Login / Signup

Field-grown miR156 transgenic switchgrass reproduction, yield, global gene expression analysis, and bioconfinement.

Chelsea R JohnsonReginald J MillwoodYuhong TangJiqing GouRobert W SykesGeoffrey B TurnerMark F DavisYi SangZeng-Yu WangCharles Neal Stewart
Published in: Biotechnology for biofuels (2017)
Because of the research field's geographical features, this study was the first instance of any genetically engineered trait in switchgrass, in which experimental plants were allowed to flower in the field in the eastern U.S.; USDA-APHIS-BRS regulators allowed open flowering. We found that medium overexpression of miR156, e.g., line T37, resulted in delayed and reduced flowering accompanied by high biomass production. We propose that induced miR156 expression could be further developed as a transgenic switchgrass bioconfinement tool to enable eventual commercialization.
Keyphrases