will
be presenting the results of her recent work and that of coauthors B. Owor,
R. Edema, A. Varsani, D.P. Martin, J.A. Thomson and E.P. Rybicki, at the annual
meeting of the American Society of Plant Biologists in Chicago (July 8, 11:20
AM) in a major symposium on Plant Biology in Sub-Saharan Africa organized by
Debby Delmer of UC Davis.
Maize, which originated in Mexico, was carried to Africa in the 1500s and eventually
displaced native food crops such as sorghum and millet. Maize streak virus,
an endemic pathogen of native African grasses, was then carried to maize plants
by viruliferous leafhoppers. African scientists have been working for more than
a quarter century on developing resistant varieties of maize by selecting and
crossing varieties with various degrees of resistance to the virus. However,
resistance requires multiple genes located on different chromosomes, so the
process is not straightforward. The group at the University of Cape Town took
the opposite approach. They mutated a viral gene that encodes a protein that
the virus needs to replicate itself and inserted it into maize plants. When
the virus infects one of these transgenic maize plants, the mutated protein,
which is expressed at a high level, prevents the virus from replicating and
killing the plant. The transgenic maize variety has proven consistently resistant
to MSV and the trait can be reliably passed on to the next generation and in
crosses to other varieties. Field trials are scheduled to begin soon, not only
to test the effectiveness of the technology in the field but also to ensure
that the GE maize variety has no unintended effects on beneficial organisms
that may feed on it. The resistant maize will also be tested to ensure that
the viral protein is digestible and non-allergenic. The MSV-resistant maize
is the first GE crop developed and tested solely by Africans.
This group of scientists also surveyed 389 Ugandan MSV isolates to assess
the diversity and genetic characteristics of this destructive pathogen. They
found that the most prevalent strain of this virus is a product of recombination
of different viral genotypes, thus identifying an important source of new pathogenic
variants and illustrating the constantly changing evolutionary battle between
plants and pathogens. MSV was first sequenced in 1984 and found to contain a
genome of only 2700 DNA bases in a circle of single-stranded DNA. When it infects
susceptible plants, they produce deformed cobs and are often severely dwarfed.
As the name of the virus suggests, the leaves are marked with parallel, yellow-white
streaks.
The timing of infection, the maize genotype, and prevailing climatic conditions
can all influence the extent of damage wreaked by this viral pathogen. Young
plants cannot survive the infection but older plants are better able to contain
the infection, resulting in smaller losses of grain. However, drought can have
a devastating effect on maize fields over a wide geographical area. Under warm
and wet conditions, a long-bodied morph of the leafhopper C. mbila emerges,
but this form only travels short distances of 10 meters or less, thus limiting
its damage to crops. Under drought conditions, a stronger, short-bodied morph
that can fly great distances spreads the disease over large areas, thus exacerbating
the effects of the drought itself.
Disease caused by similar geminiviruses, Wheat dwarf virus (WDV) and various
sugarcane streak viruses, also affect other crops, including barley, wheat,
oats, sugarcane, and millet. Thus, the technology developed for MSV could potentially
be adapted to develop resistance in these other crops. Virologist Edward Rybicki
and microbiologist Jennifer Thomson are hopeful that this year's field trials
will demonstrate not only the effectiveness of this technology in producing
resistance to a destructive pathogen but also the safety of GE foods. Part of
the objective is to provide seed that will be sold at a minimal profit to subsistence
farmers, thus removing the objection that GE technology is principally profit-driven.
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