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Oxford University Press, Plant Physiology, 1(163), p. 21-29, 2013

DOI: 10.1104/pp.113.221903

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Insertional Mutagenesis Using Tnt1 Retrotransposon in Potato

Journal article published in 2013 by Saowapa Duangpan ORCID, Wenli Zhang, Yufang Wu, Shelley H. Jansky, Jiming Jiang ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Insertional mutagenesis using T-DNA or transposable elements, which is an important tool in functional genomics and is well established in several crops, has not been developed in potato. Here we report the application of the Tnt1 retrotransposon as an insertional mutagen in potato. The Tnt1 retrotransposon was introduced into a highly homozygous and self-compatible clone, 523-3, of the diploid wild potato species Solanum chacoense. Transposition of the Tnt1 elements introduced into 523-3 can be efficiently induced by tissue culture. Tnt1 preferentially inserted into genic regions in the potato genome and the insertions were stable during sexual reproduction, making Tnt1 an ideal mutagen in potato. Several distinct phenotypes associated with plant stature and leaf morphology were discovered in mutation screening from a total of 38 families derived from Tnt1-containing lines. We demonstrate that the insertional mutagenesis system based on Tnt1 and the 523-3 clone can be expanded to the genome-wide level to potentially tag every gene in the potato genome.