CA2381330A1 - Male sterile plants - Google Patents
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- CA2381330A1 CA2381330A1 CA002381330A CA2381330A CA2381330A1 CA 2381330 A1 CA2381330 A1 CA 2381330A1 CA 002381330 A CA002381330 A CA 002381330A CA 2381330 A CA2381330 A CA 2381330A CA 2381330 A1 CA2381330 A1 CA 2381330A1
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07K—PEPTIDES
- C07K14/00—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
- C07K14/415—Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from plants
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- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12N—MICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
- C12N15/00—Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
- C12N15/09—Recombinant DNA-technology
- C12N15/63—Introduction of foreign genetic material using vectors; Vectors; Use of hosts therefor; Regulation of expression
- C12N15/79—Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts
- C12N15/82—Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts for plant cells, e.g. plant artificial chromosomes (PACs)
- C12N15/8216—Methods for controlling, regulating or enhancing expression of transgenes in plant cells
- C12N15/8222—Developmentally regulated expression systems, tissue, organ specific, temporal or spatial regulation
- C12N15/823—Reproductive tissue-specific promoters
- C12N15/8231—Male-specific, e.g. anther, tapetum, pollen
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- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
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- C12N15/00—Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
- C12N15/09—Recombinant DNA-technology
- C12N15/63—Introduction of foreign genetic material using vectors; Vectors; Use of hosts therefor; Regulation of expression
- C12N15/79—Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts
- C12N15/82—Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts for plant cells, e.g. plant artificial chromosomes (PACs)
- C12N15/8241—Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology
- C12N15/8261—Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with agronomic (input) traits, e.g. crop yield
- C12N15/8287—Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with agronomic (input) traits, e.g. crop yield for fertility modification, e.g. apomixis
- C12N15/8289—Male sterility
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Abstract
The present invention relates to nucleic acid molecules enabling the specific inhibition of a pollen specific regulatory gene. The invention also relates to methods to obtain transgenic plants which show a pollen specific inhibition or overexpression of a gene and thus male sterility. In addition, the invention relates tomethods for isolating pollen specific genes.
Description
CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 Male Sterile Plants Description The present invention relates to isolated nucleic acid molecules useful for the production of male sterile plants, in particular male sterile mono-cotyledonous plants, to vectors containing the nu-cleic acid molecules, to host cells containing the vectors, to plants, harvest and propagation mate-rial containing the host cells, to methods for ob-taining them and to methods for isolating such nu-cleic acid molecules.
The introduction of genes into transgenic plants is considered to have high commercial value. The transfer of heterologous genes or genes of interest into a plant under control of tissue-specific regu-latory elements provides a powerful means of con-ferring selective advantages to plants and to in-crease their commercial value. The ability to con-trol gene expression is useful for conferring re-sistance and immunity to certain diseases or to modify the metabolism of a tissue. Plant genetic engineering techniques also prove useful in gener-ating improved plants for plant breeding purposes, such as male sterile plants, in particular plants exhibiting cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) or nu-clear male sterility (NMS) to be used for hybrid breeding.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PC'T/EP00/08001
The introduction of genes into transgenic plants is considered to have high commercial value. The transfer of heterologous genes or genes of interest into a plant under control of tissue-specific regu-latory elements provides a powerful means of con-ferring selective advantages to plants and to in-crease their commercial value. The ability to con-trol gene expression is useful for conferring re-sistance and immunity to certain diseases or to modify the metabolism of a tissue. Plant genetic engineering techniques also prove useful in gener-ating improved plants for plant breeding purposes, such as male sterile plants, in particular plants exhibiting cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) or nu-clear male sterility (NMS) to be used for hybrid breeding.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PC'T/EP00/08001
-2-Hybrid breeding is widely used for corn, rice, and oil seed rape and is becoming ever more important.
The most important mechanism to provide plants use-ful for hybrid breeding is cytoplasmic male steril-ity. According to this mechanism the anthers of various varieties do not develop functional pollen, which is inherited by cytoplasmic factors and may be restored by dominant restorer genes. In most instances the genes involved are mitochondrial genes, which are maternally inherited. Upon fer-tilisation with non-restorer varieties, CMS will be maintained in the progeny allowing the indefinite production of seed of the female parent. Another form or producing male sterile plants is to use nu-clear male sterility (NMS) mechanisms. However, its use for the production of hybrid seed is se-verely limited by the inevitable segregation of male fertile progeny when breeding NMS-plants due to its recessive inheritance. Up to now it was not possible to develop a system allowing the produc-tion of completely pollen sterile female plants.
Thus, there is a great demand for providing NMS-plants for hybrid breeding.
Male sterile plants may be obtained by transforming plants with gene constructs comprising coding se-quences for pollen toxic or detrimental proteins under control of pollen specific regulatory ele-ments, for instance ribonucleases under control of an anther specific promoter. Male sterile plants, however, may also be advantageously obtained by specifically inhibiting the formation or function of gene products involved in pollen development and/or function.
CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001
The most important mechanism to provide plants use-ful for hybrid breeding is cytoplasmic male steril-ity. According to this mechanism the anthers of various varieties do not develop functional pollen, which is inherited by cytoplasmic factors and may be restored by dominant restorer genes. In most instances the genes involved are mitochondrial genes, which are maternally inherited. Upon fer-tilisation with non-restorer varieties, CMS will be maintained in the progeny allowing the indefinite production of seed of the female parent. Another form or producing male sterile plants is to use nu-clear male sterility (NMS) mechanisms. However, its use for the production of hybrid seed is se-verely limited by the inevitable segregation of male fertile progeny when breeding NMS-plants due to its recessive inheritance. Up to now it was not possible to develop a system allowing the produc-tion of completely pollen sterile female plants.
Thus, there is a great demand for providing NMS-plants for hybrid breeding.
Male sterile plants may be obtained by transforming plants with gene constructs comprising coding se-quences for pollen toxic or detrimental proteins under control of pollen specific regulatory ele-ments, for instance ribonucleases under control of an anther specific promoter. Male sterile plants, however, may also be advantageously obtained by specifically inhibiting the formation or function of gene products involved in pollen development and/or function.
CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001
-3-In higher plants, such as maize, the male products of meiosis, the microspores, undergo two mitotic cell divisions. The first pollen mitosis generates the large vegetative cell and a smaller generative cell. The generative cell undergoes a second mi-totic division forming the two sperm cells.
Tricellular and bicellular pollen can be distin-guished, depending on whether the second pollen mi-tosis is performed in the pollen grain or in the pollen tube after germination. The vegetative cell forms the pollen tube upon germination and trans-ports the sperm cells through the transmitting tract or the style to the embryo sac. Pollen tubes enter the embryo sacs through the micropyle and penetrate one of the two synergids whereupon the pollen tube bursts, releasing the sperm cells into the degenerating synergid. During the double fer-tilisation process one sperm cell fertilises the egg cell and the other sperm cell fertilises the central cell. Maize pollen tubes have to grow up to 30 cm along the style (silk) to reach the embryo sac which is deeply embedded within the ovary (kernel). Although maize pollen tubes reach a growth rate of approximately 1 cm/h, it takes sev-eral hours to reach the embryo sac. During this time pollen tubes have to be guided through the transmitting tissue of the style and new cell wall has to be synthesised to sustain the rapidly grow-ing tube tip. Two groups of pollen-expressed genes are distinguished, the so-called early pollen genes, which are most abundant prior to the first pollen mitosis and the late pollen genes, which are thought to have a function during pollen maturation and tube growth.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001
Tricellular and bicellular pollen can be distin-guished, depending on whether the second pollen mi-tosis is performed in the pollen grain or in the pollen tube after germination. The vegetative cell forms the pollen tube upon germination and trans-ports the sperm cells through the transmitting tract or the style to the embryo sac. Pollen tubes enter the embryo sacs through the micropyle and penetrate one of the two synergids whereupon the pollen tube bursts, releasing the sperm cells into the degenerating synergid. During the double fer-tilisation process one sperm cell fertilises the egg cell and the other sperm cell fertilises the central cell. Maize pollen tubes have to grow up to 30 cm along the style (silk) to reach the embryo sac which is deeply embedded within the ovary (kernel). Although maize pollen tubes reach a growth rate of approximately 1 cm/h, it takes sev-eral hours to reach the embryo sac. During this time pollen tubes have to be guided through the transmitting tissue of the style and new cell wall has to be synthesised to sustain the rapidly grow-ing tube tip. Two groups of pollen-expressed genes are distinguished, the so-called early pollen genes, which are most abundant prior to the first pollen mitosis and the late pollen genes, which are thought to have a function during pollen maturation and tube growth.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001
-4-Several pollen-specific cDNAs have been isolated, representing unknown proteins, cytoskeletal compo-nents, poly(A) binding proteins, translation ini-tiation factors, ubiquitin and others (reviewed by Taylor and Hepler, 1997). Several pollen specific nucleic acid sequences are described. It is known for instance that 5' UTRs (untranslated regions) of late pollen expressed genes from tomato are suffi-cient to alter translation efficiency in pollen (Bate et al., 1996; Curie and McCormick, 1997).
The pollen-specific translation initiation factor eIF-4A8 was shown to be phosphorylated during pol-len tube growth and might be involved in regulating translation of late pollen genes (op den Camp and Kuhlemeier, 1998).
Furthermore, a pollen MARS box gene DEFH125 of An-tirrhinum is disclosed by Zachgo et al., 1997. Im-munolocalization studies showed increasing DEFH125 expression in maturing stamen and localisation to the cytoplasm of the vegetative cell in mature pol-len. Finally, kinases have been described which are expressed at different stages of pollen devel-opment (Lee et al . , 1996, Estruch et al. , 1994; Mu et al., 1994; Li and Gray, 1997; Wilson et al., 1997) and pollen tube growth (Muschietti et al., 1998). However, there still remains the need for an efficient system to engineer plants producing completely sterile pollen.
Thus, it is considered particularly important to develop and provide means and methods that inhibit selectively wild-type pollen function and therefore allow the production of male sterile plants.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001
The pollen-specific translation initiation factor eIF-4A8 was shown to be phosphorylated during pol-len tube growth and might be involved in regulating translation of late pollen genes (op den Camp and Kuhlemeier, 1998).
Furthermore, a pollen MARS box gene DEFH125 of An-tirrhinum is disclosed by Zachgo et al., 1997. Im-munolocalization studies showed increasing DEFH125 expression in maturing stamen and localisation to the cytoplasm of the vegetative cell in mature pol-len. Finally, kinases have been described which are expressed at different stages of pollen devel-opment (Lee et al . , 1996, Estruch et al. , 1994; Mu et al., 1994; Li and Gray, 1997; Wilson et al., 1997) and pollen tube growth (Muschietti et al., 1998). However, there still remains the need for an efficient system to engineer plants producing completely sterile pollen.
Thus, it is considered particularly important to develop and provide means and methods that inhibit selectively wild-type pollen function and therefore allow the production of male sterile plants.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001
-5-Thus, the t=chnical problem underlying the present invention is to provide nucleic acid molecules for use in clor._ng and expressing pollen specific or pollen abundant genes, in particular for use in monocotyledcrous plants which allow the production of male sterile plants.
The present invention solves the technical problem underlying t:~e present invention by providing puri-fied nucleic acid molecules for use in cloning and expressing a pollen specific or pollen abundant gene in a p~_ant which are selected from- the group consisting c=
(a) the nucleic acid sequence defined in any one of SEQ ID No. 1 or 12, or part or a complementary strand thereof, (b) a nucleic acid sequence encoding a protein or peptide with the amino acid sequence defined in SEQ
ID No. 2, or part or a complementary strand thereof, (c) a nucleic acid sequence which hybridises to the nucleic acid sequence defined a) or b), or part or a complementary strand thereof and (d) a nucleic acid sequence which is degenerate as a result of the genetic code to the nucleic acid sequence de=fined in a), b), c), or part or a com-plementary strand thereof, WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001
The present invention solves the technical problem underlying t:~e present invention by providing puri-fied nucleic acid molecules for use in cloning and expressing a pollen specific or pollen abundant gene in a p~_ant which are selected from- the group consisting c=
(a) the nucleic acid sequence defined in any one of SEQ ID No. 1 or 12, or part or a complementary strand thereof, (b) a nucleic acid sequence encoding a protein or peptide with the amino acid sequence defined in SEQ
ID No. 2, or part or a complementary strand thereof, (c) a nucleic acid sequence which hybridises to the nucleic acid sequence defined a) or b), or part or a complementary strand thereof and (d) a nucleic acid sequence which is degenerate as a result of the genetic code to the nucleic acid sequence de=fined in a), b), c), or part or a com-plementary strand thereof, WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001
-6-(e) alleles or derivatives of the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a) , (b) , (c) , (d) , or part or a complementary strand thereof.
The present invention also solves this problem by providing purified nucleic acid molecules for use in cloning and expressing a pollen specific or pol-len abundant gene in a plant which are selected from the group consisting of (a) the nucleic acid sequence defined in any one of SEQ ID No. 3 to 11, or a part or complementary strand thereof, (b) a nucleic acid sequence which hybridises to the nucleic acid sequence defined a), or a part or com-plementary strand thereof and (c) alleles or derivatives of the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a) or (b), or part or a comple-mentary strand thereof.
The nucleic acid sequence set out in SEQ ID No. 1 represents a nucleic acid sequence, namely a cDNA
sequence encoding a pollen specifically expressed protein, called the ZmNtADS2 protein, which is probably essential for pollen tube growth. This sequence will be termed in the following the coding sequence of the present invention or the ZmM~IDS2 coding sequence.
The amino acid sequence set out in SEQ ID No. 2 represents the amino acid sequence of the protein ZmMADS2.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001
The present invention also solves this problem by providing purified nucleic acid molecules for use in cloning and expressing a pollen specific or pol-len abundant gene in a plant which are selected from the group consisting of (a) the nucleic acid sequence defined in any one of SEQ ID No. 3 to 11, or a part or complementary strand thereof, (b) a nucleic acid sequence which hybridises to the nucleic acid sequence defined a), or a part or com-plementary strand thereof and (c) alleles or derivatives of the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a) or (b), or part or a comple-mentary strand thereof.
The nucleic acid sequence set out in SEQ ID No. 1 represents a nucleic acid sequence, namely a cDNA
sequence encoding a pollen specifically expressed protein, called the ZmNtADS2 protein, which is probably essential for pollen tube growth. This sequence will be termed in the following the coding sequence of the present invention or the ZmM~IDS2 coding sequence.
The amino acid sequence set out in SEQ ID No. 2 represents the amino acid sequence of the protein ZmMADS2.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001
-7-The sequences set out in SEQ ID No. 3 to 9 comprise isolated 5' regulatory elements and are considered to be promoters or parts thereof, i.e. promoter fragments. These sequences are capable of modulat-ing, initiating and/or contributing to the pollen specific or pollen abundant transcription of nu-cleic acid sequences operably linked to them. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, these sequences may additionally contain at their 3' terminus the nucleotide sequence from position +1 to 310 as depicted in SEQ ID No. 10. This se-quence is a 5' untranslated region, which may serve as linker between a promoter of the present inven-tion and a coding sequence linked thereto.
The sequences set out in SEQ ID No . 11 comprise an isolated 3' regulatory element and is considered to be a 3' transcription regulatory element, or a part thereof, for instance a termination and/or poly-adenylation signal. This sequence is capable of modulating, in particular contributing to, or ter-minating the transcription of nucleic acid se-quences operably linked to them.
The sequence set out in SEQ ID No. 12 is the se-quence of a genomic clone comprising all of the above sequences.
The present invention also relates to nucleic acid sequences which hybridise, in particular under stringent conditions, to the sequences set out in any one of SEQ ID No. 1 and 3 to 12. In particu-lar, these sequences have a degree of identity of 70o to the sequence of SEQ ID Vos. 1 arid 3 to 12.
The sequences set out in SEQ ID No . 11 comprise an isolated 3' regulatory element and is considered to be a 3' transcription regulatory element, or a part thereof, for instance a termination and/or poly-adenylation signal. This sequence is capable of modulating, in particular contributing to, or ter-minating the transcription of nucleic acid se-quences operably linked to them.
The sequence set out in SEQ ID No. 12 is the se-quence of a genomic clone comprising all of the above sequences.
The present invention also relates to nucleic acid sequences which hybridise, in particular under stringent conditions, to the sequences set out in any one of SEQ ID No. 1 and 3 to 12. In particu-lar, these sequences have a degree of identity of 70o to the sequence of SEQ ID Vos. 1 arid 3 to 12.
8 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 _8_ In the context of the present invention, nucleic acid sequences which hybridise to any one of the specifically disclosed sequences of SEQ. Id. Nos. 1 and 3 to 12 are sequences which have a degree of 60o to 70o sequence identity to the specifically disclosed sequence on nucleotide level. In an even more preferred embodiment of the present invention, sequences which are encompassed by the present in-vention are sequences which have a degree of iden-tity of more than 700, and even more preferred, more than 800, 90%, 95o and particularly 99o to the specifically disclosed sequences on nucleotide level.
Thus, the present invention relates to nucleic acid sequences, in particular DNA sequences which hy-bridise under the hybridisation conditions as de-scribed in Sambrook et al., (1989) in particular under the following conditions to the sequences specifically disclosed:
Hybridisation buffer: 1 M NaCl; to SDS; 10%
dextran sulphate; 100 ~.g/ml ssDNA
Hybridisation temperature: 65° C
First wash: 2 x SSC; 0.5o SDS at room temperature Second wash: 0.2 x SSC; 0.5o SDS at 55°C.
More preferably, the hybridisation conditions are chosen as identified above, except that a hybridi-sation temperature and second wash temperature of 68° C, a:~d even more preferred, a hybridisation temperature and second wash temperature of 70° C is applied.
_g_ Thus, the present invention also comprises nucleic acid sequences which are functionally equivalent to the sequences of any one of SEQ ID No . 1 and 3 to 12, in particular sequences which have at least ho-mology to the sequence of SEQ ID No. 1 and 3 to 12.
The invention also relates to alleles and deriva-tives of the sequences mentioned above which are defined as sequences being essentially similar to the above sequences but comprising, for instance, nucleotide exchanges, substitutions (also by un-usual nucleotides), rearrangements, mutations, de-letions, insertions, additions or nucleotide modi-fications and are functionally equivalent to the sequences set out in SEQ ID No. 1 and 3 to 12.
The nucleic acid molecules of the present invention are, in a preferred embodiment, derived from maize (Zea mays), most preferably from maize pollen.
According to the present invention it was found that the nucleic acid sequence isolated are spe-cifically expressed in mature pollen and obviously play an important role in pollen development, in particular pollen tube growth, pollen development and/or fertilisation.
Thus, the nucleic acid molecules of the present in-vention are useful for cloning tissue specific, in particular pollen specific nucleic acid sequences, in particular regulatory elements, coding sequences and/or complete genes, in plants, in particular in monocotyledonous plants. Thus, the present inven-tion provides the means for the isolation of pollen specific coding sequences and/or transcription WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 regulatory elements that direct or contribute to pollen-preferred gene expression in plants, in par-ticular in monocotyledonous plants, such as maize.
The present invention also provides the means of isolating pollen specifically expressed genes and their transcripts.
The nucleic acid molecules of the present invention are also useful for expressing a pollen specific protein, namely the ZmMADS2 coding sequence, in plants, in particular in the pollen of plants and especially in the pollen of monocotyledonous plants such as maize or of dicotyledonous plants such as sugar beets (Beta vulgaris). Thus, the present in-vention provides the means to allow the expression of a particular pollen specific or pollen abundant gene in pollen thereby enabling the modification of pollen development, pollen tube growth or fertili-sation processes. The coding sequence of the pres-ent invention may be overexpressed in transformed plants due to expression under control of a strong constitutive or regulated promoter. It is also possible to modify the coding sequence of the pres-ent invention so as to allow the production of a modified pollen specific protein, which in turn modifies in a desired manner pollen development and/or function. Most importantly, the present in-vention provides the means to specifically inhibit the formation of a protein essential for pollen function, namely the ZmMADS2 protein, by transform-ing plants with antisense constructs comprising all or part of the ZmMADS2 transcribed region, in par-ticular the coding sequence or part thereof in an-tisense orientation under the control of its wild-WO 01/12798 cA o23e133o 2002-o2-1s PCT/EP00/08001 type or appropriate other regulatory elements so as to effectively bind to wild-type ZmMADS2 mRNA and inhibit its translation. Another possibility of eliminating the expression of an endogenous ZmMADS2 gene is to use cosuppression technology, thus to insert a transgenic copy of the endogenous ZmMADS2 gene into the plant to silence the expression, for instance by overexpression of the transgenic copy coupled in sense orientation to a strong promoter.
Such a construct leads upon expression to the abol-ishment of the wild-type ZmMADS2 function thereby producing nuclear male sterile plants. Of course, the present invention also relates to processes to restore the elimination effect, for instance by us-ing switchable or inducible promoters to restore the effects.
The present invention also provides regulatory ele-ments, such as promoters, 3' termination signals or elements present in 5' and/or 3' untranslated re-gions (UTRs) providing for pollen specific expres-sion of any gene of interest, including the ZmMADS2 coding sequence of the present invention.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the pres-ent invention, the promoter of the present inven-tion is expressed in a spatially and temporarily specific manner, preferably in mature pollen after dehiscence, but before or during dehydration of the pollen takes place. In a further preferred embodi-ment the promoter of the present invention is able, due to specific sequence elements present in its sequence, not only to direct expression in prefera-bly mature, ungerminated pollen tissue but addi-CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 tionally also in root tips. Of course, by deleting or inactivating the root specific sequence element in the promoter of the present invention an exclu-sive pollen specific expression without any expres-sion in other tissues of a plant may be obtained.
Accordingly, the proteins encoded by the gene of interest can be accumulated in pollen. For in-stance, the promoter of the present invention is particularly useful in driving the pollen specific transcription of heterologous structural genes that confer male sterility to transgenic plants by ex-pressing exclusively in pollen mRNA or proteins in-hibiting or adversely influencing pollen develop-ment and/or function. Thus, the present invention relates to improved means and methods for plant breeding, in particular the production of hybrid seed, for instance by creating plants exhibiting nuclear male sterility, in particular in grain, ce-reals and corn. In a particularly preferred em-bodiment, the present invention relates to a DNA
construct with a promoter and/or 3' regulatory ele-ment of the present invention operably linked to a coding sequence for a toxic protein, for instance a barnase or a coding sequence of the present inven-tion as set out in SEQ ID No. 1.
In the context of the present invention, a number of terms shall be utilised as follows.
The term "promoter" refers to a sequence of DNA, usually upstream (5') to the coding sequence of a structural gene, which controls the expression of the coding region by providing the recognition for RNA polymerase and/or other factors required for WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 transcription to start at the correct site. Pro-moter sequences are necessary, but not always suf-ficient to drive the expression of the gene.
A "3' regulatory element (or "3' end") refers to that portion of a gene comprising a DNA segment, excluding the 5' sequence which drives the initia-tion of transcription and the structural portion of the gene, that determines the correct termination site and contains a polyadenylation signal and any other regulatory signals capable of effecting mes-senger RNA (mRNA) processing or gene expression.
The polyadenylation signal is usually characterised by effecting the addition of polyadenylic acid tracts to the 3' end of the mRNA precursor. Poly-adenylation signals are commonly recognised by the presence of homology to the canonical form 5'-AATAAA-3', although variations are not uncommon.
"Nucleic acid" refers to a large molecule which can be single or double stranded, composed of monomers (nucleotides) containing a sugar, phosphate and ei-ther a purine or pyrimidine. The nucleic acid may be cDNA, genomic DNA, or RNA, for instance mRNA.
The term "nucleic acid sequence" refers to a natu-ral or synthetic polymer of DNA or RNA which may be single or double stranded, alternatively containing synthetic, non-natural or altered nucleotide bases capable of incorporation into DNA or RNA polymers.
The term "gene" refers to a DNA sequence that codes for a specific protein and regulatory elements con-trolling the expression of this DNA sequence.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 The term "regulatory element" refers to a sequence located upstream (5'), within and/or downstream (3') to a coding sequence whose transcription and expression is controlled by the regulatory element, potentially in conjunction with the protein biosyn-thetic apparatus of the cell. "Regulation" or "regulate" refer to the modulation of the gene ex-pression induced by DNA sequence elements located primarily, but not exclusively upstream (5') from the transcription start of the gene of interest.
Regulation may result in an all or none response to a stimulation, or it may result in variations in the level of gene expression.
The term "coding sequence" refers to that portion of a gene encoding a protein, polypeptide, or a portion thereof, and excluding the regulatory se-quences which drive the initiation or termination of transcription.
The coding sequence or the regulatory element may be one normally found in the cell, in which case it is called "autologous", or it may be one not nor-mally found in a cellular location, in which case it is termed "heterologous".
A heterologous gene may also be composed of autolo-gous elements arranged in an order and/or orienta-tion not normally found in the cell in which it is transferred. A heterologous gene may be derived in whole or in part from any source known to the art, including a bacterial or viral genome or episome, eukaryotic nuclear or plasmid DNA, cDNA or chemi-cally synthesised DNA. The structural gene may WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 constitute an uninterrupted coding region or it may include one or more introns bounded by appropriate splice junctions. The structural gene may be a composite of segments derived from different sources, naturally occurring or synthetic.
The term "vector" refers to a recombinant DNA con-struct which may be a plasmid, virus, or autono-mously replicating sequence, phage or nucleotide sequence, linear or circular, of a single or double stranded DNA or RNA, derived from any source, in which a number of nucleotide sequences have been joined or recombined into a unique construction which is capable of introducing a promoter fragment and a DNA sequence for a selected gene product in sense or antisense orientation along with appropri-ate 3' untranslated sequence into a cell, in par-ticular a plant cell.
As used herein, "plant" refers to photosynthetic organisms, such as whole plants including algae, mosses, ferns and plant-derived tissues. "Plant derived tissues" refers to differentiated and un-differentiated tissues of a plant, including pol-len, pollen tubes, pollen grains, roots, shoots, shoot meristems, coleoptilar nodes, tassels, leaves, cotyledondous petals, ovules, tubers, seeds, kernels and various forms of cells in cul-ture such as intact cells, protoplasts, embryos and callus tissue. Plant-derived tissues may be in planta, or in organ, tissue or cell culture. A
"monocotyledonous plant" refers to a plant whose seeds have only one cotyledon, or organ of the em-bryo that stores and absorbs food. A
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 "dictyledonous plant" refers to a plant whose seeds have two cotyledons.
"Transformation" and "transferring" refers to meth-ods to transfer DNA into cells including, but not limited to, biolistic approaches such as particle bombardment, microinjection, permeabilising the cell membrar_e with various physical (e. g., electro-poration) or chemical (e. g., polyethylene glycol, PEG) treatments; the fusion of protoplasts or Agro-bacterium tumefaciens or rhizogenes mediated trans-formation. For the injection and electroporation of DNA in plant cells there are no specific re-quirements for the plasmids used. Plasmids such as pUC derivatives can be used. If whole plants are to be regenerated from such transformed cells, there should be a selectable marker. Depending upon the method for the introduction of desired genes into the plant cell, further DNA sequences may be necessary; if, for example, the Ti or Ri plasmid is used for the transformation of the plant cell, at least the right border, often, however, the right and left border of the Ti and Ri plasmid T-DNA have to be linked as flanking region to the genes to be introduced.
If Agrobacteria are used for the transformation, the DNA to be introduced has to be cloned into spe-cific plasmids, either into an intermediary vector or into a binary vector. The intermediary vectors can be integrated into the Ti or Ri plasmid of the Agrobacteria due to sequences that are homologous to sequences in the T-DNA by homologous recombina-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 tion. The Ti or Ri plasmid furthermore contains the vir region necessary for the transfer of the T-DNA into the plant cell. Intermediary vectors can-not replicate in Agrobacteria. By means of a helper plasmid the intermediary vector can be transferred by means of a conjugation to Agrobacterium tumefa-ciens. Binary vectors can replicate both in E.coli and in Agrobacteria and they contain a selection marker gene and a linker or polylinker framed by the right and left T-DNA border region. They can be transformed directly into the Agrobacteria (Holsters et al., 1978). The Agrobacterium serving as a host cell should contain a plasmid carrying a vir region. The Agrobacterium transformed is used for the transformation of plant cells. The use of T-DNA for the transformation of plant cells has been extensively examined and described in EP-A 120 516; Hoekema, (1985); An et al., (1985).
For the transfer of the DNA into the plant cell plant explants can be co-cultivated with Agrobacte-rium tumefaciens or Agrobacterium rhizogenes. From the infected plant material (e. g., pieces of leaf, stem segments, roots, but also protoplasts or plant cells cultivated by suspension) whole plants can be regenerated in a suitable medium, which may contain antibiotics or biozides for the selection of trans-formed cells.
Alternative systems for the transformation of mono-cotyledonous plants are the transformation by means of electrically or chemically induced introduction of DNA into protoplasts, the electroporation of partially permeabilised cells, the macroinjection of DNA into flowers, the microinjection of DNA into micro-spores and pro-embryos, the introduction of DNA into germinating pollen and the introduction of DNA into embryos by swelling (Potrykus, Physiol.
Plant (1990), 269-273).
While the transformation of dicotyledonous plants via Ti plasmid vector systems with the help of Agrobacterium tumefaciens is well-established, more recent research work indicates that also monocoty-ledonous plants are accessible for transformation by means of vectors based on Agrobacterium (Chan et al . , ( 1993 ) ; Hiei et al . , ( 1994 ) ; Bytebier et al . , (1987); Raineri et al., (1990), Gould et al., (1991); Mooney et al., (1991); Lit et al., (1992)).
In fact, several of the above-mentioned transforma-tion systems could be established for various cere-als: the electroporation of tissues, the transfor-mation of protoplasts and the DNA transfer by par-ticle bombardment in regenerative tissue and cells (Jahne et al., (1995). The transformation of maize has been described in Brettschneider et al., (1997) and Ishida et al., (1996). The transformation of wheat has been frequently described in the litera-ture (Maheshwari et al., (1995).
The term "host cell" refers to a cell which has been genetically modified by transfer of a het-erologous or autologous nucleic acid sequence or its descendants still containing this sequence.
The host cell may be transiently or stably trans-formed and is preferably able to express the trans-formed nucleic acid molecule. These cells are also WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 termed "transgenic cells". In the case of an autologous nucleic acid sequence being transferred, the sequence will be present in the host cell in a higher copy number than naturally occurring.
The term "operably linked" refers to the chemical fusion of two of more fragments of DNA in a proper orientation such that the fusion preserves or cre-ates a proper reading frame, or makes possible the proper regulation of expression of the DNA se-quences when transformed into plant tissue.
The term "expression" as used herein is intended to describe the transcription and/or coding of the se-quence for the gene product. In the expression, a DNA chain coding for the sequence of gene product is first transcribed to a complementary RNA, which is often an mRNA, and then the thus transcribed mRNA is translated into the above mentioned gene product if the gene product is a protein. However, expression also includes the transcription of DNA
inserted in antisense orientation to its regulatory elements. Expression, which is constitutive and possibly further enhanced by an externally con-trolled promoter fragment thereby producing multi-ple copies of mRNA and large quantities of the se-lected gene product, may also include overproduc-tion of a gene product.
A "tissue specific promoter" refers to a sequence of DNA that provides recognition signals for RNA
polymerase and/or other factors required for tran-scription to begin, and/or for controlling expres-sion of the coding sequence precisely within cer-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 taro tissues or within certain cells of that tis-sue. Expression in a tissue specific manner may be only in individual tissues, or cells within tis-sues, or in combinations of tissues. The present invention relates in particular to pollen and/or root specific expression, i.e. examples may include tissue specific expression in pollen only and no other tissues within the plant, or may be in pollen and roots, and no other tissues of the plant. An expression in pollen according to which the expres-sion takes place mainly, but not exclusively, in the pollen is also termed "tissue abundant".
The term "pollen specific nucleic acid sequence"
refers to nucleic acid sequences, i.e. genes, cod-ing sequences and/or regulatory elements which are exclusively or mainly active in pollen of plants, in particular those which direct or contribute to a pollen abundant or pollen selective expression of a protein. The term "pollen abundant nucleic acid sequence" refers to nucleic acid sequences, i.e.
genes, coding sequences and/or regulatory elements which are mainly active in pollen of plants, in particular those which direct or contribute to a pollen abundant expression of a protein.
In a further preferred embodiment the invention re-lates to nucleic acid molecules specifically hy-bridising to transcripts of the nucleic acid mole-cules. These nucleic acid molecules are preferably oligonucleotides having a length of at least 10, in particular of at least 15 and particularly pre-ferred of at least 50 nucleotides. The nucleic acid molecules and oligonucleotides of the present in-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 vention may be used for instance as primers for a PCR reaction or be used as components of antisense constructs or of DNA molecules encoding suitable ribozymes.
The present invention also relates to vectors com-prising the above-identified nucleic acid molecules in particular comprising chimeric DNA constructs or non-chimeric DNA constructs such as the wild-type ZmMADS2 gene, or derivatives thereof or parts thereof . The term DNA construct refers to a combi-nation of at least one regulatory element and a coding sequence.
Thus, the present invention relates to recombinant nucleic acid molecules useful in the preparation of male sterile plant cells and plants as defined above by genetic engineering. In particular, the invention concerns chimeric DNA constructs compris-ing a coding DNA sequence coding for a wild-type ZmMADS2 protein operably linked to a promoter wherein said promoter is different to the promoter linked to said ZmMADS2 coding sequence in the wild-type gene i.e. either is a mutated wild-type pro-moter or a promoter from another gene and/or spe-cies. In a further preferred embodiment, the inven-tion concerns chimeric DNA constructs comprising a modified coding DNA sequence coding for a mutated ZmMADS2 protein, wherein the DNA-sequence is opera-bly linked to a promoter which may be different from the promoter linked to said ZmMADS2 coding se-quence in the wild-type gene or the promoter is the wild-type ZmMADS2 promoter.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 Of course, the present invention also relates to chimeric antisense constructs comprising a DNA se-quence present in or derived from the transcribed region of the ZmMADS2 sequence of the present in-vention depicted in SEQ ID No 1, or a part thereof, which is linked to a promoter wherein said promoter is different to the promoter linked to said ZmMADS2 coding sequences in the wild-type gene or is the wild-type promoter and wherein the orientation of the coding sequence to the promoter is vice versa to the wild-type orientation. In one embodiment of the present invention, the DNA sequence of the pre-sent invention used to specifically inhibit via an-tisense constructs the translation of ZmMADS2 ex-pression from the wild-type gene is at least par-tially not derived from the ZmMADS2 coding se-quence, but rather contains sequences from untrans-lated regions of the ZmMADS2 transcribed region.
Of course the invention also relates to DNA con-structs comprising a DNA sequence coding for the non-chimeric wild-type ZmMADS2 protein operably linked to the wild-type promoter. These constructs may be used to transform plant cells and plants for which the DNA construct is autologous, i.e. is the source or natural environment for the DNA construct or for which the DNA construct is heterologous, i.e., is from another species. Plant cells and plants obtained by using the above listed DNA con-structs may be characterised by ZmMADS2 antisense expression, multiple copies of the above DNA con-structs in their genome, that means are character-ised by an increased copy number of the ZmMADS2 gene in the genome and/or a different location in the genome with respect to the wild-type gene WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 and/or the presence of a foreign gene in their genome.
In the context of the present invention a chimeric DNA construct is thus a DNA sequence composed of different DNA fragments not naturally occurring in this combination. The DNA fragments combined in the chimeric DNA construct may originate from the same species or from different species. For example a DNA fragment coding for an ZmMADS2 protein may be operably linked to a DNA fragment representing a promoter from another gene of the same species that provides for an increased expression of the ZmMADS2 coding sequence. Preferably however, a DNA fragment coding for an ZmMADS2 protein is operably linked to a DNA fragment containing a promoter from another species for instance from another plant species, from a fungus, yeast or from a plant virus or a synthetically produced promoter. A synthetically produced promoter is either a promoter synthesised chemically from nucleotides de novo or a hybrid-promoter spliced together by combining two or more nucleotide sequences from synthetic or natural pro-moters which are not present in the combined form in any organism. The promoter has to be functional in the plant cell to be transformed with the chi-meric DNA construct.
The promoter used in the present .invention may be derived from the same or from a different species and may provide for constitutive or regulated ex-pression, in particular positively regulated by in-ternal or external factors. External factors for the regulation of promoters are for example light, WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 draught, head, chemicals such as inorganic salts, heavy metals or organic compounds such as organic acids, derivatives of these acids, in particular its salts and sugars.
Examples of promoters to be used in the context of the present invention are the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 19S or 35S promoters, nopaline syn-thase promoters, pathogenesis-related (PR) protein promoters, the ubiquitin promoter from maize for a constitutive expression, the HMG promoters from wheat, promoters from Zein genes from maize, small subunit of ribulose bisphosphonate carboxylase (ssuRUBISCO) promoters, the 35S transcript promoter from the figworm mosaic virus (FMV 35S), the oc-topine synthase promoter or the actin promoter from rice etc. It is preferred that the particular pro-moter selected should be capable of causing suffi-cient expression to result in the production of an effective amount of antisense mRNA or modified or wild-type ZmMADS2 protein to produce male steril-ity. Of course, for selective expression of the ZmMADS2 protein tissue specific promoters may be used. However, in the most preferred embodiment of the present invention, i.e. the ZmMADS2 antisense constructs, the promoter may be a constitutive strong promoter, since the pollen specificity of the antisense action is confined to the pollen due to pollen specific expression of the target, i.e.
the wild-type ZmMA.DS2 expression.
The DNA construct of the invention may contain mul-tiple copies of a promoter and/or multiple copies of the DNA coding sequences . In addition, the con-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 struct may include coding sequences for markers and coding sequences for other peptides such as signal or transit peptides or resistance genes for in-stance against virus infections or antibiotics.
Useful markers are peptides providing antibiotic or drug resistance for example resistance to phosphi-notrycine, hygromycin, kanamycin, 6418, gentamycin, lincomycin, methotrexate or glyphosate. These mark-ers, such as the herbicide resistence gene pat en-coding a phosphinotrycine acetyl transferase, can be used to select cells transformed with the chi-meric DNA constructs of the invention from untrans-formed cells. Of course other markers are markers coding peptidic enzymes which can be easily de-tected by a visible reaction for example a colour reaction for example luciferase, (3-1,3-glucuronidase or (3-galactosidase.
Signal or transit peptides provide the ZmMADS2 pro-tein formed on expression of the DNA constructs of the present invention with the ability to be trans-ported to the desired site of action. Examples for transit peptides of the present invention are chlo-roplast transit peptides, mitochondria transit pep-tides or nuclear localisation signals.
In chimeric DNA constructs containing coding se-quences for transit peptides these sequences are usually derived from a plant, for instance from corn, potato, Arabidopsis or tobacco. Preferably, transit peptides and ZmMADS2 coding sequences are derived from the same plant, for instance corn. In particular such a chimeric DNA construct comprises a DNA sea_uence coding for a wild-type ZmMADS2 pro-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 tein and a DNA sequence coding for a transit pep-tide operably linked to a promoter wherein said promoter is different to the promoter linked to said coding sequences in wild-type gene, but func-tional in plant cells. In particular, said promoter provides for higher transcription efficiency than the wild-type promoter.
The mRNA produced by a DNA construct of the present invention may advantageously also contain a 5' non-translated leader sequence. This sequence may be derived from the promoter selected to express the gene and can be specifically modified so as to in-crease translation and stability of the mRNA. The 5' non-translated regions can also be obtained from viral RNAs from suitable eucaryotic genes or a syn-thetic gene sequence.
Preferably, the coding sequence of the present in-vention is not only operably linked to 5' regula-tory elements, such as promoters, but is addition-ally linked to other regulatory elements such as enhancers and/or 3' regulatory elements. For in-stance, the vectors of the present invention may contain functional terminator sequences such as the terminator or the octopine synthase gene from Agro-bacterium tumefaciens. Further 3' non-translated regions to be used in a chimeric construct of the present invention to cause the addition of poly-adenylate nucleotides to the 3' end of the tran-scribed RNA are the polyadenylation signals of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens nopaline synthase gene (NOS) or from plant genes like the soy bean storage protein gene and the small subunit of the ribulose-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 _27_ 1,5-bisphosphonate carboxylase (ssuRUBISCO) gene.
Of course, also the regulating elements of the pre-sent invention deriving from the wild-type ZmMADS2 gene may be used.
The vectors of the present invention may also pos-sess functional units effecting the stabilisation of the vector in the host organism, such as bacte-rial replication origins. Furthermore, the chimeric DNA constructs of the present invention may also encompass introns or part of introns inserted within or outside the coding sequence for the ZmMADS2 protein.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the pres-ent invention the vector furthermore contains T-DNA, in particular the left, the right or both T-DNA borders derived from Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
Of course, sequences derived from Agrobacterium rhizogenes may also be used. The use of T-DNA se-quences in the vector of the present invention en-ables the Agrobacterium mediated transformation of cells. In a preferred embodiment of the present in-vention the nucleic acid sequence of the present invention, optionally operably linked to regulatory elements, is inserted within the T-DNA or adjacent to it.
Furthermore, the present invention relates to a wild-type or modified ZmMADS2 protein coded by a nucleic acid sequence of the present invention.
The ZmMADS2 protein exhibits in a particularly pre-ferred embodiment features of a MARS-box protein and in particular transcriptional regulative activ-ity during pollen development, in particular pollen CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 _28_ tube growth, and function. In particular, the pre-sent invention relates to a ZmMADS2 protein pro-duced from a plant cell or plant of the present in-vention or from the propagation material or harvest products of plants or plant cells of the present invention. The invention also relates to antibo-dies, in particular mono- or polyclonal antibodies as well as peptide antibodies raised against the protein with the activity of an ZmMADS2 protein which may be useful for cloning and detection as-says.
Thus, the present invention also relates to a method for the production of a protein with the ac-tivity of an ZmMADS2 protein, wherein a cell of the present invention, in particular a plant cell or plant callus is cultivated under conditions allow-ing the synthesis of the protein and the protein is isolated from cultivated cells and/or the culture medium.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the pres-ent invention the 5' and/or 3' regulatory elements of the present invention contained in the vector are operably linked to a gene of interest which in this context may also be only its coding sequence, which may be a heterologous or autologous gene or coding sequence. Such a gene of interest may be a gene, in particular its coding sequence, confer-ring, for instance, disease resistance; drought re-sistance; insect resistance; herbicide resistance;
immunity; an improved intake of nutrients, minerals or water from the soil; or a modified metabolism in the plant, particularly its pollen and/or roots.
_29_ Such a modified metabolism may relate to a pre-ferred accumulation of useful or toxic substances in pollen and/or roots, for instance sugars or, vice versa, in the depletion of substances undesir-able in pollen and/or roots, for instance certain amino acids. Thus, in the context of the present invention, a gene of interest may confer resistance to infection by a virus, such as a gene encoding the capsid protein of the BWYV or the BNYW virus, a gene conferring resistance to herbicides such as Basta~, or to an insecticide, a gene conferring re-sistance to the corn rootworm, a gene encoding the toxic crystal protein of Bacillus thuringiensis or a gene whose expression confers male sterility. A
gene of interest includes also a coding sequence cloned in antisense orientation to the regulatory sequences directing its expression. Such an an-tisense-construct may be used specifically to re-press the activity of undesirable genes in plant cells, in particular in pollen and/or roots, for instance to produce male sterile plants exhibiting a modified, for instance abortive pollen develop-ment, pollen morphology or metabolism and/or pollen function. The gene of interest may also comprise signal sequences, in particular ER targeting se-quences, directing the encoded protein in the ER
and eventually for instance in the cell wall, vas-cular tissue, nucleus and /or the vacuole.
Thus, the nucleic acid sequences of the present in-vention are useful since they enable the pollen and/or root specific expression of a ZmMADS2 coding sequence in antisense orientation and further genes of interest in plants, in particular monocotyledon-WO 01/12798 CA 02381330 2002-02-18 PC'T/EP00/08001 dous plants. Accordingly, plants are enabled to produce useful, in particular toxic, products in their pollen or the plants may be engineered by modifying the pollen structure, function and/or de-velopment.
The present invention also relates to a method of genetically modifying a cell by transforming it with a nucleic acid molecule of the present inven-tion or vector according to the above, whereby the ZmMADS2 coding sequence or a further gene of inter-est operably linked to at least one regulatory ele-ment either according to the present invention or as conventionally used is expressible in the cell.
In particular, the cell being transformed by the method of the present invention is a plant, bacte-rial or yeast cell. In a particularly preferred embodiment of the present invention, the above method further comprises the regeneration of the transformed cell to a differentiated and, in a pre-ferred embodiment, fertile or non-fertile plant.
The present invention also relates to host cells transformed with the nucleic acid molecule or the vector of the present invention, in particular plant, yeast or bacterial cells, in particular monocotyledonous or dicotyledonous plant cells.
The present invention also relates to cell cul-tures, tissue, calluses, etc. comprising a cell ac-cording to the above, i.e. a transgenic cell and its descendants harbouring and preferably experi-encing the nucleic acid molecule or vector of the present invention.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 Thus, the present invention relates to transgenic plant cells which were transformed with one or sev-eral nucleic acid molecules of the present inven-tion as well as to transgenic plants cells origi-nating from such transformed cells. Such plant cells can be distinguished from naturally occurring plant cells by the observation that they contain at least one nucleic acid molecule according to the present invention which does not naturally occur in these cells, or by the fact that such a molecule is integrated into the genome of the cell at a loca-tion where it does not naturally occur, that is, in another genomic region, or by the observation that the copy number of the nucleic acid molecules is different from the copy number in naturally occur-ring plants, in particular a higher copy number.
Preferably, the nucleic acid sequences of the pres-ent invention is operably linked in antisense ori-entation.
Thus, the present invention also relates to trans-genic cells, also called host cells, transformed with the nucleic acid molecule or vector of the present invention, in particular plant, yeast or bacterial cells, in particular monocotyledonous or dicotyledonous plant cells. The present inver~tion also relates to cell cultures, tissue, calluses, propagation and harvest material, pollen, seeds, seedlings, embryos, etc. comprising a cell accord-ing to the above, that is, a transgenic cell being stably or transiently transformed and being capable of expressing a male sterility causing coding se-quence. The transgenic plants of the present in-vention can be regenerated to whole plants accord-ing to methods known to the person skilled in the art. The regenerated plant may be chimeric with respect to the incorporated foreign DNA. If the cells containing the foreign DNA develop into ei-ther micro- or macro-spores the integrated foreign DNA will be transmitted to a sexual progeny. If the cells containing the foreign DNA are somatic cells of the plant, non-chimeric transgenic plants are produced by conventional methods of vegetative propagation either in vivo, i.e. from buds or stem cuttings or in vitro following established proce-dures known in the art.
Thus, the present invention also relates to trans-genic plants, parts of plants, plant tissue, plant seeds, plant embryos, plant seedlings, plant propa-gation material, plant harvest material, plant leaves and plant pollen, plant roots containing the above identified plants cell of the present inven-tion. These plants or plant parts are character-ised by, as a minimum, the presence of the het-erologous transferred DNA construct of the present invention in the genome or, in cases where the transferred nucleic acid molecule is autologous to the transferred host cell are characterised by ad-ditional copies of the nucleic acid molecule of the present invention anch or a am=erenc location within the genome. Thus, the present invention also relates to plants, plant tissues, plant seeds, plant seedlings, plant embryos, propagation mate-rial, harvest material, leaves, pollen, roots, cal-luses, tassels etc. non-biologically transformed which possess stably or transiently integrated in the genome of the cells, for instance in the cell WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 nucleus, plastids or mitochondria a heterologous and/or autologous nucleic acid sequence containing (a) a coding sequence of the present invention or (b) a regulatory element of the present invention recognised by the polymerases of the cells of the said plant and, in a preferred embodiment, being operably linked in sense or antisense orientation to in case of (a) at least one regulatory element or in case of (b) a coding sequence of a gene of interest. The teaching of the present invention is therefore applicable to any plant, plant genus or plant species wherein the regulatory elements men-tioned above are recognised by the polymerases of the cell. Thus, the present invention provides plants of many species, genuses, families, orders and classes that are ably to recognise these regu-latory elements of the present invention or deriva-tives or parts thereof.
Any plant is considered, in particular plants of economic interest for example plants grown for hu-man or animal nutrition, plants grown for the con-tent of useful secondary metabolites, plants grown for their content of fibres, trees and plants of ornamental interest. Examples which do not imply any limitation as to the scope of the present in-vention are corn, wheat, barley, rice, sorghum, sugarcane, sugarbeet, soybean, Brassica, sunflower, carrot, tobacco, lettuce, cucumber, tomato, potato, cotton, Arabidopsis, Lolium, Festuca, Dactylis, or poplar.
The present invention also relates to a process, in particular a microbiological process and/or techni-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PC'T/EP00/08001 cal process, for producing a plant or reproduction material of said plant, including an heterologous or autologous DNA construct of the present inven-tion stably or transiently integrated therein, and capable of being expressed in said plants or repro-duction material, which process comprises trans-forming cells or tissue of said plants with a DNA
construct containing a nucleic acid molecule of the present invention, i.e. a regulatory element which is capable of causing the stable integration of the ZmMADS2 coding sequence in said cell or tissue and enabling the sense or antisense expression of a ZmMADS2 coding sequence or part thereof in said plant cell or tissue, regenerating plants or repro-duction material of said plant or both from the plant cell or tissue transformed with said DNA con-struct and, optionally, biologically replicating said last mentioned plants or reproduction material or both.
Finally, the present invention relates to a method for isolating or cloning pollen and/or root spe-cific gene and/or pollen and/or root specific regu-latory elements, such as promoters, or MARS box genes whereby a nucleic acid sequence of the pres-ent invention is used to screen nucleic acid se-quences derived from any source, such as genomic or cDNA libraries derived from plants, in particular monocotyledonous plants. The nucleic acid se-quences of the present invention thereby provide a means of isolating related regulatory sequences of other plant species which confer pollen or root specificity to genes of interest operably linked to them.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 Further preferred embodiments of the present inven-tion are mentioned in the claims. ' The invention may be more fully understood from the following detailed sequence descriptions which are part of the present teaching. The SEQ ID Nos. 1 to 40 are incorporated in the present invention. The positions indicated below refer to the sequence numbering of SEQ ID No. 12 in 5' to 3' direction.
SEQ ID No. 1 represents the complete cDNA-sequence of the ZmMADS2 (Zea mays MADS-box) gene.
SEQ ID No. 2 represents the amino acid sequence of the ZmMADS2 protein.
SEQ ID No. 3 to 9 are partial DNA sequences of the ZmMADS2 gene of Zea mays and represent promoters and promoter fragments of various lengths.
SEQ ID No. 3: The 1502 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 1 to-wards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 4: The 502 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 1 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 502.
SEQ ID No. 5: The 500 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 503 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1002.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 SEQ ID No. 6: The 1000 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 503 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 7: The 740 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 763 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 8: The 500 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 1003 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 9: The 410 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 1093 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 10 is a partial DNA sequence of the ZmMADS2 gene of Zea mays. The 310 by sequence spans the region from and excluding the translation initiation codon ATG at position 1813 to 1815 to-wards the 5' end up to the initiation site of tran-scription at position 1503 (5'-AAACG-3'). This se-quence is the 5' untranslated region (5' UTR).
SEQ ID No. 11 is also a partial DNA sequence of the ZmMADS2 gene and represents a 3' regulation element of 251 by from and excluding the translation stop codon TGA at position 4379 to 4381 to position 5031.
SEQ ID No. 12 is the genomic DNA sequence of the ZmMADS2 gene of Zea mays comprising 5031 nucleo-tides and encompassing the coding region of the WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 gene, an 5' untranslated region of 310 by [5' UTR:
position 1503-1812] between and excluding the translation initiation codon ATG (position 1813 -1815) and including the nucleotide at position 1503 (also depicted in SEQ ID No. 10) and the regulatory elements identified in SEQ ID Nos 3 to 9 and 11.
SEQ ID No. 13 to 40 represent primers used for cloning and detecting nucleic acid sequence of the present invention and/or transcripts expressed thereby.
The invention is further illustrated by way of ex-ample and the following drawings.
Figure 1 shows a northern blot analysis for various tissues of Zea mays. A signal was obtained exclu-sively in mature pollen.
Figure 2 shows RT-PCR analyses of various maize tissues . A signal could be obtained in mature pol-len and root tips (lower band; 350 bp).
Figure 3 shows PCR analyses of various reproductive tissues, in particular of cDNA libraries of egg cells, in vitro zygotes 18 hours after fertilisa-tion, mature pollen and leaves (from seedlings) . A
signal was obtained only in mature pollen.
Figure 4 shows RT-PCR analyses of ZmMADS2 expres-sion during microgametogenesis of maize. A signal was obtained in mature pollen after anthesis.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 Figure 5 shows ZmMADS2 transcript in growing pollen tubes of maize.
Figure 6 shows transient transformation assays of N. tabacum.
Example 1: Cloning of the ZmMAI7S2 cDNA sequence Plant material and pollen isolation Tissues were isolated from Zea mays L. inbred line A188 (Green and Philips, 1975) cultivated in a greenhouse. Embryos from kernels (12 dap and ma-ture) were isolated under sterile conditions.
Seedlings were germinated under sterile conditions in the dark and were dissected into cotyledons, roots tips and scutella. For isolation of pollen before anthesis, tassels were divided into upper (mature stage) and lower parts (immature stage).
Pollen was isolated as described by Mordhorst et al. (1993) and different developmental stages were separated via a discontinuous Percoll gradient (20%, 30o and 40% Percoll in 0.4 M mannitol). Cen-trifugation was performed for 10 min at 20° C and 226 x g in a swing out rotor with slow acceleration and deceleration. Developmental stages of pollen were monitored microscopically and by DAPI staining (see below).
RNA isolation and construction of cDNA libraries Total RNA was isolated from various tissues with TRIzol (GibcoBRL). Seasand was added for the mac-WO 01/12798 cA o23e133o 2002-o2-1s PCT/EP00/08001 eration of pollen. Total RNA was isolated from ma-ture pollen for the construction of a cDNA library using the protocol described by Stirn et al.
(1995). The library was constructed from 5 ~g poly(A)' RNA as outlined by Dresselhaus et al.
(1996b) using the Uni-ZAP XR lambda vector (Stratagene). Total RNA from leaf material of 10 day old seedlings was isolated as described by Logemann et al. (1987) and a cDNA library was gen-erated from 2 ~g poly(A)' RNA (seedlings library) .
Screening of cDNA library with maize MADS box probes The highly conserved MADS box of different maize MARS box genes was amplified from the maize genome by PCR and served as probes for the plaque screen-ing of a cDNA library of mature maize pollen.
Genomic DNA from leaf material was isolated as out-lined by Dellaporta et al. (1983) and served as template for the synthesis of different MARS box probes. Gene specific primers with the nucleotide sequence specified in SEQ ID No. 13 to 24 were used to specifically amplify the MADS box region of maize MARS box genes:
ZMM1 (5'-ATGGGGAGGGGAAGGATTGA-3', SEQ ID No. 13;
5'-CTGTTGTTGGCGTACTCGTAG-3', SEQ ID No. 14), ZEM2/3/ZAG 4 (5'-AGGGGCAAGATCGACATCAAG-3', SEQ ID
No. 15;
5'-GG/TCGT/AACTCGTAGAGGCGG-3', SEQ ID No. 16), ZAG3/5 (5'-ATGGGGAGGGGACGA/CGTTGA-3', SEQ ID No.
17;
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 5'-GCTGCCGAACTCGTAGAGCT-3'; SEQ ID No. 18), ZAP1 (5'-GTTGTTGGCGTACTCGTAGAG-3', SEQ ID No. 19;
5'-GGGCGCAAGGTACAGCTGAA-3', SEQ ID No. 20), ZAG1 (5'-GTTGTTGGCGTACTCGTAGAG-3', SEQ ID No. 21;
5'-AAGGGCAAGACTGAGATCAAG-3, SEQ ID No. 22) and ZAG2 (5'-CACTTGAACTCTTTTACGCTTAT-3', SEQ ID No. 23;
5'-GACAATCTTGACACATGTATGAA-3', SEQ ID No. 24);
amplification of the MARS box and flanking genomic regions: PCR amplification was performed with 200 ng genomic DNA in a standard reaction mixture: 250 nM primer, 2 mM MgClz, 400 ~.M dNTPs and 1.25 U Taq DNA polymerase (GibcoBRL) in PCR buffer (50mM KC1, 20 mM Tris-HC1, pH 8.4). Hot start PCRs were per-formed with the following profile: 5 min 95° C, 3 min 75° C (addition of Taq-DNA polymerase) followed by 30 cycles with 1 min 96° C, 1 min 62° C (ZEM, ZMM, ZAG3) or 60° C (ZAG1, ZAPl) and 3 min 72° C.
A final extension was performed for 5 min at 72° C.
PCR products were separated on low melting agarose gels (NuSieve GTG, BIOzym) and isolated gel frag-ments containing the DNAs were digested with Gelase (BIOzym) . Probes were labelled with [3zP] -dCTP
(6000 Ci/mmol), Amersham) using the Prime-it II
random primer labelling Kit (Stratagene) and puri-fied with NucTrap columns (Stratagene). Approxi-mately 22.000 phages from the pollen library were plated per 15 cm plate and transferred by Hybond-N
membranes (Amersham) as double plague lifts accord-ing to Sambrook et al. (1989). Prehybridisation was performed with 50 ~.g/ml salmon sperm DNA in hy-bridisation buffer (5xSSPE, 5x Denharts, 0.5o SDS) for 5 h at 55° C. Filters were hybridised with a cocktail of the different MADS box probes in a fi-nal concentration of 650.000 cpm for each probe/ml WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 hybridisation buffer. After hybridisation over-night at 55° C, filters were washed three times for 15 min with 5x SSPE/O,lo SDS and exposed to X-Omat AR films (Amersham) using intensifier screens at -70° C. Putative positive lambda phages were iso-lated and cDNAs excised according to the manufac-turer (ZAP-cDNA Synthesis Kit, Stratagene).
Thus, approximately 250.000 phages were screened with the MARS box probes at medium stringent condi-tions to permit hybridisation to less homologous sequences. Thirteen putative positive signals were analysed further and two cDNAs with high homology to MADS box proteins were isolated, designated ZmMADSl and ZmMADS2.
5' RACE
ZmMADS2 cDNA isolated from the pollen cDNA library was incomplete at its 5' end and a PCR approach was chosen to isolate the full length cDNA from the pollen library. For amplification of the missing 5' end, a gene specific RACE-primer (rapid amplifi-cation of cDNA ends, 5'-CGATTCAAATCGTGAATCTCAT-3';
SEQ ID No. 25) combined with a pBluescript vector primer (5'-CCCCCGGGCTGCAGGAATTC-3'; SEQ ID No. 25-vector primer) was used in a standard PCR reaction with the following profile: 3 min 96° C followed by 33 cycles: 20 sec 96° C, 30 sec 62°, 2 min 72° C
and a final extension for 5 min at 72° C. PCR
products were cloned and sequenced. Full length cDNA was amplified from 3 ~.l pollen cDNA library with primers specific for the ZmMADS2 3'-end and 5'-end (5'-TTTTAGCAACATCTGCACCATT-3'; SEQ ID No.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 27; 5'-TCTCGGCTAGCTTCCTCCT-3'; SEQ ID No. 28) using a mixture of 2 U Pfu DNA polymerase and 1 U TaqPlus Long DNA polymerase (Stratagene) for a first ampli-fication round of 25 cycles in a standard PCR reac-tion with Pfu reaction buffer (10 mM KC1, 10 mM
(NH4) ZS04, 2 mM MgS04, 0. 1 o TritonX100, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.75). 1/10 of purified PCR products served as template in a subsequent second amplifi-cation round with Pfu DNA polymerase (25 cycles).
PCR profiles for both amplification rounds were as follows: 3 min 96° C, 5 min 75° C followed by 25 cycles with 20 sec 96° C, 30 sec 58° C, 90 sec 72°
C and a final extension for 5 min at 72° C. PCR
products were cloned and sequenced.
DNA Sequencing and sequence analysis Sequencing of cDNAs was performed with the ABI
PRISM Dye Terminator Kit with TaqFS DNA polymerase (PE Applied Biosystems) according to the manufac-turers protocol, except that 800 ng of template DNA
and 5 pmole vector primers were used. Sequence analyses were performed with DNASIS 1.1 software program package (HITACHI).
The cDNA of ZmMADS2 is 1268 by in length with an open reading frame of 240 amino acids. The 3'-UTR
is 251 by (3' UTR: position 3976 - 4226) and the 5'-UTR is 310 by (5' UTR: position 1503 - 1812) in length, calculated from the putative start point of transcription at position 1503 as analysed by primer extension (data not shown) to and excluding the ATG at position 1813-1815.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 The sequence of the full-length cDNA is given in SEQ ID No. 1. The amino acid sequence of ZmMADS2 is given in SEQ ID No. 2. ZmMADS2 contains a MADS-box at the N-terminal end consisting of 57 (including the start methionine) amino acids. The MADS-box is followed by a linker region of 32 amino acid and a K-box comprising 67 amino acids. A pu-tative bipartite nuclear localisation signal is lo-cated in the MARS box of ZmMADS2. A bipartite sig-nal motive (RR- (X) 1z-KRR) is comprised of two basic amino acids, a spacer of twelve variable amino ac-ids and a basic cluster in which three out of five amino acids are basic. Putative N-glycosylation sites (N-X-T/S) and several putative phosphoryla-tion sites for protein kinase C (ST-X-RK) and Ca-sein Kinase II (ST-X2-DE) have been found. Homology searches revealed that ZmMA.DS2 belongs to the AGL
17 family of MARS box proteins (Zachgo et al., 1997).
Example 2: Cloning of the genomic ZmMADS2 clone The cDNA isolated in Example 1 was used to clone the genomic clone as follows:
Genomic DNA from leaf material of Zea mays line A188 was used to construct libraries with the "Universal Genome Walker Kit" (Clontech, Palo Alto). These libraries served as templates for the synthesis of four genomic fragments. The amplifi-cation was carried out with nested adapter primers delivered by the manufacturer and nested gene spe-cific primers (Tnorf 1: 5'-CGGCCTATAGCTAGCTCTCTTCTTGACCCT-3', SEQ ID No. 29;
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 Frontl: 5'-AGGGTCAAGAAGAGAGCTAGCTATAGG-3', SEQ ID
No. 30; Tnorf2: 5'-GCTAAGGAGCGAGAGGTTGTGGTTGTGG-3', SEQ ID No. 31; Front2: 5'-CCACAACCACAACCTCTCGCTCCTTA-3', SEQ ID No. 32 ac-cording to the manufacturer's instructions.
PCR amplification of a fragment containing intron 1 and the first 247 by of intron 2 was performed fol-lowing the "Genome Walker" protocol. For amplifi-cation of the promoter fragments, 5% DMSO was added to the reaction mixture. Synthesis of the se-quences of introns 3 to 6 was performed in a stan-dard PCR reaction mixture with 200 ng genomic DNA
template and the following gene specific primers:
Ex3 oben: 5'-TCGGCAGTTGACGGGAGAT-3', SEQ ID No. 33, In3' low: 5'-TTAGCAACTCATTATAGCAC-3', SEQ ID No.
34, Pe for: 5'-AGAAACCAGAGATGTTCCAG-3', SEQ ID No.
35, Pe-rev: 5'-CAACATCTGCACCATTTTGAA-3', SEQ ID No.
36, Intron2-1: 5'-GTCACATCAACAAGCGTCCTACC-3', SEQ
ID No. 37, Intron3: 5'-TAAGAGCATCAACAGTAGTAACG-3', SEQ ID No. 38.
All fragments were cloned with the Zero blunt TOPO
PCR Cloning Kit (Invitrogen, Leek) and sequenced at SEQLAB (Gottingen), except for fragments containing Intron 2. Amplification of Intron 2 with different primer pairs (Intron2-1 and Pe-rev, Intron2-1 and In3' low, Intron 2-1 and Intron3, Front2 and In-tron3) using different DNA polymerases (PfuTurbo, Stratagene; PlatinumTaq, GibcoBRL; AdvantageTth, Clontech) showed that this Intron is about 11 kb in length.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 The nucleotide sequence of the genomic clone as de-picted in SEQ ID No. 12 comprises 5031 nucleotides.
Intron No. 2 has not been fully sequenced. Depend-ing upon the start of transcription, the promoter comprises nucleotides 1 to 1502, since a transcrip-tion start point has been determined at position 1503 5'-AAACGC-3'. From position 1503 to the ATG
initiation translation codon at position 1813 to 1815 is the 5' untranslated region. Exons and con-sequently also introns are indicated in SEQ ID No.
12. In intron II between position 3203 and 3204 there remains some sequence ambiguity. Further nu-cleotides are present in intron II at this position (circa 11 kb).
The translation termination codon TGA is located at position 4778 to 4780 with a transcription termina-tion signal between and including position 4781 and 5031. A putative polyadenylation site TATAA is lo-cated at position 4888 to 4893.
The promoter from position 1 to position 1502 de-picted in SEQ ID No. 3 may be divided into func-tional promoter fragments with sequences as indi-cated in SEQ ID No. 4 to 9. SEQ ID No. 4 comprises at position 17 to 27 an induction element respon-sive to dryness, abscisic acid and/or coldness and at position 151 to 155 a root-specific element.
The promoter fragment of SEQ ID No. 5 comprises at positions 532 to position 536, position 542 to 546, positions 634 to 638 and position 705 to 709 a root-specific element, at position 654 to 658 an element responsible for induction by sugar deple-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 tion and at position 684 to 689 an element respon-sive to dryness, abscisic acid and/or coldness.
The promoter set out in SEQ ID No. 8 comprises an element responsible for induction by dryness, ab-scisic acid and/or coldness located at position 1019 to 1025 and 1369 to 1375, a root-specific ele-ment at position 1083 to 1087 and a sucrose respon-sive element at position 1192 to 1200, as well as an element responsible for induction by sugar de-pletion at position 1259 to 1263. The element con-ferring root-specificity at position 1083 to 1087 is particularly important due to its root-specificity. Deletion of this element in the pro-moter fragments and promoters of the present inven-tion provides a promoter being exclusively ex-pressed in pollen.
In the 5' UTR depicted in SEQ ID No. 10, an element responsible for induction by sugar depletion is lo-cated at position 1701 to 1708.
Further elements conferring root-specificity are located at the following positions: 2281 to 2286, 2518 to 2522, 2575 to 2579, 2802 to 2807, 3014 to 3018, 4295 to 4299, 4506 to 4510, 4700 to 4704, 4888 to 4892.
Further elements responsible for induction by dry-ness, abscisic acid and/or coldness are located at the following positions: 2014 to 2019, 2055 to 2060, 2072 to 2077, 2392 to 2397, 2584 to 2589, 2679 to 2683, 2842 to 2846, 2863 to 2869, 3112 to 3117, 3231 to 3236, 4067 to 4072, 4228 to 4233, WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 4042 to 4246, 4344 to 4350, 4479 to 4484, 4486 to 4492.
Example 3: Northern blot and PCR analyses Ten ~g of total RNA extracted from various tissues were separated on denaturating agarose gels and transferred to Hybond N+ membranes (Amersham) by capillary blotting with lOx SSC overnight. The RNA
was fixed to the membrane by W crosslinking with 300 mJoule in a Stratalinker 1800 (Stratagene).
Gene specific probes were amplified from plasmids containing ZmMADS2 cDNAs with primers specific for the 3'-ends of ZmMADS2 (5'-AGAAACCAGAGATGTTCCAG-3';
SEQ ID No. 39, 5'-CAACATCTGCACCATTTTGAA-3'; SEQ ID
No. 40) according to the profile described for the 5'RACE. Probes were labelled as described above.
Prehybridisation was performed for 5 h at 65° C
with 100 ~.g/ml salmon DNA in hybridisation buffer (7o SDS, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5 M NaH2P04, pH 7.2). Probes were added in a final concentration of 106 cpm/ml hybridisation buffer and hybridised overnight at 65° C. Filters were washed with decreasing concen-trations of SSC with a final wash of 0.2xSSC/O.lo SDS for 15 min at 65° C and were exposed to X-Omat AR films (Amersham) at -70° C using intensifier screens. Fig. 1 shows the spatial and temporal ex-pression of ZmMADS2 (dag: days after germination, dap: days after pollination). It is shown that the ZmMADS2 coding sequence is expressed in pollen, in particular in mature pollen after dehiscence indi-cating an essential role in pollen development and pollen function, in particular pollen tube growth.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 RT-PCR analyses of tissues for ZmMADS2 expression were performed with 1 ~.g of total RNA (Figure 2) .
RNA was reverse transcribed with 50U SuperScriptII
reverse transcriptase (GibcoBRL) for 75 min at 50°
C with the ZmMADS2 specific primer (see above) in reaction buffer (75 mM KCl, 3 mM MgCl2, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.3) with 0.4 mM dNTPs, 10 mM DTT and 10 U
RNasin (Promega). The complete RT-PCR reaction was used as template in the subsequent standard PCR re-action with ZmMADS2 specific primers (see above).
PCR products were separated on an agarose gel blot-ted and hybridised to radiolabelled ZmMADS2 spe-cific probe. Figure 2 shows ZmMADS2 expression in mature pollen and root tips (lower band).
For quantitative RT-PCR analysis of ZmMADS2 expres-sion in pollen, RNA samples were treated with DNaseI according to the manufacturer's protocol (GibcoBRL). 250 ng and 500 ng, respectively, of each RNA probe were reverse transcribed and a stan-dard PCR was performed with 27 cycles (ZmMADS2) as described above (Figure 4). cDNA libraries of maize egg cells, in vitro zygotes (Dresselhaus et al., 1994 and 1996a), pollen and seedlings were analysed for the presence of ZmMADS2 cDNAs with gene-specific primers using 3 ~g of cDNA libraries as templates in a standard PCR as described above .
To confirm specificity of PCR products, gels were blotted and hybridised to radiolabelled gene-specific probes (Fig. 3). Fig. 3 shows that among various reproductive cells ZmMADS2 is only ex-pressed in pollen.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 Thus, it was shown that ZmMADS2 is most abundant in mature pollen after dehiscence. At that stage pol-len are dehydrated and metabolically inactive. The onset of ZmMADS2 expression therefore takes place after the pollen reaches maturity, but before dehy-dration inhibits transcriptional activity (Figure 4). A faint signal was detected in root tips (Fig.
2) which is confirmed by RT-PCR analyses as shown in Fig. 2. The lower band represents amplified ZmMADS2 cDNA which is detectable in mature pollen and root tips. The upper band represents genomic DNA.
In order to localise ZmMADS2 transcripts whole mount RNA in situ hybridisation experiments were performed.
Example 4 Whole mount in situ hybridisation and DAPI staining Pollen was germinated in liquid medium as described by Torres et al. (1995). Germination rates were determined microscopically and only samples with high germination rates were used for the experi-ments. All media were prepared with DEPC-treated deionized water. Germinated pollen were fixed for 2 to 3 h in 4 o paraformaldehyd in germination me-dium at room temperature. Fixation and all follow-ing steps were performed in Eppendorf tubes and pollen was precipitated by centrifugation for 1 min at 1500 rpm at room temperature for the exchange of medium. Pollen was dehydrated by passage through a series of 3:7, 1:1, 7:3 ME: PP solutions at room WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 temperature for 30 min each (ME: 90o methanol and 10% 0.5 M EGTA; PP: 4o paraformaldehyde in PBS
(phosphate buffered saline, 130 mM NaCl, 10 mM
NaH2P04 , pH 7 . 4 ) . Pollen was incubated for 10 min in 100a ethanol and for 10 min in 1000 xylol before rehydration through an ethanol series was performed (85%, 700, 55%, and 35% ethanol in water). Prote-inase K (Boehringer) treatment was carried out for 35 min at 37° C with 1 ~.g/ml proteinase in 100 mM
Tris-HC1 (pH 7.5) with 50 mM EDTA. Reactions were stopped with 2 mg/ml glycine in PBS (2 min) and pollen was washed in PBS (2 min). Pollen were re-fixed for 20 min at room temperature with 40 paraformaldehyde in PBS and were washed twice for 5 min with PBS. Prehybridisation was performed with 100 ~g/ml tRNA and 100 ~,g/ml mRNA (Boehringer) in 1 ml hybridisation buffer (6x SSC, 0.1% SDS, 50% For-mamid) at 42° C for 3 h with gentle shaking. After prehybridisation, 800 ~.l of the buffer was removed and the remaining 200 ~.l were distributed to two 500 ~.l Eppendorf tubes. Probes were added to a fi-nal concentration of 500 ng/ml. DIG-labelled RNA
probes were synthesised from the 3' end of ZmMADS2 cloned into pGEM-T vector (Promega) with Sp6 and T7 RNA Polymerase (Boehringer) according to the manu-facturer's protocol. Hybridisation was carried out at 42°C overnight without shaking. The samples were washed for 10 min at 42 ° C with 2x SSC, 0 . 1%
SDS with gentle shaking before RNase treatment with 40 ~.g/ml RNaseA (Boehringer) was performed for 30 min at 37° C in 150 ~1 RNase buffer (10 mM Tris-HC1 (pH 8), 0.5 M NaCl, 1 mM EDTA). Samples were washed three times for 10 min in lx SSC, O.lo SDS and 0.5x SSC, O.lo SDS at 42° C and equilibriated for 5 min in B1 buffer (Boehringer). Blocking was performed in B1 buffer with 1 o blocking reagent (Boehringer) and 0.3o TritonX100 for 1h at room temperature.
Detection was performed with NBT/BCIP according to the manufacturer's protocol (Boehringer). The re-actions were monitored microscopically and stopped by adding buffers at neutral pH (Tris-HC1 or B1-buffer). Reactions could be restarted by retrans-ferring the probes into reaction mixture.
DAPI staining was performed with pollen fixed in ethanol: acetic acid (3:1) for 1 h at room tempera-ture and dehydrated through an ethanol series (75%, 550, 35o ethanol in water). Pollen was transferred to Tris-HC1 buffer (pH 7.5) with 200 ng/ml DAPI and staining was monitored under UV light (359/441 nm).
The in situ hybridisation experiments with ZmMADS2 antisense probes showed transcripts in the emerging pollen tube 5 min after germination (Figure 5a).
During pollen tube growth, transcripts are translo-cated into pollen tubes displaying a gradient with increasing concentration toward the tip (Figure 5c). The translocation of ZmMADS2 transcripts into the pollen tube precedes migration of the vegeta-tive nucleus in the sperm cells into pollen tubes by more than two hours. Possibly, ZmMADS2 is re-quired only later in the germination process.
ZmMADS2 transcript levels in microspores are very low (Figure 4). Maximal expression in mature pol-len after dehiscence and localisation of tran-scripts in pollen tubes clearly classifies ZmMADS2 as a late pollen gene. The above findings clearly imply a function for ZmMADS2 during pollen tube WO 01/12798 CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 growth, in particular a function as a transcription factor, i.e. in regulating the transcription of one or more target genes.
Example 5: Transient transformation assays Pollen transformation was carried out according a modified protocol of Hamilton et al. (1992). Plas-mids containing the ZmMADS2 promoter fragments fused to the luciferase reporter gene and the NOS
terminator were used to coat gold particles (0,3 ~.m - 3 ~.m) which were then bombarded into pollen grains of Nicotiana tabacum (SR1) using a helium driven biolistic device (PDS-1000/He Biolistic Par-ticle Delivery System, Bio-Rad). The plasmids con-tained fragments of SEQ ID No. 3, Pos. 1-1538 (pDNSS), 455-1538 (pDNS6), 1006-1538 (pDNS7), 1175-1538 (pDNS8) or no promoter (negative control).
Pollen were spread out with a brush on sterile plastic petri dishes (30 mm x 15 mm) containing pollen medium (0, O1 o H3BO3, 10 mM CaCl2, 0, 05 mM
KHzP04, 0,1% yeast extract and 10% sucrose) with 0,6o agarose. Bombardments were done 5-20 min after spreading of the pollen. For bombardments done with leaf tissue, tips of young leaves were cut and placed on petri dishes containing sterile water with 0,6% agarose. The plates were kept at room temperature for 12-16 h prior to measurement of lu-ciferase activity.
Measuring of luciferase activity were carried out with the Luciferase Assay Kit (Promega) following the protocol of the manufacturer (Technical Bulle-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 tin #TB101) except for the preparation of the tis-sues. Germinated pollen, along with the agarose me-dium, were transferred to ice cold tubes followed by addition of 0,2 ml of cold lysis buffer and ground with a manual homogenizer. Leaf tips were transferred into ice cold tubes and homogenized in a Retschmill (MM 2000). Thereto 0,2 ml of lysis buffer was added. All samples were centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 5 min. at 4°C. The supernatants were assayed for luciferase activity in a Luminometer (Lumat LB 9501, Berthold). Corrections were made for the volume of liquid remaining in the agarose pellets. Total numbers of assayed samples per con-struct were 30 (pollen) or 5 (leaves).
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<160> 4C
<170> PatentIn Ver. 2.1 <210> 1 <211> 1268 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 1 tctcggctag cttcctcctc tctccctcct cttcgtcttc ctctttcctt ctcccttggg 60 aaacctgctg cctttgagct ttcttcttcg agtgctccca ccagatctcc tcctccttac 120 cttctttggc acgttcggcg gcgcgcgcgg agatagatag atcccgccat cgtcgtcgcc 180 gtccttgctt ccgatcggag ggccacaacc acaacctctc gctccttagc gtgcgcgcgc 240 gagccagggt caagaagaga gctagctata ggccggagat cgatggggag gggaaagatc 300 gtgatccgca ggatcgataa ctccacgagc cggcaggtga ccttctccaa gcgccggaac 360 gggatcttca agaaggccaa ggagctcgcc atcctctgcg atgcggaggt cggcctcgtc 420 atcttctcca gcaccggccg cctctacgag tactctagca ccagcatgaa atcagttata 480 gatcggtacg gcaaggccaa ggaagagcag caagtcgtcg caaatcccaa ctcggagctt 540 aagttttggc aaagggaggc agcaagcttg agacaacaac tgcacaactt gcaagaaaat 600 tatcggcagt tgacgggaga tgatctttct gggctgaatg tcaaagaact gcagtccctg 660 gagaatcaat tggaaacaag cctgcgtggt gtccgcgcaa agaaggacca tctcttgata 720 gatgagattc acgatttgaa tcgaaaggca agtttatttc accaagaaaa tacagacttg 780 tacaataaga tcaacctgat tcgccaagaa aatgatgagt tacataaaaa gatctatgag 840 actgaaggac caagtggagt taatcgggag tcaccgactc cattcaactt tgcagtagta 900 gaaaccagag atgttccagt gcaacttgaa ctcagcacac tgccacaaca aaataacatt 960 gagccatcta ctgctcctaa gctaggattg caattaattc catgaagaag agtaaaactg 1020 ccgtcttatg atgctgaagg aaactattta ttgtgaagag atgatactca gagaaagaca 1080 tatttgtggc agggagattt gagatatgaa cttataaatg taatgcaaat aattttcaga 1140 ctggaatggg gtcgtggaat tcagaggatg attgctttct agttgcattt gatgtttgat 1200 gagacttttc tcatgtgaaa cgtttattaa aacttcaaaa tggtgcagat gttgctaaaa 1260 aaaaaaaa 1268 <210> 2 <211> 240 <212> PRT
<213> Zea mays <400> 2 Met G1y ~rg Gly Lys Ile Val Ile Arg Arg T_'~= Asp Asn Ser Thr Ser Arg Gln Val Thr Phe Ser Lys Arg .'-.=g Asn G1~_: Ile Phe Lr~s L_rs Ala Lys Glu Leu Ala Ile Leu Cys Asp r~~~a Glu '~a~~ Giy Leu Va'~ I__ Phe 35 .~0 45 Ser Ser ':"~r Glyr Arg Leu T-_:r Glu T;'r Ser S°_= Thr Ser Met ~_ Ser Va1 1__ Asp Arg T:- G1y Lys Ala Lys Glu Glu Gln Gln Va1 -,'al Ala Asn Pro Asn Ser Glu Leu Lys Phe Trp Gln Arg Glu Ala Ala Ser Leu g5 90 95 Arg Gln Gln Leu His Asn Leu Gln G1u Asn Tyr Arg Gln Leu Thr Gly Asp AsD Leu Ser G~v_ Leu Asn Val Lys Glu Leu Gln Ser Leu Glu Asn Gln Leu Glu Thr Ser Leu Arg Gly Val Arg Ala Lys Lys Asp His Leu Leu Ile Asp Glu Ile His Asp Leu Asn Arg Lys Ala Ser Leu Phe His Gln Glu Asn Thr Asp Leu Tyr Asn Lys Ile Asn Leu Ile Arg Gln Glu Asn Asp G1u Leu His Lys Lys Ile Tyr Glu Thr Glu Gly Pro Ser Gly Val Asn Arg Glu Ser Pro Thr Pro Phe Asn Phe Ala Val Val G1u Thr Arg Asp Val Pro Val Gln Leu Glu Leu Ser Thr Leu Pro Gln Gln Asn Asn Ile Glu Pro Ser Thr Ala Pro Lys Leu Gly Leu G1n Leu Ile Pro <210> 3 <211> 1502 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 3 ctgaagctgt cgtgttcctc acgtgcattg gctacaaatg tatgtaacat agtaaatctg 60 attgaaaagt taaatcttaa taattattat tacgacaaac taaaaaccta ttccatttct 120 ttgcatatga aaaatacagg tattccatgt aatataggaa caaatgtata atgcggctac 180 tttgatgaac aatttataaa tgcattaaaa ggtatgtaac ataataaatc cgtcatgtaa 240 tgttgtaact atataaaata gcaacataaa tttaattgca actaaaaacc gcctttttct 300 atgcgaaata atttacacta gcttcatata ggaatagatg gaaaaccaaa tcattaatgt 360 ctgcattatc atgcattatt ctggtatgaa gaaagagcgc gtatagccag catgacagat 420 ccattgttta caacaaatgt tcaaaggtgg taaagtaaag acctcgaccg gaaccattgg 480 gcccacttgc aaaatttaat ggtgattcta catctaaaat gttttgtttc aaatataaga 540 caatatggtt gtatctttgc ttttacccca atgggttcta tcaatgatgg ttgaggtcct 600 ccattattta ggatgtggtc aagtgcatca acgaatatga tcacttctac actcgacggt 660 tctcctaaat ttatacagta ttacagttat atatttatag ttatatattt atgatacttt 720 aaatggaatc agaaatagaa tgcaatgctt aaataaaacc aatgaatctt aaagaaagat 780 ttggatccag atatagtcca gcaacttatg acaatagtat acatataatg ccaatgccaa 840 catgtttcaa gtg ~.,,.taa aaactatgta cattttctgc ~tcgtttact caaatacgta 900 aaatagcact gctctataat aagtacatct attatcacct ataaaacttt ttccagcaac 960 atttatataa tttgtgcatc attaatttta acaacactta taaattagct caaatacgta 1020 acaaagcgcg c~catJ~gcg cgctcaagct actagttctt atacaatga~ aacaatacta 1080 ..tatattaga cataaaatta ggtgtagttt atttatttac tggtactact t~_ttaagtc 1140 ataattaggt gtactagaag ctactacgcc ctgacggaga caagcacgca caatagaaaa 1200 gagcgccctc gtgctcagag tgctcgcctt tagtttcgtg gctactatat actagctgcg 1260 acgattttta ttttctttct cttctgggct atcattagca cggccattta ggggtaatga 1320 gcagcggcca ataaacaaag ccctggggta gccaatcggg tgtcgccgtg c=cgcgcgcg 1380 cgcgtctggc c__ctgccct cctcctccct ttccttgcta aataaagcaa gtagcagata 1440 ggggaaagtc tgctcgcaag ttgcatccgc cctgcgccaa gaaaagccat cgttcttccc 1500 ac 1502 <210> 4 <211> 502 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 4 ctgaagctgt cgtgttcctc acgtgcattg gctacaaatg tatgtaacat agtaaatctg 60 attgaaaagt taaatcttaa taattattat tacgacaaac taaaaaccta ttccatttct 120 ttgcatatga aaaatacagg tattccatgt aatataggaa caaatgtata atgcggctac 180 tttgatgaac aatttataaa tgcattaaaa ggtatgtaac ataataaatc cgtcatgtaa 240 tgttgtaact atataaaata gcaacataaa tttaattgca actaaaaacc gcctttttct 300 atgcgaaata atttacacta gcttcatata ggaatagatg gaaaaccaaa tcattaatgt 360 ctgcattatc atgcattatt ctggtatgaa gaaagagcgc gtatagccag catgacagat 420 ccattgttta caacaaatgt tcaaaggtgg taaagtaaag acctcgaccg gaaccattgg 480 gcccacttgc aaaatttaat gg 502 <210> 5 <211> 500 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 5 tgattctaca tctaaaatgt tttgtttcaa atataagaca atatggttgt atctttgctt 60 ttaccccaat gggttctatc aatgatggtt gaggtcctcc attatttagg atgtggtcaa 120 gtgcatcaac gaatatgatc acttctacac tcgacggttc tcctaaattt atacagtatt 180 acagttatat atttatagtt atatatttat gatactttaa atggaatcag aaatagaatg 240 caatgcttaa ataaaaccaa tgaatcttaa agaaagattt ggatccagat atagtccagc 300 aacttatgac aatagtatac atataatgcc aatgccaaca tgtttcaagt gctcttaaaa 360 actatgtaca ttttctgctt cgtttactca aatacgtaaa atagcactgc tctataataa 420 gtacatctat tatcacctat aaaacttttt ccagcaacat ttatataatt tgtgcatcat 480 taattttaac aacacttata 500 <210> 6 <211> 1000 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 6 tgattctaca tctaaaatgt tttgtttcaa atataagaca atatggttgt atctttgctt 60 ttaccccaat gggttctatc aatgatggtt gaggtcctcc attatttagg atgtggtcaa 120 gtgcatcaac gaatatgatc acttctacac tcgacggttc tcctaaattt atacagtatt 180 acagttatat atttatagtt atatatttat gatactttaa atggaatcag aaatagaatg 240 caatgcttaa ataaaaccaa tgaatcttaa agaaagattt ggatccagat atagtccagc 300 aacttatgac aatagtatac atataatgcc aatgccaaca tgtttcaagt cctcttaaaa 360 actatgtaca t~~_ctgctt cgtttactca aatacgtaaa atagcactgc tctataataa 420 gtacatctat tatcacctat aaaacttttt ccagcaacat ttatataatt t7tgcatcat 480 taattttaac aacacttata aattagctca aatacgtaac aaagcgcgcc catgggcgcg 540 ctcaagctac tagttcttat acagtgaaaa caatactact atattagaca taaaattagg 600 tgtagtttat ttatttactg gtactacttc tttaagtcat aattaggtgt a.ctagaagct 660 actacgccct gacggagaca agcacgcaca atagaaaaga gcgccctcg~ gctcagagtg 720 ctcgccttta gtttcgtggc tactatatac tagctgcgac gatttttatt t..ctttctct 780 tctgggctat cattagcacg gccatttagg ggtaatgagc agcggccaat aaacaaagcc 840 ctggggtagc caatcgggtg tcgccgtgcg cgcgcgcgcg cgtctggcct cctgccctcc 900 tcctcccttt ccttgctaaa taaagcaagt agcagatagg ggaaagtctg ctcgcaagtt 960 gcatccgccc tgcgccaaga aaagccatcg ttcttcccac 1000 <210> 7 <211> 740 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 7 tgaatcttaa agaaagattt ggatccagat atagtccagc aacttatgac aatagtatac 60 atataatgcc aatgccaaca tgtttcaagt gctcttaaaa actatgtaca ttttctgctt 120 cgtttactca aatacgtaaa atagcactgc tctataataa gtacatctat tatcacctat 180 aaaacttttt ccagcaacat ttatataatt tgtgcatcat taattttaac aacacttata 240 aattagctca aatacgtaac aaagcgcgcc catgggcgcg ctcaagctac tagttcttat 300 acagtgaaaa caatactact atattagaca taaaattagg tgtagtttat ttatttactg 360 gtactacttc tttaagtcat aattaggtgt actagaagct actacgccct gacggagaca 420 agcacgcaca atagaaaaga gcgccctcgt gctcagagtg ctcgccttta gtttcgtggc 480 tactatatac tagctgcgac gatttttatt ttctttctct tctgggctat cattagcacg 540 gccatttagg ggtaatgagc agcggccaat aaacaaagcc ctggggtagc caatcgggtg 600 tcgccgtgcg cgcgcgcgcg cgtctggcct cctgccctcc tcctcccttt ccttgctaaa 660 taaagcaagt agcagatagg ggaaagtctg ctcgcaagtt gcatccgccc tgcgccaaga 720 aaagccatcg ttcttcccac 740 <210> 8 <211> 500 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 8 aattagctca aatacgtaac aaagcgcgcc catgggcgcg ctcaagctac tagttcttat 60 acagtgaaaa caatactact atattagaca taaaattagg tgtagtttat ttatttactg 120 gtactacttc tttaagtcat aattaggtgt actagaagct actacgccct gacggagaca 180 agcacgcaca atagaaaaga gcgccctcgt gctcagagtg ctcgccttta gtttcgtggc 240 tactatatac tagctgcgac gatttttatt ttctttctct tctgggctat cattagcacg 300 gccatttagg ggtaatgagc agcggccaat aaacaaagcc ctggggtagc caatcgggtg 360 tcgccgtgcg cgcgcgcgcg cgtctggcct cctgccctcc tcctcccttt ccttgctaaa 420 taaagcaagt agcagatagg ggaaagtctg ctcgcaagtt gcatccgccc tgcgccaaga 480 aaagccatcg ttcttcccac 500 <210> 9 <211> 410 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 9 taaaattagg tgtagtttat ttatttactg gtactacttc tttaagtcat aattaggtgt 60 actagaagct actacgccct gacggagaca agcacgcaca atagaaaaga gcgccctcgt 120 gctcagagtg ctcgccttta gtttcgtggc tactatatac tagctgcgac gatttttatt 180 ttctttctct tctgggctat cattagcacg gccatttagg ggtaatgagc agcggccaat 240 aaacaaagcc ctggggtagc caatcgggtg tcgccgtgcg cgcgcgcgcg cgtctggcct 300 cctgccctcc tcctcccttt ccttgctaaa taaagcaagt agcagatagg ggaaagtctg 360 ctcgcaagtt gcatccgccc tgcgccaaga aaagccatcg ttcttcccac 410 <210> 10 <211> 310 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mars <400> 10 aaacgcacac atagaagcat cattcccctc tcggctagct tcctcctctc tccctcctct 60 tcgtcttcct ctttccttct cccttgggaa acctgctgcc t~tgagcttt cttcttcgag 120 tgctcccacc agatctcctc ctccttacct tctttggcac gttcggcggc gcgcgcggag 180 atagatagat cccgccatcg tcgtcgccgt c~ttgcttcc gatcggaggg ccacaaccac 240 aacctctcgc t_cttagcgt gcgcgcgcga gccagggtca agaagagagc tagctatagg 300 ccggagatcg 310 <210> 11 <211> 251 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mat's <400> 11 agaagagtaa aactgccgtc ttatgatgct gaaggaaact atttattgtg aagagatgat 60 actcagagaa agacatattt gtggcaggga gatttgagat atgaacttat aaatgtaatg 120 caaataattt tcagactgga atggggtcgt ggaattcaga ggatgattgc tttctagttg 180 catttgatgt ttgatgagac ttttctcatg tgaaacgttt attaaaactt caaaatggtg 240 cagatgttgc t 251 <210> 12 <211> 5031 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mavs <220>
<221> misc_~eature <222> (1813)..(1994) <223> EXON I
<220>
<221> misc_Leature <222> (2871)..(2954) <223> EXON II
<220>
<221> misc_::eature <222> (3202)..(3258) <223> EXON III
<220>
<221> misc_~eature <222> (4066)..(4166) <223> EXON I'J
<220>
<221> misc_'=ature <222> (4248)..(4289) <223> EXON V
<220>
<221> misc =eature <222> (4367;..(4449) <223> EXON 'J1 <220>
<221> m~sc_Leat~_=
<222> !s523)..(4676) <223> ERON VII
<220>
<400> 12 ctgaagctgt cgtgttcctc acgtgcattg gctacaaatg tatgtaacat agtaaatctg 60 attgaaaagt taaatcttaa taattattat tacgacaaac taaaaaccta ttccatttct 120 ttgcatatga aaaatacagg tattccatgt aatataggaa caaatgtata atgcggctac 180 tttgatgaac aatttataaa tgcattaaaa ggtatgtaac ataataaatc cgtcatgtaa 240 tgttgtaact atataaaata gcaacataaa tttaattgca actaaaaacc gcctttttct 300 atgcgaaata atttacacta gcttcatata ggaatagatg gaaaaccaaa tcattaatgt 360 ctgcattatc atgcattatt ctggtatgaa gaaagagcgc gtatagccag catgacagat 420 ccattgttta caacaaatgt tcaaaggtgg taaagtaaag acctcgaccg gaaccattgg 480 gcccacttgc aaaatttaat ggtgattcta catctaaaat gttttgtttc aaatataaga 540 caatatggtt gtatctttgc ttttacccca atgggttcta tcaatgatgg ttgaggtcct 600 ccattattta ggatgtggtc aagtgcatca acgaatatga tcacttctac actcgacggt 660 tctcctaaat ttatacagta ttacagttat atatttatag ttatatattt atgatacttt 720 aaatggaatc agaaatagaa tgcaatgctt aaataaaacc aatgaatctt aaagaaagat 780 ttggatccag atatagtcca gcaacttatg acaatagtat acatataatg ccaatgccaa 840 catgtttcaa gtgctcttaa aaactatgta cattttctgc ttcgtttact caaatacgta 900 aaatagcact gctctataat aagtacatct attatcacct ataaaacttt ttccagcaac 960 atttatataa tttgtgcatc attaatttta acaacactta taaattagct caaatacgta 1020 acaaagcgcg cccatgggcg cgctcaagct actagttctt atacagtgaa aacaatacta 1080 ctatattaga cataaaatta ggtgtagttt atttatttac tggtactact tctttaagtc 1140 ataattaggt gtactagaag ctactacgcc ctgacggaga caagcacgca caatagaaaa 1200 gagcgccctc gtgctcagag tgctcgcctt tagtttcgtg gctactatat actagctgcg 1260 acgattttta ttttctttct cttctgggct atcattagca cggccattta ggggtaatga 1320 gcagcggcca ataaacaaag ccctggggta gccaatcggg tgtcgccgtg cgcgcgcgcg 1380 cgcgtctggc ctcctgccct cctcctccct ttccttgcta aataaagcaa gtagcagata 1440 ggggaaagtc tgctcgcaag ttgcatccgc cctgcgccaa gaaaagccat cgttcttccc 1500 acaaacgcac acatagaagc atcattcccc tctcggctag cttcctcctc tctccctcct 1560 cttcgtcttc ctctttcctt ctcccttggg aaacctgctg cctttgagct ttcttcttcg 1620 agtgctccca ccagatctcc tcctccttac cttctttggc acgttcggcg gcgcgcgcgg 1680 agatagatag atcccgccat cgtcgtcgcc gtccttgctt ccgatcggag ggccacaacc 1740 acaacctctc gctccttagc gtgcgcgcgc gagccagggt caagaagaga gctagctata 1800 ggccggagat cgatggggag gggaaagatc gtgatccgca ggatcgataa ctccacgagc 1860 cggcaggtga ccttctccaa gcgccggaac gggatcttca agaaggccaa ggagctcgcc 1920 atcctctgcg atgcggaggt cggcctcgtc atcttctcca gcaccggccg cctctacgag 1980 tactctagca ccaggtcgtc gcccttcgat tattatccgt ccctgcttta attaatttaa 2040 tacttcaata atgccaactg ttttcttgct cctgttgaag cgatatacta tatataataa 2100 tagagttgtt cttggcttct tgctttaatt agtttgggtt atcgattgca ttttatgatt 2160 tgaaactaca cactacctgt ctcatataca tggactggcg agagtgatta tggacctata 2220 caccatgtat acacaagtcc taaggtagac aaaagatttt aatttacctg tcgattgtcg 2280 aatattgact gtacatatag cgcacagagc tagcaacaac actcctggtt tctttgacgg 2340 ggcaagcaag atctgtgtat gcggtctaac aataaaatac aatctttggt acggttagta 2400 tttgtgtttt tgcccctctt cttccttgtt gtttggtcta tttgaactat tattcctctc 2-X60 caaaaaattc cctatgtatc atcggaattt atactcatcc cttgcattgt gtgccatata 2520 ttgagtggca tatagtaggg aacatatgca aaactaaatt taattagctt tgtcatattg 2580 tttcatgtga tcaactcgac acagcatgtc attgcagtag gaaacgcata ggcttttgtg 2640 atgtaagata tatgtgtgta tatatatgca tggggttcta tccacagggg ctggtagtgt 2700 tactgccatc agagagtttt tccctagaga gagagagaga gagagcctag atcctaactc 2760 ctgtaattaa gattttaact tttttagata gctataaact taatatttta caacgaatag 2820 catagtaata gttttttttt gggataaact gacatttgtg ctgtgtgcag catgaaatca 2880 gttatagatc ggtacggcaa ggccaaggaa gagcagcaag tcgtcgcaaa tcccaactcg 2940 gagcttaagt tttgctctag ataatttttt ctctctattc tgaagtgttt gcttgtttaa 3000 ctaaaagatt gctatatttt ttttgctttc gttttgatat atatatcctt taagtttatg 3060 gtttttaagg atgggaagaa attacacaac tatggtcaca tcaacaagcg tcctaccttt 3120 ttttatctta tccagctgct tgatcttttc tagttaccag cccgggccgt cgaccacgcg 3180 tgccctatag tgagtcgtaa cgcaaaggga ggcagcaagc ~tgagacaac aactgcacaa 3240 cttgcaagaa aattatcgta tggttcgaaa accctgcaaa agtttcaagc aagttattca 3300 ttagaaactt gagtg,.~cag agacagaagc acaatgcaca agcatgcaa~ atccaaatgc 3360 aggtacaact attacacatt catagataac agaaacaatt agcaagagtc aaattatcat 3420 gtgaaaggct agacattaga catcaaaata cttcatacga gataagttga acatgtgaaa 3480 attattctac ggccaacaat aaaactaaaa caaaacaggg acatcacagt taaactactt 3540 cccctgcttc attttaaagg tgcatttgca tttgcatttg aacaagtttt taaggctgtc 3600 tctaacagct accctatcac atcccctatc ttacctcata ttacaaactt cattcagcaa 3660 acagtgtaat ctagagtaca gtgcaaatcc tctattttac acaatcttgc tgcggatagc 3720 ctaacattgt actttgacca tgaatttctc ttatccaata aatccaaacc cagaaaattc 3780 aatgttgttt caaaagcttt gtgagatatg aataatgata caattttcat acactaagac 3840 tgcatataat ttgattaact gttagacaaa ttttgtaaaa ttaaacggcc ttttttccat 3900 acaaaagaaa cagagggtat atcaaaacat atcctgatga tgctccaaac atttatagag 3960 aaaacacaca catatattgg caattggcaa acataagcta gactgtgtgt gtataattgt 4020 ataatacaca acattaattg ctgatgccta ttaatttgtt acagggcagt tgacgggaga 4080 tgatctttct gggctgaatg tcaaagaact gcagtccctg gagaatcaat tggaaacaag 4140 cctgcgtggt gtccgcgcaa agaaggtttg attcttaatc aaatttctat aatcaattgt 4200 tcaataaatt actaaagatc gttactactg ttgatgctct taacaggacc atctcttgat 4260 agatgagatt cacgatttga atcgaaaggt ctgtaatatc gtgaatttat agttatgtgt 4320 tttatttgat ttagtagcac tgactaacca ctttgttggt cacaggcaag tttatttcac 4380 caagaaaata cagacttgta caataagatc aacctgattc gccaagaaaa tgatgagtta 4440 cataaaaagg tagctgatga attgaacaaa aataccacta actgcctaac cacacatatg 4500 acatgatatt aattgttctc agatctatga gactgaagga ccaagtggag ttaatcggga 4560 gtcaccgact ccattcaact ttgcagtagt agaaaccaga gatgttccag tgcaacttga 4620 actcagcaca ctgccacaac aaaataacat tgagccatct actgctccta agctagggta 4680 taacatttat tctctctata tatttcaatt ggttaactag tgttgactac agtgctataa 4740 tgagttgcta aacacatgca gattgcaatt aattccatga agaagagtaa aactgccgtc 4800 ttatgatgct gaaggaaact atttattgtg aagagatgat actcagagaa agacatattt 4860 gtggcaggga gatttgagat atgaacttat aaatgtaatg caaataattt tcagactgga 4920 atggggtcgt ggaattcaga ggatgattgc tttctagttg catttgatgt ttgatgagac 4980 ttttctcatg tgaaacgttt attaaaactt caaaatggtg cagatgttgc t 5031 <210> 13 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 13 atggggaggg gaaggattga 20 <210> 14 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 14 ctgttgttgg cgtactcgta g 21 <210> 15 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 15 aggggcaaga tcgacatcaa g 21 <210> 16 <211> 19 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 1~
gkcgwactcg tagaggcgg 19 <210> 17 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea maws <400> 17 atggggaggg gacgmgttga 20 <210> 18 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 18 gctgccgaac tcgtagagct 20 <210> 19 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 19 gttgttggcg tactcgtaga g 21 <210> 20 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mans <400> 20 gggcgcaagg tacagctgaa 20 <210> 21 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea maws <400> 21 gttgttggcg tactcgtaga g 21 <210> 22 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 22 aagggcaaga c gagatcaa g 21 <210> 23 <211> 23 <212> DNA
Thus, the present invention relates to nucleic acid sequences, in particular DNA sequences which hy-bridise under the hybridisation conditions as de-scribed in Sambrook et al., (1989) in particular under the following conditions to the sequences specifically disclosed:
Hybridisation buffer: 1 M NaCl; to SDS; 10%
dextran sulphate; 100 ~.g/ml ssDNA
Hybridisation temperature: 65° C
First wash: 2 x SSC; 0.5o SDS at room temperature Second wash: 0.2 x SSC; 0.5o SDS at 55°C.
More preferably, the hybridisation conditions are chosen as identified above, except that a hybridi-sation temperature and second wash temperature of 68° C, a:~d even more preferred, a hybridisation temperature and second wash temperature of 70° C is applied.
_g_ Thus, the present invention also comprises nucleic acid sequences which are functionally equivalent to the sequences of any one of SEQ ID No . 1 and 3 to 12, in particular sequences which have at least ho-mology to the sequence of SEQ ID No. 1 and 3 to 12.
The invention also relates to alleles and deriva-tives of the sequences mentioned above which are defined as sequences being essentially similar to the above sequences but comprising, for instance, nucleotide exchanges, substitutions (also by un-usual nucleotides), rearrangements, mutations, de-letions, insertions, additions or nucleotide modi-fications and are functionally equivalent to the sequences set out in SEQ ID No. 1 and 3 to 12.
The nucleic acid molecules of the present invention are, in a preferred embodiment, derived from maize (Zea mays), most preferably from maize pollen.
According to the present invention it was found that the nucleic acid sequence isolated are spe-cifically expressed in mature pollen and obviously play an important role in pollen development, in particular pollen tube growth, pollen development and/or fertilisation.
Thus, the nucleic acid molecules of the present in-vention are useful for cloning tissue specific, in particular pollen specific nucleic acid sequences, in particular regulatory elements, coding sequences and/or complete genes, in plants, in particular in monocotyledonous plants. Thus, the present inven-tion provides the means for the isolation of pollen specific coding sequences and/or transcription WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 regulatory elements that direct or contribute to pollen-preferred gene expression in plants, in par-ticular in monocotyledonous plants, such as maize.
The present invention also provides the means of isolating pollen specifically expressed genes and their transcripts.
The nucleic acid molecules of the present invention are also useful for expressing a pollen specific protein, namely the ZmMADS2 coding sequence, in plants, in particular in the pollen of plants and especially in the pollen of monocotyledonous plants such as maize or of dicotyledonous plants such as sugar beets (Beta vulgaris). Thus, the present in-vention provides the means to allow the expression of a particular pollen specific or pollen abundant gene in pollen thereby enabling the modification of pollen development, pollen tube growth or fertili-sation processes. The coding sequence of the pres-ent invention may be overexpressed in transformed plants due to expression under control of a strong constitutive or regulated promoter. It is also possible to modify the coding sequence of the pres-ent invention so as to allow the production of a modified pollen specific protein, which in turn modifies in a desired manner pollen development and/or function. Most importantly, the present in-vention provides the means to specifically inhibit the formation of a protein essential for pollen function, namely the ZmMADS2 protein, by transform-ing plants with antisense constructs comprising all or part of the ZmMADS2 transcribed region, in par-ticular the coding sequence or part thereof in an-tisense orientation under the control of its wild-WO 01/12798 cA o23e133o 2002-o2-1s PCT/EP00/08001 type or appropriate other regulatory elements so as to effectively bind to wild-type ZmMADS2 mRNA and inhibit its translation. Another possibility of eliminating the expression of an endogenous ZmMADS2 gene is to use cosuppression technology, thus to insert a transgenic copy of the endogenous ZmMADS2 gene into the plant to silence the expression, for instance by overexpression of the transgenic copy coupled in sense orientation to a strong promoter.
Such a construct leads upon expression to the abol-ishment of the wild-type ZmMADS2 function thereby producing nuclear male sterile plants. Of course, the present invention also relates to processes to restore the elimination effect, for instance by us-ing switchable or inducible promoters to restore the effects.
The present invention also provides regulatory ele-ments, such as promoters, 3' termination signals or elements present in 5' and/or 3' untranslated re-gions (UTRs) providing for pollen specific expres-sion of any gene of interest, including the ZmMADS2 coding sequence of the present invention.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the pres-ent invention, the promoter of the present inven-tion is expressed in a spatially and temporarily specific manner, preferably in mature pollen after dehiscence, but before or during dehydration of the pollen takes place. In a further preferred embodi-ment the promoter of the present invention is able, due to specific sequence elements present in its sequence, not only to direct expression in prefera-bly mature, ungerminated pollen tissue but addi-CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 tionally also in root tips. Of course, by deleting or inactivating the root specific sequence element in the promoter of the present invention an exclu-sive pollen specific expression without any expres-sion in other tissues of a plant may be obtained.
Accordingly, the proteins encoded by the gene of interest can be accumulated in pollen. For in-stance, the promoter of the present invention is particularly useful in driving the pollen specific transcription of heterologous structural genes that confer male sterility to transgenic plants by ex-pressing exclusively in pollen mRNA or proteins in-hibiting or adversely influencing pollen develop-ment and/or function. Thus, the present invention relates to improved means and methods for plant breeding, in particular the production of hybrid seed, for instance by creating plants exhibiting nuclear male sterility, in particular in grain, ce-reals and corn. In a particularly preferred em-bodiment, the present invention relates to a DNA
construct with a promoter and/or 3' regulatory ele-ment of the present invention operably linked to a coding sequence for a toxic protein, for instance a barnase or a coding sequence of the present inven-tion as set out in SEQ ID No. 1.
In the context of the present invention, a number of terms shall be utilised as follows.
The term "promoter" refers to a sequence of DNA, usually upstream (5') to the coding sequence of a structural gene, which controls the expression of the coding region by providing the recognition for RNA polymerase and/or other factors required for WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 transcription to start at the correct site. Pro-moter sequences are necessary, but not always suf-ficient to drive the expression of the gene.
A "3' regulatory element (or "3' end") refers to that portion of a gene comprising a DNA segment, excluding the 5' sequence which drives the initia-tion of transcription and the structural portion of the gene, that determines the correct termination site and contains a polyadenylation signal and any other regulatory signals capable of effecting mes-senger RNA (mRNA) processing or gene expression.
The polyadenylation signal is usually characterised by effecting the addition of polyadenylic acid tracts to the 3' end of the mRNA precursor. Poly-adenylation signals are commonly recognised by the presence of homology to the canonical form 5'-AATAAA-3', although variations are not uncommon.
"Nucleic acid" refers to a large molecule which can be single or double stranded, composed of monomers (nucleotides) containing a sugar, phosphate and ei-ther a purine or pyrimidine. The nucleic acid may be cDNA, genomic DNA, or RNA, for instance mRNA.
The term "nucleic acid sequence" refers to a natu-ral or synthetic polymer of DNA or RNA which may be single or double stranded, alternatively containing synthetic, non-natural or altered nucleotide bases capable of incorporation into DNA or RNA polymers.
The term "gene" refers to a DNA sequence that codes for a specific protein and regulatory elements con-trolling the expression of this DNA sequence.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 The term "regulatory element" refers to a sequence located upstream (5'), within and/or downstream (3') to a coding sequence whose transcription and expression is controlled by the regulatory element, potentially in conjunction with the protein biosyn-thetic apparatus of the cell. "Regulation" or "regulate" refer to the modulation of the gene ex-pression induced by DNA sequence elements located primarily, but not exclusively upstream (5') from the transcription start of the gene of interest.
Regulation may result in an all or none response to a stimulation, or it may result in variations in the level of gene expression.
The term "coding sequence" refers to that portion of a gene encoding a protein, polypeptide, or a portion thereof, and excluding the regulatory se-quences which drive the initiation or termination of transcription.
The coding sequence or the regulatory element may be one normally found in the cell, in which case it is called "autologous", or it may be one not nor-mally found in a cellular location, in which case it is termed "heterologous".
A heterologous gene may also be composed of autolo-gous elements arranged in an order and/or orienta-tion not normally found in the cell in which it is transferred. A heterologous gene may be derived in whole or in part from any source known to the art, including a bacterial or viral genome or episome, eukaryotic nuclear or plasmid DNA, cDNA or chemi-cally synthesised DNA. The structural gene may WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 constitute an uninterrupted coding region or it may include one or more introns bounded by appropriate splice junctions. The structural gene may be a composite of segments derived from different sources, naturally occurring or synthetic.
The term "vector" refers to a recombinant DNA con-struct which may be a plasmid, virus, or autono-mously replicating sequence, phage or nucleotide sequence, linear or circular, of a single or double stranded DNA or RNA, derived from any source, in which a number of nucleotide sequences have been joined or recombined into a unique construction which is capable of introducing a promoter fragment and a DNA sequence for a selected gene product in sense or antisense orientation along with appropri-ate 3' untranslated sequence into a cell, in par-ticular a plant cell.
As used herein, "plant" refers to photosynthetic organisms, such as whole plants including algae, mosses, ferns and plant-derived tissues. "Plant derived tissues" refers to differentiated and un-differentiated tissues of a plant, including pol-len, pollen tubes, pollen grains, roots, shoots, shoot meristems, coleoptilar nodes, tassels, leaves, cotyledondous petals, ovules, tubers, seeds, kernels and various forms of cells in cul-ture such as intact cells, protoplasts, embryos and callus tissue. Plant-derived tissues may be in planta, or in organ, tissue or cell culture. A
"monocotyledonous plant" refers to a plant whose seeds have only one cotyledon, or organ of the em-bryo that stores and absorbs food. A
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 "dictyledonous plant" refers to a plant whose seeds have two cotyledons.
"Transformation" and "transferring" refers to meth-ods to transfer DNA into cells including, but not limited to, biolistic approaches such as particle bombardment, microinjection, permeabilising the cell membrar_e with various physical (e. g., electro-poration) or chemical (e. g., polyethylene glycol, PEG) treatments; the fusion of protoplasts or Agro-bacterium tumefaciens or rhizogenes mediated trans-formation. For the injection and electroporation of DNA in plant cells there are no specific re-quirements for the plasmids used. Plasmids such as pUC derivatives can be used. If whole plants are to be regenerated from such transformed cells, there should be a selectable marker. Depending upon the method for the introduction of desired genes into the plant cell, further DNA sequences may be necessary; if, for example, the Ti or Ri plasmid is used for the transformation of the plant cell, at least the right border, often, however, the right and left border of the Ti and Ri plasmid T-DNA have to be linked as flanking region to the genes to be introduced.
If Agrobacteria are used for the transformation, the DNA to be introduced has to be cloned into spe-cific plasmids, either into an intermediary vector or into a binary vector. The intermediary vectors can be integrated into the Ti or Ri plasmid of the Agrobacteria due to sequences that are homologous to sequences in the T-DNA by homologous recombina-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 tion. The Ti or Ri plasmid furthermore contains the vir region necessary for the transfer of the T-DNA into the plant cell. Intermediary vectors can-not replicate in Agrobacteria. By means of a helper plasmid the intermediary vector can be transferred by means of a conjugation to Agrobacterium tumefa-ciens. Binary vectors can replicate both in E.coli and in Agrobacteria and they contain a selection marker gene and a linker or polylinker framed by the right and left T-DNA border region. They can be transformed directly into the Agrobacteria (Holsters et al., 1978). The Agrobacterium serving as a host cell should contain a plasmid carrying a vir region. The Agrobacterium transformed is used for the transformation of plant cells. The use of T-DNA for the transformation of plant cells has been extensively examined and described in EP-A 120 516; Hoekema, (1985); An et al., (1985).
For the transfer of the DNA into the plant cell plant explants can be co-cultivated with Agrobacte-rium tumefaciens or Agrobacterium rhizogenes. From the infected plant material (e. g., pieces of leaf, stem segments, roots, but also protoplasts or plant cells cultivated by suspension) whole plants can be regenerated in a suitable medium, which may contain antibiotics or biozides for the selection of trans-formed cells.
Alternative systems for the transformation of mono-cotyledonous plants are the transformation by means of electrically or chemically induced introduction of DNA into protoplasts, the electroporation of partially permeabilised cells, the macroinjection of DNA into flowers, the microinjection of DNA into micro-spores and pro-embryos, the introduction of DNA into germinating pollen and the introduction of DNA into embryos by swelling (Potrykus, Physiol.
Plant (1990), 269-273).
While the transformation of dicotyledonous plants via Ti plasmid vector systems with the help of Agrobacterium tumefaciens is well-established, more recent research work indicates that also monocoty-ledonous plants are accessible for transformation by means of vectors based on Agrobacterium (Chan et al . , ( 1993 ) ; Hiei et al . , ( 1994 ) ; Bytebier et al . , (1987); Raineri et al., (1990), Gould et al., (1991); Mooney et al., (1991); Lit et al., (1992)).
In fact, several of the above-mentioned transforma-tion systems could be established for various cere-als: the electroporation of tissues, the transfor-mation of protoplasts and the DNA transfer by par-ticle bombardment in regenerative tissue and cells (Jahne et al., (1995). The transformation of maize has been described in Brettschneider et al., (1997) and Ishida et al., (1996). The transformation of wheat has been frequently described in the litera-ture (Maheshwari et al., (1995).
The term "host cell" refers to a cell which has been genetically modified by transfer of a het-erologous or autologous nucleic acid sequence or its descendants still containing this sequence.
The host cell may be transiently or stably trans-formed and is preferably able to express the trans-formed nucleic acid molecule. These cells are also WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 termed "transgenic cells". In the case of an autologous nucleic acid sequence being transferred, the sequence will be present in the host cell in a higher copy number than naturally occurring.
The term "operably linked" refers to the chemical fusion of two of more fragments of DNA in a proper orientation such that the fusion preserves or cre-ates a proper reading frame, or makes possible the proper regulation of expression of the DNA se-quences when transformed into plant tissue.
The term "expression" as used herein is intended to describe the transcription and/or coding of the se-quence for the gene product. In the expression, a DNA chain coding for the sequence of gene product is first transcribed to a complementary RNA, which is often an mRNA, and then the thus transcribed mRNA is translated into the above mentioned gene product if the gene product is a protein. However, expression also includes the transcription of DNA
inserted in antisense orientation to its regulatory elements. Expression, which is constitutive and possibly further enhanced by an externally con-trolled promoter fragment thereby producing multi-ple copies of mRNA and large quantities of the se-lected gene product, may also include overproduc-tion of a gene product.
A "tissue specific promoter" refers to a sequence of DNA that provides recognition signals for RNA
polymerase and/or other factors required for tran-scription to begin, and/or for controlling expres-sion of the coding sequence precisely within cer-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 taro tissues or within certain cells of that tis-sue. Expression in a tissue specific manner may be only in individual tissues, or cells within tis-sues, or in combinations of tissues. The present invention relates in particular to pollen and/or root specific expression, i.e. examples may include tissue specific expression in pollen only and no other tissues within the plant, or may be in pollen and roots, and no other tissues of the plant. An expression in pollen according to which the expres-sion takes place mainly, but not exclusively, in the pollen is also termed "tissue abundant".
The term "pollen specific nucleic acid sequence"
refers to nucleic acid sequences, i.e. genes, cod-ing sequences and/or regulatory elements which are exclusively or mainly active in pollen of plants, in particular those which direct or contribute to a pollen abundant or pollen selective expression of a protein. The term "pollen abundant nucleic acid sequence" refers to nucleic acid sequences, i.e.
genes, coding sequences and/or regulatory elements which are mainly active in pollen of plants, in particular those which direct or contribute to a pollen abundant expression of a protein.
In a further preferred embodiment the invention re-lates to nucleic acid molecules specifically hy-bridising to transcripts of the nucleic acid mole-cules. These nucleic acid molecules are preferably oligonucleotides having a length of at least 10, in particular of at least 15 and particularly pre-ferred of at least 50 nucleotides. The nucleic acid molecules and oligonucleotides of the present in-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 vention may be used for instance as primers for a PCR reaction or be used as components of antisense constructs or of DNA molecules encoding suitable ribozymes.
The present invention also relates to vectors com-prising the above-identified nucleic acid molecules in particular comprising chimeric DNA constructs or non-chimeric DNA constructs such as the wild-type ZmMADS2 gene, or derivatives thereof or parts thereof . The term DNA construct refers to a combi-nation of at least one regulatory element and a coding sequence.
Thus, the present invention relates to recombinant nucleic acid molecules useful in the preparation of male sterile plant cells and plants as defined above by genetic engineering. In particular, the invention concerns chimeric DNA constructs compris-ing a coding DNA sequence coding for a wild-type ZmMADS2 protein operably linked to a promoter wherein said promoter is different to the promoter linked to said ZmMADS2 coding sequence in the wild-type gene i.e. either is a mutated wild-type pro-moter or a promoter from another gene and/or spe-cies. In a further preferred embodiment, the inven-tion concerns chimeric DNA constructs comprising a modified coding DNA sequence coding for a mutated ZmMADS2 protein, wherein the DNA-sequence is opera-bly linked to a promoter which may be different from the promoter linked to said ZmMADS2 coding se-quence in the wild-type gene or the promoter is the wild-type ZmMADS2 promoter.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 Of course, the present invention also relates to chimeric antisense constructs comprising a DNA se-quence present in or derived from the transcribed region of the ZmMADS2 sequence of the present in-vention depicted in SEQ ID No 1, or a part thereof, which is linked to a promoter wherein said promoter is different to the promoter linked to said ZmMADS2 coding sequences in the wild-type gene or is the wild-type promoter and wherein the orientation of the coding sequence to the promoter is vice versa to the wild-type orientation. In one embodiment of the present invention, the DNA sequence of the pre-sent invention used to specifically inhibit via an-tisense constructs the translation of ZmMADS2 ex-pression from the wild-type gene is at least par-tially not derived from the ZmMADS2 coding se-quence, but rather contains sequences from untrans-lated regions of the ZmMADS2 transcribed region.
Of course the invention also relates to DNA con-structs comprising a DNA sequence coding for the non-chimeric wild-type ZmMADS2 protein operably linked to the wild-type promoter. These constructs may be used to transform plant cells and plants for which the DNA construct is autologous, i.e. is the source or natural environment for the DNA construct or for which the DNA construct is heterologous, i.e., is from another species. Plant cells and plants obtained by using the above listed DNA con-structs may be characterised by ZmMADS2 antisense expression, multiple copies of the above DNA con-structs in their genome, that means are character-ised by an increased copy number of the ZmMADS2 gene in the genome and/or a different location in the genome with respect to the wild-type gene WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 and/or the presence of a foreign gene in their genome.
In the context of the present invention a chimeric DNA construct is thus a DNA sequence composed of different DNA fragments not naturally occurring in this combination. The DNA fragments combined in the chimeric DNA construct may originate from the same species or from different species. For example a DNA fragment coding for an ZmMADS2 protein may be operably linked to a DNA fragment representing a promoter from another gene of the same species that provides for an increased expression of the ZmMADS2 coding sequence. Preferably however, a DNA fragment coding for an ZmMADS2 protein is operably linked to a DNA fragment containing a promoter from another species for instance from another plant species, from a fungus, yeast or from a plant virus or a synthetically produced promoter. A synthetically produced promoter is either a promoter synthesised chemically from nucleotides de novo or a hybrid-promoter spliced together by combining two or more nucleotide sequences from synthetic or natural pro-moters which are not present in the combined form in any organism. The promoter has to be functional in the plant cell to be transformed with the chi-meric DNA construct.
The promoter used in the present .invention may be derived from the same or from a different species and may provide for constitutive or regulated ex-pression, in particular positively regulated by in-ternal or external factors. External factors for the regulation of promoters are for example light, WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 draught, head, chemicals such as inorganic salts, heavy metals or organic compounds such as organic acids, derivatives of these acids, in particular its salts and sugars.
Examples of promoters to be used in the context of the present invention are the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 19S or 35S promoters, nopaline syn-thase promoters, pathogenesis-related (PR) protein promoters, the ubiquitin promoter from maize for a constitutive expression, the HMG promoters from wheat, promoters from Zein genes from maize, small subunit of ribulose bisphosphonate carboxylase (ssuRUBISCO) promoters, the 35S transcript promoter from the figworm mosaic virus (FMV 35S), the oc-topine synthase promoter or the actin promoter from rice etc. It is preferred that the particular pro-moter selected should be capable of causing suffi-cient expression to result in the production of an effective amount of antisense mRNA or modified or wild-type ZmMADS2 protein to produce male steril-ity. Of course, for selective expression of the ZmMADS2 protein tissue specific promoters may be used. However, in the most preferred embodiment of the present invention, i.e. the ZmMADS2 antisense constructs, the promoter may be a constitutive strong promoter, since the pollen specificity of the antisense action is confined to the pollen due to pollen specific expression of the target, i.e.
the wild-type ZmMA.DS2 expression.
The DNA construct of the invention may contain mul-tiple copies of a promoter and/or multiple copies of the DNA coding sequences . In addition, the con-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 struct may include coding sequences for markers and coding sequences for other peptides such as signal or transit peptides or resistance genes for in-stance against virus infections or antibiotics.
Useful markers are peptides providing antibiotic or drug resistance for example resistance to phosphi-notrycine, hygromycin, kanamycin, 6418, gentamycin, lincomycin, methotrexate or glyphosate. These mark-ers, such as the herbicide resistence gene pat en-coding a phosphinotrycine acetyl transferase, can be used to select cells transformed with the chi-meric DNA constructs of the invention from untrans-formed cells. Of course other markers are markers coding peptidic enzymes which can be easily de-tected by a visible reaction for example a colour reaction for example luciferase, (3-1,3-glucuronidase or (3-galactosidase.
Signal or transit peptides provide the ZmMADS2 pro-tein formed on expression of the DNA constructs of the present invention with the ability to be trans-ported to the desired site of action. Examples for transit peptides of the present invention are chlo-roplast transit peptides, mitochondria transit pep-tides or nuclear localisation signals.
In chimeric DNA constructs containing coding se-quences for transit peptides these sequences are usually derived from a plant, for instance from corn, potato, Arabidopsis or tobacco. Preferably, transit peptides and ZmMADS2 coding sequences are derived from the same plant, for instance corn. In particular such a chimeric DNA construct comprises a DNA sea_uence coding for a wild-type ZmMADS2 pro-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 tein and a DNA sequence coding for a transit pep-tide operably linked to a promoter wherein said promoter is different to the promoter linked to said coding sequences in wild-type gene, but func-tional in plant cells. In particular, said promoter provides for higher transcription efficiency than the wild-type promoter.
The mRNA produced by a DNA construct of the present invention may advantageously also contain a 5' non-translated leader sequence. This sequence may be derived from the promoter selected to express the gene and can be specifically modified so as to in-crease translation and stability of the mRNA. The 5' non-translated regions can also be obtained from viral RNAs from suitable eucaryotic genes or a syn-thetic gene sequence.
Preferably, the coding sequence of the present in-vention is not only operably linked to 5' regula-tory elements, such as promoters, but is addition-ally linked to other regulatory elements such as enhancers and/or 3' regulatory elements. For in-stance, the vectors of the present invention may contain functional terminator sequences such as the terminator or the octopine synthase gene from Agro-bacterium tumefaciens. Further 3' non-translated regions to be used in a chimeric construct of the present invention to cause the addition of poly-adenylate nucleotides to the 3' end of the tran-scribed RNA are the polyadenylation signals of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens nopaline synthase gene (NOS) or from plant genes like the soy bean storage protein gene and the small subunit of the ribulose-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 _27_ 1,5-bisphosphonate carboxylase (ssuRUBISCO) gene.
Of course, also the regulating elements of the pre-sent invention deriving from the wild-type ZmMADS2 gene may be used.
The vectors of the present invention may also pos-sess functional units effecting the stabilisation of the vector in the host organism, such as bacte-rial replication origins. Furthermore, the chimeric DNA constructs of the present invention may also encompass introns or part of introns inserted within or outside the coding sequence for the ZmMADS2 protein.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the pres-ent invention the vector furthermore contains T-DNA, in particular the left, the right or both T-DNA borders derived from Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
Of course, sequences derived from Agrobacterium rhizogenes may also be used. The use of T-DNA se-quences in the vector of the present invention en-ables the Agrobacterium mediated transformation of cells. In a preferred embodiment of the present in-vention the nucleic acid sequence of the present invention, optionally operably linked to regulatory elements, is inserted within the T-DNA or adjacent to it.
Furthermore, the present invention relates to a wild-type or modified ZmMADS2 protein coded by a nucleic acid sequence of the present invention.
The ZmMADS2 protein exhibits in a particularly pre-ferred embodiment features of a MARS-box protein and in particular transcriptional regulative activ-ity during pollen development, in particular pollen CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 _28_ tube growth, and function. In particular, the pre-sent invention relates to a ZmMADS2 protein pro-duced from a plant cell or plant of the present in-vention or from the propagation material or harvest products of plants or plant cells of the present invention. The invention also relates to antibo-dies, in particular mono- or polyclonal antibodies as well as peptide antibodies raised against the protein with the activity of an ZmMADS2 protein which may be useful for cloning and detection as-says.
Thus, the present invention also relates to a method for the production of a protein with the ac-tivity of an ZmMADS2 protein, wherein a cell of the present invention, in particular a plant cell or plant callus is cultivated under conditions allow-ing the synthesis of the protein and the protein is isolated from cultivated cells and/or the culture medium.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the pres-ent invention the 5' and/or 3' regulatory elements of the present invention contained in the vector are operably linked to a gene of interest which in this context may also be only its coding sequence, which may be a heterologous or autologous gene or coding sequence. Such a gene of interest may be a gene, in particular its coding sequence, confer-ring, for instance, disease resistance; drought re-sistance; insect resistance; herbicide resistance;
immunity; an improved intake of nutrients, minerals or water from the soil; or a modified metabolism in the plant, particularly its pollen and/or roots.
_29_ Such a modified metabolism may relate to a pre-ferred accumulation of useful or toxic substances in pollen and/or roots, for instance sugars or, vice versa, in the depletion of substances undesir-able in pollen and/or roots, for instance certain amino acids. Thus, in the context of the present invention, a gene of interest may confer resistance to infection by a virus, such as a gene encoding the capsid protein of the BWYV or the BNYW virus, a gene conferring resistance to herbicides such as Basta~, or to an insecticide, a gene conferring re-sistance to the corn rootworm, a gene encoding the toxic crystal protein of Bacillus thuringiensis or a gene whose expression confers male sterility. A
gene of interest includes also a coding sequence cloned in antisense orientation to the regulatory sequences directing its expression. Such an an-tisense-construct may be used specifically to re-press the activity of undesirable genes in plant cells, in particular in pollen and/or roots, for instance to produce male sterile plants exhibiting a modified, for instance abortive pollen develop-ment, pollen morphology or metabolism and/or pollen function. The gene of interest may also comprise signal sequences, in particular ER targeting se-quences, directing the encoded protein in the ER
and eventually for instance in the cell wall, vas-cular tissue, nucleus and /or the vacuole.
Thus, the nucleic acid sequences of the present in-vention are useful since they enable the pollen and/or root specific expression of a ZmMADS2 coding sequence in antisense orientation and further genes of interest in plants, in particular monocotyledon-WO 01/12798 CA 02381330 2002-02-18 PC'T/EP00/08001 dous plants. Accordingly, plants are enabled to produce useful, in particular toxic, products in their pollen or the plants may be engineered by modifying the pollen structure, function and/or de-velopment.
The present invention also relates to a method of genetically modifying a cell by transforming it with a nucleic acid molecule of the present inven-tion or vector according to the above, whereby the ZmMADS2 coding sequence or a further gene of inter-est operably linked to at least one regulatory ele-ment either according to the present invention or as conventionally used is expressible in the cell.
In particular, the cell being transformed by the method of the present invention is a plant, bacte-rial or yeast cell. In a particularly preferred embodiment of the present invention, the above method further comprises the regeneration of the transformed cell to a differentiated and, in a pre-ferred embodiment, fertile or non-fertile plant.
The present invention also relates to host cells transformed with the nucleic acid molecule or the vector of the present invention, in particular plant, yeast or bacterial cells, in particular monocotyledonous or dicotyledonous plant cells.
The present invention also relates to cell cul-tures, tissue, calluses, etc. comprising a cell ac-cording to the above, i.e. a transgenic cell and its descendants harbouring and preferably experi-encing the nucleic acid molecule or vector of the present invention.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 Thus, the present invention relates to transgenic plant cells which were transformed with one or sev-eral nucleic acid molecules of the present inven-tion as well as to transgenic plants cells origi-nating from such transformed cells. Such plant cells can be distinguished from naturally occurring plant cells by the observation that they contain at least one nucleic acid molecule according to the present invention which does not naturally occur in these cells, or by the fact that such a molecule is integrated into the genome of the cell at a loca-tion where it does not naturally occur, that is, in another genomic region, or by the observation that the copy number of the nucleic acid molecules is different from the copy number in naturally occur-ring plants, in particular a higher copy number.
Preferably, the nucleic acid sequences of the pres-ent invention is operably linked in antisense ori-entation.
Thus, the present invention also relates to trans-genic cells, also called host cells, transformed with the nucleic acid molecule or vector of the present invention, in particular plant, yeast or bacterial cells, in particular monocotyledonous or dicotyledonous plant cells. The present inver~tion also relates to cell cultures, tissue, calluses, propagation and harvest material, pollen, seeds, seedlings, embryos, etc. comprising a cell accord-ing to the above, that is, a transgenic cell being stably or transiently transformed and being capable of expressing a male sterility causing coding se-quence. The transgenic plants of the present in-vention can be regenerated to whole plants accord-ing to methods known to the person skilled in the art. The regenerated plant may be chimeric with respect to the incorporated foreign DNA. If the cells containing the foreign DNA develop into ei-ther micro- or macro-spores the integrated foreign DNA will be transmitted to a sexual progeny. If the cells containing the foreign DNA are somatic cells of the plant, non-chimeric transgenic plants are produced by conventional methods of vegetative propagation either in vivo, i.e. from buds or stem cuttings or in vitro following established proce-dures known in the art.
Thus, the present invention also relates to trans-genic plants, parts of plants, plant tissue, plant seeds, plant embryos, plant seedlings, plant propa-gation material, plant harvest material, plant leaves and plant pollen, plant roots containing the above identified plants cell of the present inven-tion. These plants or plant parts are character-ised by, as a minimum, the presence of the het-erologous transferred DNA construct of the present invention in the genome or, in cases where the transferred nucleic acid molecule is autologous to the transferred host cell are characterised by ad-ditional copies of the nucleic acid molecule of the present invention anch or a am=erenc location within the genome. Thus, the present invention also relates to plants, plant tissues, plant seeds, plant seedlings, plant embryos, propagation mate-rial, harvest material, leaves, pollen, roots, cal-luses, tassels etc. non-biologically transformed which possess stably or transiently integrated in the genome of the cells, for instance in the cell WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 nucleus, plastids or mitochondria a heterologous and/or autologous nucleic acid sequence containing (a) a coding sequence of the present invention or (b) a regulatory element of the present invention recognised by the polymerases of the cells of the said plant and, in a preferred embodiment, being operably linked in sense or antisense orientation to in case of (a) at least one regulatory element or in case of (b) a coding sequence of a gene of interest. The teaching of the present invention is therefore applicable to any plant, plant genus or plant species wherein the regulatory elements men-tioned above are recognised by the polymerases of the cell. Thus, the present invention provides plants of many species, genuses, families, orders and classes that are ably to recognise these regu-latory elements of the present invention or deriva-tives or parts thereof.
Any plant is considered, in particular plants of economic interest for example plants grown for hu-man or animal nutrition, plants grown for the con-tent of useful secondary metabolites, plants grown for their content of fibres, trees and plants of ornamental interest. Examples which do not imply any limitation as to the scope of the present in-vention are corn, wheat, barley, rice, sorghum, sugarcane, sugarbeet, soybean, Brassica, sunflower, carrot, tobacco, lettuce, cucumber, tomato, potato, cotton, Arabidopsis, Lolium, Festuca, Dactylis, or poplar.
The present invention also relates to a process, in particular a microbiological process and/or techni-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PC'T/EP00/08001 cal process, for producing a plant or reproduction material of said plant, including an heterologous or autologous DNA construct of the present inven-tion stably or transiently integrated therein, and capable of being expressed in said plants or repro-duction material, which process comprises trans-forming cells or tissue of said plants with a DNA
construct containing a nucleic acid molecule of the present invention, i.e. a regulatory element which is capable of causing the stable integration of the ZmMADS2 coding sequence in said cell or tissue and enabling the sense or antisense expression of a ZmMADS2 coding sequence or part thereof in said plant cell or tissue, regenerating plants or repro-duction material of said plant or both from the plant cell or tissue transformed with said DNA con-struct and, optionally, biologically replicating said last mentioned plants or reproduction material or both.
Finally, the present invention relates to a method for isolating or cloning pollen and/or root spe-cific gene and/or pollen and/or root specific regu-latory elements, such as promoters, or MARS box genes whereby a nucleic acid sequence of the pres-ent invention is used to screen nucleic acid se-quences derived from any source, such as genomic or cDNA libraries derived from plants, in particular monocotyledonous plants. The nucleic acid se-quences of the present invention thereby provide a means of isolating related regulatory sequences of other plant species which confer pollen or root specificity to genes of interest operably linked to them.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 Further preferred embodiments of the present inven-tion are mentioned in the claims. ' The invention may be more fully understood from the following detailed sequence descriptions which are part of the present teaching. The SEQ ID Nos. 1 to 40 are incorporated in the present invention. The positions indicated below refer to the sequence numbering of SEQ ID No. 12 in 5' to 3' direction.
SEQ ID No. 1 represents the complete cDNA-sequence of the ZmMADS2 (Zea mays MADS-box) gene.
SEQ ID No. 2 represents the amino acid sequence of the ZmMADS2 protein.
SEQ ID No. 3 to 9 are partial DNA sequences of the ZmMADS2 gene of Zea mays and represent promoters and promoter fragments of various lengths.
SEQ ID No. 3: The 1502 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 1 to-wards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 4: The 502 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 1 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 502.
SEQ ID No. 5: The 500 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 503 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1002.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 SEQ ID No. 6: The 1000 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 503 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 7: The 740 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 763 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 8: The 500 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 1003 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 9: The 410 by (base pair) sequence spans the region from and including position 1093 towards the 3' end, up to and including position 1502.
SEQ ID No. 10 is a partial DNA sequence of the ZmMADS2 gene of Zea mays. The 310 by sequence spans the region from and excluding the translation initiation codon ATG at position 1813 to 1815 to-wards the 5' end up to the initiation site of tran-scription at position 1503 (5'-AAACG-3'). This se-quence is the 5' untranslated region (5' UTR).
SEQ ID No. 11 is also a partial DNA sequence of the ZmMADS2 gene and represents a 3' regulation element of 251 by from and excluding the translation stop codon TGA at position 4379 to 4381 to position 5031.
SEQ ID No. 12 is the genomic DNA sequence of the ZmMADS2 gene of Zea mays comprising 5031 nucleo-tides and encompassing the coding region of the WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 gene, an 5' untranslated region of 310 by [5' UTR:
position 1503-1812] between and excluding the translation initiation codon ATG (position 1813 -1815) and including the nucleotide at position 1503 (also depicted in SEQ ID No. 10) and the regulatory elements identified in SEQ ID Nos 3 to 9 and 11.
SEQ ID No. 13 to 40 represent primers used for cloning and detecting nucleic acid sequence of the present invention and/or transcripts expressed thereby.
The invention is further illustrated by way of ex-ample and the following drawings.
Figure 1 shows a northern blot analysis for various tissues of Zea mays. A signal was obtained exclu-sively in mature pollen.
Figure 2 shows RT-PCR analyses of various maize tissues . A signal could be obtained in mature pol-len and root tips (lower band; 350 bp).
Figure 3 shows PCR analyses of various reproductive tissues, in particular of cDNA libraries of egg cells, in vitro zygotes 18 hours after fertilisa-tion, mature pollen and leaves (from seedlings) . A
signal was obtained only in mature pollen.
Figure 4 shows RT-PCR analyses of ZmMADS2 expres-sion during microgametogenesis of maize. A signal was obtained in mature pollen after anthesis.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 Figure 5 shows ZmMADS2 transcript in growing pollen tubes of maize.
Figure 6 shows transient transformation assays of N. tabacum.
Example 1: Cloning of the ZmMAI7S2 cDNA sequence Plant material and pollen isolation Tissues were isolated from Zea mays L. inbred line A188 (Green and Philips, 1975) cultivated in a greenhouse. Embryos from kernels (12 dap and ma-ture) were isolated under sterile conditions.
Seedlings were germinated under sterile conditions in the dark and were dissected into cotyledons, roots tips and scutella. For isolation of pollen before anthesis, tassels were divided into upper (mature stage) and lower parts (immature stage).
Pollen was isolated as described by Mordhorst et al. (1993) and different developmental stages were separated via a discontinuous Percoll gradient (20%, 30o and 40% Percoll in 0.4 M mannitol). Cen-trifugation was performed for 10 min at 20° C and 226 x g in a swing out rotor with slow acceleration and deceleration. Developmental stages of pollen were monitored microscopically and by DAPI staining (see below).
RNA isolation and construction of cDNA libraries Total RNA was isolated from various tissues with TRIzol (GibcoBRL). Seasand was added for the mac-WO 01/12798 cA o23e133o 2002-o2-1s PCT/EP00/08001 eration of pollen. Total RNA was isolated from ma-ture pollen for the construction of a cDNA library using the protocol described by Stirn et al.
(1995). The library was constructed from 5 ~g poly(A)' RNA as outlined by Dresselhaus et al.
(1996b) using the Uni-ZAP XR lambda vector (Stratagene). Total RNA from leaf material of 10 day old seedlings was isolated as described by Logemann et al. (1987) and a cDNA library was gen-erated from 2 ~g poly(A)' RNA (seedlings library) .
Screening of cDNA library with maize MADS box probes The highly conserved MADS box of different maize MARS box genes was amplified from the maize genome by PCR and served as probes for the plaque screen-ing of a cDNA library of mature maize pollen.
Genomic DNA from leaf material was isolated as out-lined by Dellaporta et al. (1983) and served as template for the synthesis of different MARS box probes. Gene specific primers with the nucleotide sequence specified in SEQ ID No. 13 to 24 were used to specifically amplify the MADS box region of maize MARS box genes:
ZMM1 (5'-ATGGGGAGGGGAAGGATTGA-3', SEQ ID No. 13;
5'-CTGTTGTTGGCGTACTCGTAG-3', SEQ ID No. 14), ZEM2/3/ZAG 4 (5'-AGGGGCAAGATCGACATCAAG-3', SEQ ID
No. 15;
5'-GG/TCGT/AACTCGTAGAGGCGG-3', SEQ ID No. 16), ZAG3/5 (5'-ATGGGGAGGGGACGA/CGTTGA-3', SEQ ID No.
17;
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 5'-GCTGCCGAACTCGTAGAGCT-3'; SEQ ID No. 18), ZAP1 (5'-GTTGTTGGCGTACTCGTAGAG-3', SEQ ID No. 19;
5'-GGGCGCAAGGTACAGCTGAA-3', SEQ ID No. 20), ZAG1 (5'-GTTGTTGGCGTACTCGTAGAG-3', SEQ ID No. 21;
5'-AAGGGCAAGACTGAGATCAAG-3, SEQ ID No. 22) and ZAG2 (5'-CACTTGAACTCTTTTACGCTTAT-3', SEQ ID No. 23;
5'-GACAATCTTGACACATGTATGAA-3', SEQ ID No. 24);
amplification of the MARS box and flanking genomic regions: PCR amplification was performed with 200 ng genomic DNA in a standard reaction mixture: 250 nM primer, 2 mM MgClz, 400 ~.M dNTPs and 1.25 U Taq DNA polymerase (GibcoBRL) in PCR buffer (50mM KC1, 20 mM Tris-HC1, pH 8.4). Hot start PCRs were per-formed with the following profile: 5 min 95° C, 3 min 75° C (addition of Taq-DNA polymerase) followed by 30 cycles with 1 min 96° C, 1 min 62° C (ZEM, ZMM, ZAG3) or 60° C (ZAG1, ZAPl) and 3 min 72° C.
A final extension was performed for 5 min at 72° C.
PCR products were separated on low melting agarose gels (NuSieve GTG, BIOzym) and isolated gel frag-ments containing the DNAs were digested with Gelase (BIOzym) . Probes were labelled with [3zP] -dCTP
(6000 Ci/mmol), Amersham) using the Prime-it II
random primer labelling Kit (Stratagene) and puri-fied with NucTrap columns (Stratagene). Approxi-mately 22.000 phages from the pollen library were plated per 15 cm plate and transferred by Hybond-N
membranes (Amersham) as double plague lifts accord-ing to Sambrook et al. (1989). Prehybridisation was performed with 50 ~.g/ml salmon sperm DNA in hy-bridisation buffer (5xSSPE, 5x Denharts, 0.5o SDS) for 5 h at 55° C. Filters were hybridised with a cocktail of the different MADS box probes in a fi-nal concentration of 650.000 cpm for each probe/ml WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 hybridisation buffer. After hybridisation over-night at 55° C, filters were washed three times for 15 min with 5x SSPE/O,lo SDS and exposed to X-Omat AR films (Amersham) using intensifier screens at -70° C. Putative positive lambda phages were iso-lated and cDNAs excised according to the manufac-turer (ZAP-cDNA Synthesis Kit, Stratagene).
Thus, approximately 250.000 phages were screened with the MARS box probes at medium stringent condi-tions to permit hybridisation to less homologous sequences. Thirteen putative positive signals were analysed further and two cDNAs with high homology to MADS box proteins were isolated, designated ZmMADSl and ZmMADS2.
5' RACE
ZmMADS2 cDNA isolated from the pollen cDNA library was incomplete at its 5' end and a PCR approach was chosen to isolate the full length cDNA from the pollen library. For amplification of the missing 5' end, a gene specific RACE-primer (rapid amplifi-cation of cDNA ends, 5'-CGATTCAAATCGTGAATCTCAT-3';
SEQ ID No. 25) combined with a pBluescript vector primer (5'-CCCCCGGGCTGCAGGAATTC-3'; SEQ ID No. 25-vector primer) was used in a standard PCR reaction with the following profile: 3 min 96° C followed by 33 cycles: 20 sec 96° C, 30 sec 62°, 2 min 72° C
and a final extension for 5 min at 72° C. PCR
products were cloned and sequenced. Full length cDNA was amplified from 3 ~.l pollen cDNA library with primers specific for the ZmMADS2 3'-end and 5'-end (5'-TTTTAGCAACATCTGCACCATT-3'; SEQ ID No.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 27; 5'-TCTCGGCTAGCTTCCTCCT-3'; SEQ ID No. 28) using a mixture of 2 U Pfu DNA polymerase and 1 U TaqPlus Long DNA polymerase (Stratagene) for a first ampli-fication round of 25 cycles in a standard PCR reac-tion with Pfu reaction buffer (10 mM KC1, 10 mM
(NH4) ZS04, 2 mM MgS04, 0. 1 o TritonX100, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.75). 1/10 of purified PCR products served as template in a subsequent second amplifi-cation round with Pfu DNA polymerase (25 cycles).
PCR profiles for both amplification rounds were as follows: 3 min 96° C, 5 min 75° C followed by 25 cycles with 20 sec 96° C, 30 sec 58° C, 90 sec 72°
C and a final extension for 5 min at 72° C. PCR
products were cloned and sequenced.
DNA Sequencing and sequence analysis Sequencing of cDNAs was performed with the ABI
PRISM Dye Terminator Kit with TaqFS DNA polymerase (PE Applied Biosystems) according to the manufac-turers protocol, except that 800 ng of template DNA
and 5 pmole vector primers were used. Sequence analyses were performed with DNASIS 1.1 software program package (HITACHI).
The cDNA of ZmMADS2 is 1268 by in length with an open reading frame of 240 amino acids. The 3'-UTR
is 251 by (3' UTR: position 3976 - 4226) and the 5'-UTR is 310 by (5' UTR: position 1503 - 1812) in length, calculated from the putative start point of transcription at position 1503 as analysed by primer extension (data not shown) to and excluding the ATG at position 1813-1815.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 The sequence of the full-length cDNA is given in SEQ ID No. 1. The amino acid sequence of ZmMADS2 is given in SEQ ID No. 2. ZmMADS2 contains a MADS-box at the N-terminal end consisting of 57 (including the start methionine) amino acids. The MADS-box is followed by a linker region of 32 amino acid and a K-box comprising 67 amino acids. A pu-tative bipartite nuclear localisation signal is lo-cated in the MARS box of ZmMADS2. A bipartite sig-nal motive (RR- (X) 1z-KRR) is comprised of two basic amino acids, a spacer of twelve variable amino ac-ids and a basic cluster in which three out of five amino acids are basic. Putative N-glycosylation sites (N-X-T/S) and several putative phosphoryla-tion sites for protein kinase C (ST-X-RK) and Ca-sein Kinase II (ST-X2-DE) have been found. Homology searches revealed that ZmMA.DS2 belongs to the AGL
17 family of MARS box proteins (Zachgo et al., 1997).
Example 2: Cloning of the genomic ZmMADS2 clone The cDNA isolated in Example 1 was used to clone the genomic clone as follows:
Genomic DNA from leaf material of Zea mays line A188 was used to construct libraries with the "Universal Genome Walker Kit" (Clontech, Palo Alto). These libraries served as templates for the synthesis of four genomic fragments. The amplifi-cation was carried out with nested adapter primers delivered by the manufacturer and nested gene spe-cific primers (Tnorf 1: 5'-CGGCCTATAGCTAGCTCTCTTCTTGACCCT-3', SEQ ID No. 29;
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 Frontl: 5'-AGGGTCAAGAAGAGAGCTAGCTATAGG-3', SEQ ID
No. 30; Tnorf2: 5'-GCTAAGGAGCGAGAGGTTGTGGTTGTGG-3', SEQ ID No. 31; Front2: 5'-CCACAACCACAACCTCTCGCTCCTTA-3', SEQ ID No. 32 ac-cording to the manufacturer's instructions.
PCR amplification of a fragment containing intron 1 and the first 247 by of intron 2 was performed fol-lowing the "Genome Walker" protocol. For amplifi-cation of the promoter fragments, 5% DMSO was added to the reaction mixture. Synthesis of the se-quences of introns 3 to 6 was performed in a stan-dard PCR reaction mixture with 200 ng genomic DNA
template and the following gene specific primers:
Ex3 oben: 5'-TCGGCAGTTGACGGGAGAT-3', SEQ ID No. 33, In3' low: 5'-TTAGCAACTCATTATAGCAC-3', SEQ ID No.
34, Pe for: 5'-AGAAACCAGAGATGTTCCAG-3', SEQ ID No.
35, Pe-rev: 5'-CAACATCTGCACCATTTTGAA-3', SEQ ID No.
36, Intron2-1: 5'-GTCACATCAACAAGCGTCCTACC-3', SEQ
ID No. 37, Intron3: 5'-TAAGAGCATCAACAGTAGTAACG-3', SEQ ID No. 38.
All fragments were cloned with the Zero blunt TOPO
PCR Cloning Kit (Invitrogen, Leek) and sequenced at SEQLAB (Gottingen), except for fragments containing Intron 2. Amplification of Intron 2 with different primer pairs (Intron2-1 and Pe-rev, Intron2-1 and In3' low, Intron 2-1 and Intron3, Front2 and In-tron3) using different DNA polymerases (PfuTurbo, Stratagene; PlatinumTaq, GibcoBRL; AdvantageTth, Clontech) showed that this Intron is about 11 kb in length.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 The nucleotide sequence of the genomic clone as de-picted in SEQ ID No. 12 comprises 5031 nucleotides.
Intron No. 2 has not been fully sequenced. Depend-ing upon the start of transcription, the promoter comprises nucleotides 1 to 1502, since a transcrip-tion start point has been determined at position 1503 5'-AAACGC-3'. From position 1503 to the ATG
initiation translation codon at position 1813 to 1815 is the 5' untranslated region. Exons and con-sequently also introns are indicated in SEQ ID No.
12. In intron II between position 3203 and 3204 there remains some sequence ambiguity. Further nu-cleotides are present in intron II at this position (circa 11 kb).
The translation termination codon TGA is located at position 4778 to 4780 with a transcription termina-tion signal between and including position 4781 and 5031. A putative polyadenylation site TATAA is lo-cated at position 4888 to 4893.
The promoter from position 1 to position 1502 de-picted in SEQ ID No. 3 may be divided into func-tional promoter fragments with sequences as indi-cated in SEQ ID No. 4 to 9. SEQ ID No. 4 comprises at position 17 to 27 an induction element respon-sive to dryness, abscisic acid and/or coldness and at position 151 to 155 a root-specific element.
The promoter fragment of SEQ ID No. 5 comprises at positions 532 to position 536, position 542 to 546, positions 634 to 638 and position 705 to 709 a root-specific element, at position 654 to 658 an element responsible for induction by sugar deple-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 tion and at position 684 to 689 an element respon-sive to dryness, abscisic acid and/or coldness.
The promoter set out in SEQ ID No. 8 comprises an element responsible for induction by dryness, ab-scisic acid and/or coldness located at position 1019 to 1025 and 1369 to 1375, a root-specific ele-ment at position 1083 to 1087 and a sucrose respon-sive element at position 1192 to 1200, as well as an element responsible for induction by sugar de-pletion at position 1259 to 1263. The element con-ferring root-specificity at position 1083 to 1087 is particularly important due to its root-specificity. Deletion of this element in the pro-moter fragments and promoters of the present inven-tion provides a promoter being exclusively ex-pressed in pollen.
In the 5' UTR depicted in SEQ ID No. 10, an element responsible for induction by sugar depletion is lo-cated at position 1701 to 1708.
Further elements conferring root-specificity are located at the following positions: 2281 to 2286, 2518 to 2522, 2575 to 2579, 2802 to 2807, 3014 to 3018, 4295 to 4299, 4506 to 4510, 4700 to 4704, 4888 to 4892.
Further elements responsible for induction by dry-ness, abscisic acid and/or coldness are located at the following positions: 2014 to 2019, 2055 to 2060, 2072 to 2077, 2392 to 2397, 2584 to 2589, 2679 to 2683, 2842 to 2846, 2863 to 2869, 3112 to 3117, 3231 to 3236, 4067 to 4072, 4228 to 4233, WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 4042 to 4246, 4344 to 4350, 4479 to 4484, 4486 to 4492.
Example 3: Northern blot and PCR analyses Ten ~g of total RNA extracted from various tissues were separated on denaturating agarose gels and transferred to Hybond N+ membranes (Amersham) by capillary blotting with lOx SSC overnight. The RNA
was fixed to the membrane by W crosslinking with 300 mJoule in a Stratalinker 1800 (Stratagene).
Gene specific probes were amplified from plasmids containing ZmMADS2 cDNAs with primers specific for the 3'-ends of ZmMADS2 (5'-AGAAACCAGAGATGTTCCAG-3';
SEQ ID No. 39, 5'-CAACATCTGCACCATTTTGAA-3'; SEQ ID
No. 40) according to the profile described for the 5'RACE. Probes were labelled as described above.
Prehybridisation was performed for 5 h at 65° C
with 100 ~.g/ml salmon DNA in hybridisation buffer (7o SDS, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5 M NaH2P04, pH 7.2). Probes were added in a final concentration of 106 cpm/ml hybridisation buffer and hybridised overnight at 65° C. Filters were washed with decreasing concen-trations of SSC with a final wash of 0.2xSSC/O.lo SDS for 15 min at 65° C and were exposed to X-Omat AR films (Amersham) at -70° C using intensifier screens. Fig. 1 shows the spatial and temporal ex-pression of ZmMADS2 (dag: days after germination, dap: days after pollination). It is shown that the ZmMADS2 coding sequence is expressed in pollen, in particular in mature pollen after dehiscence indi-cating an essential role in pollen development and pollen function, in particular pollen tube growth.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 RT-PCR analyses of tissues for ZmMADS2 expression were performed with 1 ~.g of total RNA (Figure 2) .
RNA was reverse transcribed with 50U SuperScriptII
reverse transcriptase (GibcoBRL) for 75 min at 50°
C with the ZmMADS2 specific primer (see above) in reaction buffer (75 mM KCl, 3 mM MgCl2, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.3) with 0.4 mM dNTPs, 10 mM DTT and 10 U
RNasin (Promega). The complete RT-PCR reaction was used as template in the subsequent standard PCR re-action with ZmMADS2 specific primers (see above).
PCR products were separated on an agarose gel blot-ted and hybridised to radiolabelled ZmMADS2 spe-cific probe. Figure 2 shows ZmMADS2 expression in mature pollen and root tips (lower band).
For quantitative RT-PCR analysis of ZmMADS2 expres-sion in pollen, RNA samples were treated with DNaseI according to the manufacturer's protocol (GibcoBRL). 250 ng and 500 ng, respectively, of each RNA probe were reverse transcribed and a stan-dard PCR was performed with 27 cycles (ZmMADS2) as described above (Figure 4). cDNA libraries of maize egg cells, in vitro zygotes (Dresselhaus et al., 1994 and 1996a), pollen and seedlings were analysed for the presence of ZmMADS2 cDNAs with gene-specific primers using 3 ~g of cDNA libraries as templates in a standard PCR as described above .
To confirm specificity of PCR products, gels were blotted and hybridised to radiolabelled gene-specific probes (Fig. 3). Fig. 3 shows that among various reproductive cells ZmMADS2 is only ex-pressed in pollen.
WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 Thus, it was shown that ZmMADS2 is most abundant in mature pollen after dehiscence. At that stage pol-len are dehydrated and metabolically inactive. The onset of ZmMADS2 expression therefore takes place after the pollen reaches maturity, but before dehy-dration inhibits transcriptional activity (Figure 4). A faint signal was detected in root tips (Fig.
2) which is confirmed by RT-PCR analyses as shown in Fig. 2. The lower band represents amplified ZmMADS2 cDNA which is detectable in mature pollen and root tips. The upper band represents genomic DNA.
In order to localise ZmMADS2 transcripts whole mount RNA in situ hybridisation experiments were performed.
Example 4 Whole mount in situ hybridisation and DAPI staining Pollen was germinated in liquid medium as described by Torres et al. (1995). Germination rates were determined microscopically and only samples with high germination rates were used for the experi-ments. All media were prepared with DEPC-treated deionized water. Germinated pollen were fixed for 2 to 3 h in 4 o paraformaldehyd in germination me-dium at room temperature. Fixation and all follow-ing steps were performed in Eppendorf tubes and pollen was precipitated by centrifugation for 1 min at 1500 rpm at room temperature for the exchange of medium. Pollen was dehydrated by passage through a series of 3:7, 1:1, 7:3 ME: PP solutions at room WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 temperature for 30 min each (ME: 90o methanol and 10% 0.5 M EGTA; PP: 4o paraformaldehyde in PBS
(phosphate buffered saline, 130 mM NaCl, 10 mM
NaH2P04 , pH 7 . 4 ) . Pollen was incubated for 10 min in 100a ethanol and for 10 min in 1000 xylol before rehydration through an ethanol series was performed (85%, 700, 55%, and 35% ethanol in water). Prote-inase K (Boehringer) treatment was carried out for 35 min at 37° C with 1 ~.g/ml proteinase in 100 mM
Tris-HC1 (pH 7.5) with 50 mM EDTA. Reactions were stopped with 2 mg/ml glycine in PBS (2 min) and pollen was washed in PBS (2 min). Pollen were re-fixed for 20 min at room temperature with 40 paraformaldehyde in PBS and were washed twice for 5 min with PBS. Prehybridisation was performed with 100 ~g/ml tRNA and 100 ~,g/ml mRNA (Boehringer) in 1 ml hybridisation buffer (6x SSC, 0.1% SDS, 50% For-mamid) at 42° C for 3 h with gentle shaking. After prehybridisation, 800 ~.l of the buffer was removed and the remaining 200 ~.l were distributed to two 500 ~.l Eppendorf tubes. Probes were added to a fi-nal concentration of 500 ng/ml. DIG-labelled RNA
probes were synthesised from the 3' end of ZmMADS2 cloned into pGEM-T vector (Promega) with Sp6 and T7 RNA Polymerase (Boehringer) according to the manu-facturer's protocol. Hybridisation was carried out at 42°C overnight without shaking. The samples were washed for 10 min at 42 ° C with 2x SSC, 0 . 1%
SDS with gentle shaking before RNase treatment with 40 ~.g/ml RNaseA (Boehringer) was performed for 30 min at 37° C in 150 ~1 RNase buffer (10 mM Tris-HC1 (pH 8), 0.5 M NaCl, 1 mM EDTA). Samples were washed three times for 10 min in lx SSC, O.lo SDS and 0.5x SSC, O.lo SDS at 42° C and equilibriated for 5 min in B1 buffer (Boehringer). Blocking was performed in B1 buffer with 1 o blocking reagent (Boehringer) and 0.3o TritonX100 for 1h at room temperature.
Detection was performed with NBT/BCIP according to the manufacturer's protocol (Boehringer). The re-actions were monitored microscopically and stopped by adding buffers at neutral pH (Tris-HC1 or B1-buffer). Reactions could be restarted by retrans-ferring the probes into reaction mixture.
DAPI staining was performed with pollen fixed in ethanol: acetic acid (3:1) for 1 h at room tempera-ture and dehydrated through an ethanol series (75%, 550, 35o ethanol in water). Pollen was transferred to Tris-HC1 buffer (pH 7.5) with 200 ng/ml DAPI and staining was monitored under UV light (359/441 nm).
The in situ hybridisation experiments with ZmMADS2 antisense probes showed transcripts in the emerging pollen tube 5 min after germination (Figure 5a).
During pollen tube growth, transcripts are translo-cated into pollen tubes displaying a gradient with increasing concentration toward the tip (Figure 5c). The translocation of ZmMADS2 transcripts into the pollen tube precedes migration of the vegeta-tive nucleus in the sperm cells into pollen tubes by more than two hours. Possibly, ZmMADS2 is re-quired only later in the germination process.
ZmMADS2 transcript levels in microspores are very low (Figure 4). Maximal expression in mature pol-len after dehiscence and localisation of tran-scripts in pollen tubes clearly classifies ZmMADS2 as a late pollen gene. The above findings clearly imply a function for ZmMADS2 during pollen tube WO 01/12798 CA 02381330 2002-02-18 pCT/EP00/08001 growth, in particular a function as a transcription factor, i.e. in regulating the transcription of one or more target genes.
Example 5: Transient transformation assays Pollen transformation was carried out according a modified protocol of Hamilton et al. (1992). Plas-mids containing the ZmMADS2 promoter fragments fused to the luciferase reporter gene and the NOS
terminator were used to coat gold particles (0,3 ~.m - 3 ~.m) which were then bombarded into pollen grains of Nicotiana tabacum (SR1) using a helium driven biolistic device (PDS-1000/He Biolistic Par-ticle Delivery System, Bio-Rad). The plasmids con-tained fragments of SEQ ID No. 3, Pos. 1-1538 (pDNSS), 455-1538 (pDNS6), 1006-1538 (pDNS7), 1175-1538 (pDNS8) or no promoter (negative control).
Pollen were spread out with a brush on sterile plastic petri dishes (30 mm x 15 mm) containing pollen medium (0, O1 o H3BO3, 10 mM CaCl2, 0, 05 mM
KHzP04, 0,1% yeast extract and 10% sucrose) with 0,6o agarose. Bombardments were done 5-20 min after spreading of the pollen. For bombardments done with leaf tissue, tips of young leaves were cut and placed on petri dishes containing sterile water with 0,6% agarose. The plates were kept at room temperature for 12-16 h prior to measurement of lu-ciferase activity.
Measuring of luciferase activity were carried out with the Luciferase Assay Kit (Promega) following the protocol of the manufacturer (Technical Bulle-WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 tin #TB101) except for the preparation of the tis-sues. Germinated pollen, along with the agarose me-dium, were transferred to ice cold tubes followed by addition of 0,2 ml of cold lysis buffer and ground with a manual homogenizer. Leaf tips were transferred into ice cold tubes and homogenized in a Retschmill (MM 2000). Thereto 0,2 ml of lysis buffer was added. All samples were centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 5 min. at 4°C. The supernatants were assayed for luciferase activity in a Luminometer (Lumat LB 9501, Berthold). Corrections were made for the volume of liquid remaining in the agarose pellets. Total numbers of assayed samples per con-struct were 30 (pollen) or 5 (leaves).
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WO 01/12798 cA 02381330 2002-02-18 PCT/EP00/08001 Dresselhaus, T., Lorz, H. and Kranz, E., Plant J.
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~E:~UENCE L_..T=JIG
<110> Siidwestdeutsche Saatzucht ~_. H. a. bath <120> Male sterile Dlants <130> 23596 WO
<140>
<141>
<160> 4C
<170> PatentIn Ver. 2.1 <210> 1 <211> 1268 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 1 tctcggctag cttcctcctc tctccctcct cttcgtcttc ctctttcctt ctcccttggg 60 aaacctgctg cctttgagct ttcttcttcg agtgctccca ccagatctcc tcctccttac 120 cttctttggc acgttcggcg gcgcgcgcgg agatagatag atcccgccat cgtcgtcgcc 180 gtccttgctt ccgatcggag ggccacaacc acaacctctc gctccttagc gtgcgcgcgc 240 gagccagggt caagaagaga gctagctata ggccggagat cgatggggag gggaaagatc 300 gtgatccgca ggatcgataa ctccacgagc cggcaggtga ccttctccaa gcgccggaac 360 gggatcttca agaaggccaa ggagctcgcc atcctctgcg atgcggaggt cggcctcgtc 420 atcttctcca gcaccggccg cctctacgag tactctagca ccagcatgaa atcagttata 480 gatcggtacg gcaaggccaa ggaagagcag caagtcgtcg caaatcccaa ctcggagctt 540 aagttttggc aaagggaggc agcaagcttg agacaacaac tgcacaactt gcaagaaaat 600 tatcggcagt tgacgggaga tgatctttct gggctgaatg tcaaagaact gcagtccctg 660 gagaatcaat tggaaacaag cctgcgtggt gtccgcgcaa agaaggacca tctcttgata 720 gatgagattc acgatttgaa tcgaaaggca agtttatttc accaagaaaa tacagacttg 780 tacaataaga tcaacctgat tcgccaagaa aatgatgagt tacataaaaa gatctatgag 840 actgaaggac caagtggagt taatcgggag tcaccgactc cattcaactt tgcagtagta 900 gaaaccagag atgttccagt gcaacttgaa ctcagcacac tgccacaaca aaataacatt 960 gagccatcta ctgctcctaa gctaggattg caattaattc catgaagaag agtaaaactg 1020 ccgtcttatg atgctgaagg aaactattta ttgtgaagag atgatactca gagaaagaca 1080 tatttgtggc agggagattt gagatatgaa cttataaatg taatgcaaat aattttcaga 1140 ctggaatggg gtcgtggaat tcagaggatg attgctttct agttgcattt gatgtttgat 1200 gagacttttc tcatgtgaaa cgtttattaa aacttcaaaa tggtgcagat gttgctaaaa 1260 aaaaaaaa 1268 <210> 2 <211> 240 <212> PRT
<213> Zea mays <400> 2 Met G1y ~rg Gly Lys Ile Val Ile Arg Arg T_'~= Asp Asn Ser Thr Ser Arg Gln Val Thr Phe Ser Lys Arg .'-.=g Asn G1~_: Ile Phe Lr~s L_rs Ala Lys Glu Leu Ala Ile Leu Cys Asp r~~~a Glu '~a~~ Giy Leu Va'~ I__ Phe 35 .~0 45 Ser Ser ':"~r Glyr Arg Leu T-_:r Glu T;'r Ser S°_= Thr Ser Met ~_ Ser Va1 1__ Asp Arg T:- G1y Lys Ala Lys Glu Glu Gln Gln Va1 -,'al Ala Asn Pro Asn Ser Glu Leu Lys Phe Trp Gln Arg Glu Ala Ala Ser Leu g5 90 95 Arg Gln Gln Leu His Asn Leu Gln G1u Asn Tyr Arg Gln Leu Thr Gly Asp AsD Leu Ser G~v_ Leu Asn Val Lys Glu Leu Gln Ser Leu Glu Asn Gln Leu Glu Thr Ser Leu Arg Gly Val Arg Ala Lys Lys Asp His Leu Leu Ile Asp Glu Ile His Asp Leu Asn Arg Lys Ala Ser Leu Phe His Gln Glu Asn Thr Asp Leu Tyr Asn Lys Ile Asn Leu Ile Arg Gln Glu Asn Asp G1u Leu His Lys Lys Ile Tyr Glu Thr Glu Gly Pro Ser Gly Val Asn Arg Glu Ser Pro Thr Pro Phe Asn Phe Ala Val Val G1u Thr Arg Asp Val Pro Val Gln Leu Glu Leu Ser Thr Leu Pro Gln Gln Asn Asn Ile Glu Pro Ser Thr Ala Pro Lys Leu Gly Leu G1n Leu Ile Pro <210> 3 <211> 1502 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 3 ctgaagctgt cgtgttcctc acgtgcattg gctacaaatg tatgtaacat agtaaatctg 60 attgaaaagt taaatcttaa taattattat tacgacaaac taaaaaccta ttccatttct 120 ttgcatatga aaaatacagg tattccatgt aatataggaa caaatgtata atgcggctac 180 tttgatgaac aatttataaa tgcattaaaa ggtatgtaac ataataaatc cgtcatgtaa 240 tgttgtaact atataaaata gcaacataaa tttaattgca actaaaaacc gcctttttct 300 atgcgaaata atttacacta gcttcatata ggaatagatg gaaaaccaaa tcattaatgt 360 ctgcattatc atgcattatt ctggtatgaa gaaagagcgc gtatagccag catgacagat 420 ccattgttta caacaaatgt tcaaaggtgg taaagtaaag acctcgaccg gaaccattgg 480 gcccacttgc aaaatttaat ggtgattcta catctaaaat gttttgtttc aaatataaga 540 caatatggtt gtatctttgc ttttacccca atgggttcta tcaatgatgg ttgaggtcct 600 ccattattta ggatgtggtc aagtgcatca acgaatatga tcacttctac actcgacggt 660 tctcctaaat ttatacagta ttacagttat atatttatag ttatatattt atgatacttt 720 aaatggaatc agaaatagaa tgcaatgctt aaataaaacc aatgaatctt aaagaaagat 780 ttggatccag atatagtcca gcaacttatg acaatagtat acatataatg ccaatgccaa 840 catgtttcaa gtg ~.,,.taa aaactatgta cattttctgc ~tcgtttact caaatacgta 900 aaatagcact gctctataat aagtacatct attatcacct ataaaacttt ttccagcaac 960 atttatataa tttgtgcatc attaatttta acaacactta taaattagct caaatacgta 1020 acaaagcgcg c~catJ~gcg cgctcaagct actagttctt atacaatga~ aacaatacta 1080 ..tatattaga cataaaatta ggtgtagttt atttatttac tggtactact t~_ttaagtc 1140 ataattaggt gtactagaag ctactacgcc ctgacggaga caagcacgca caatagaaaa 1200 gagcgccctc gtgctcagag tgctcgcctt tagtttcgtg gctactatat actagctgcg 1260 acgattttta ttttctttct cttctgggct atcattagca cggccattta ggggtaatga 1320 gcagcggcca ataaacaaag ccctggggta gccaatcggg tgtcgccgtg c=cgcgcgcg 1380 cgcgtctggc c__ctgccct cctcctccct ttccttgcta aataaagcaa gtagcagata 1440 ggggaaagtc tgctcgcaag ttgcatccgc cctgcgccaa gaaaagccat cgttcttccc 1500 ac 1502 <210> 4 <211> 502 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 4 ctgaagctgt cgtgttcctc acgtgcattg gctacaaatg tatgtaacat agtaaatctg 60 attgaaaagt taaatcttaa taattattat tacgacaaac taaaaaccta ttccatttct 120 ttgcatatga aaaatacagg tattccatgt aatataggaa caaatgtata atgcggctac 180 tttgatgaac aatttataaa tgcattaaaa ggtatgtaac ataataaatc cgtcatgtaa 240 tgttgtaact atataaaata gcaacataaa tttaattgca actaaaaacc gcctttttct 300 atgcgaaata atttacacta gcttcatata ggaatagatg gaaaaccaaa tcattaatgt 360 ctgcattatc atgcattatt ctggtatgaa gaaagagcgc gtatagccag catgacagat 420 ccattgttta caacaaatgt tcaaaggtgg taaagtaaag acctcgaccg gaaccattgg 480 gcccacttgc aaaatttaat gg 502 <210> 5 <211> 500 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 5 tgattctaca tctaaaatgt tttgtttcaa atataagaca atatggttgt atctttgctt 60 ttaccccaat gggttctatc aatgatggtt gaggtcctcc attatttagg atgtggtcaa 120 gtgcatcaac gaatatgatc acttctacac tcgacggttc tcctaaattt atacagtatt 180 acagttatat atttatagtt atatatttat gatactttaa atggaatcag aaatagaatg 240 caatgcttaa ataaaaccaa tgaatcttaa agaaagattt ggatccagat atagtccagc 300 aacttatgac aatagtatac atataatgcc aatgccaaca tgtttcaagt gctcttaaaa 360 actatgtaca ttttctgctt cgtttactca aatacgtaaa atagcactgc tctataataa 420 gtacatctat tatcacctat aaaacttttt ccagcaacat ttatataatt tgtgcatcat 480 taattttaac aacacttata 500 <210> 6 <211> 1000 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 6 tgattctaca tctaaaatgt tttgtttcaa atataagaca atatggttgt atctttgctt 60 ttaccccaat gggttctatc aatgatggtt gaggtcctcc attatttagg atgtggtcaa 120 gtgcatcaac gaatatgatc acttctacac tcgacggttc tcctaaattt atacagtatt 180 acagttatat atttatagtt atatatttat gatactttaa atggaatcag aaatagaatg 240 caatgcttaa ataaaaccaa tgaatcttaa agaaagattt ggatccagat atagtccagc 300 aacttatgac aatagtatac atataatgcc aatgccaaca tgtttcaagt cctcttaaaa 360 actatgtaca t~~_ctgctt cgtttactca aatacgtaaa atagcactgc tctataataa 420 gtacatctat tatcacctat aaaacttttt ccagcaacat ttatataatt t7tgcatcat 480 taattttaac aacacttata aattagctca aatacgtaac aaagcgcgcc catgggcgcg 540 ctcaagctac tagttcttat acagtgaaaa caatactact atattagaca taaaattagg 600 tgtagtttat ttatttactg gtactacttc tttaagtcat aattaggtgt a.ctagaagct 660 actacgccct gacggagaca agcacgcaca atagaaaaga gcgccctcg~ gctcagagtg 720 ctcgccttta gtttcgtggc tactatatac tagctgcgac gatttttatt t..ctttctct 780 tctgggctat cattagcacg gccatttagg ggtaatgagc agcggccaat aaacaaagcc 840 ctggggtagc caatcgggtg tcgccgtgcg cgcgcgcgcg cgtctggcct cctgccctcc 900 tcctcccttt ccttgctaaa taaagcaagt agcagatagg ggaaagtctg ctcgcaagtt 960 gcatccgccc tgcgccaaga aaagccatcg ttcttcccac 1000 <210> 7 <211> 740 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 7 tgaatcttaa agaaagattt ggatccagat atagtccagc aacttatgac aatagtatac 60 atataatgcc aatgccaaca tgtttcaagt gctcttaaaa actatgtaca ttttctgctt 120 cgtttactca aatacgtaaa atagcactgc tctataataa gtacatctat tatcacctat 180 aaaacttttt ccagcaacat ttatataatt tgtgcatcat taattttaac aacacttata 240 aattagctca aatacgtaac aaagcgcgcc catgggcgcg ctcaagctac tagttcttat 300 acagtgaaaa caatactact atattagaca taaaattagg tgtagtttat ttatttactg 360 gtactacttc tttaagtcat aattaggtgt actagaagct actacgccct gacggagaca 420 agcacgcaca atagaaaaga gcgccctcgt gctcagagtg ctcgccttta gtttcgtggc 480 tactatatac tagctgcgac gatttttatt ttctttctct tctgggctat cattagcacg 540 gccatttagg ggtaatgagc agcggccaat aaacaaagcc ctggggtagc caatcgggtg 600 tcgccgtgcg cgcgcgcgcg cgtctggcct cctgccctcc tcctcccttt ccttgctaaa 660 taaagcaagt agcagatagg ggaaagtctg ctcgcaagtt gcatccgccc tgcgccaaga 720 aaagccatcg ttcttcccac 740 <210> 8 <211> 500 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 8 aattagctca aatacgtaac aaagcgcgcc catgggcgcg ctcaagctac tagttcttat 60 acagtgaaaa caatactact atattagaca taaaattagg tgtagtttat ttatttactg 120 gtactacttc tttaagtcat aattaggtgt actagaagct actacgccct gacggagaca 180 agcacgcaca atagaaaaga gcgccctcgt gctcagagtg ctcgccttta gtttcgtggc 240 tactatatac tagctgcgac gatttttatt ttctttctct tctgggctat cattagcacg 300 gccatttagg ggtaatgagc agcggccaat aaacaaagcc ctggggtagc caatcgggtg 360 tcgccgtgcg cgcgcgcgcg cgtctggcct cctgccctcc tcctcccttt ccttgctaaa 420 taaagcaagt agcagatagg ggaaagtctg ctcgcaagtt gcatccgccc tgcgccaaga 480 aaagccatcg ttcttcccac 500 <210> 9 <211> 410 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 9 taaaattagg tgtagtttat ttatttactg gtactacttc tttaagtcat aattaggtgt 60 actagaagct actacgccct gacggagaca agcacgcaca atagaaaaga gcgccctcgt 120 gctcagagtg ctcgccttta gtttcgtggc tactatatac tagctgcgac gatttttatt 180 ttctttctct tctgggctat cattagcacg gccatttagg ggtaatgagc agcggccaat 240 aaacaaagcc ctggggtagc caatcgggtg tcgccgtgcg cgcgcgcgcg cgtctggcct 300 cctgccctcc tcctcccttt ccttgctaaa taaagcaagt agcagatagg ggaaagtctg 360 ctcgcaagtt gcatccgccc tgcgccaaga aaagccatcg ttcttcccac 410 <210> 10 <211> 310 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mars <400> 10 aaacgcacac atagaagcat cattcccctc tcggctagct tcctcctctc tccctcctct 60 tcgtcttcct ctttccttct cccttgggaa acctgctgcc t~tgagcttt cttcttcgag 120 tgctcccacc agatctcctc ctccttacct tctttggcac gttcggcggc gcgcgcggag 180 atagatagat cccgccatcg tcgtcgccgt c~ttgcttcc gatcggaggg ccacaaccac 240 aacctctcgc t_cttagcgt gcgcgcgcga gccagggtca agaagagagc tagctatagg 300 ccggagatcg 310 <210> 11 <211> 251 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mat's <400> 11 agaagagtaa aactgccgtc ttatgatgct gaaggaaact atttattgtg aagagatgat 60 actcagagaa agacatattt gtggcaggga gatttgagat atgaacttat aaatgtaatg 120 caaataattt tcagactgga atggggtcgt ggaattcaga ggatgattgc tttctagttg 180 catttgatgt ttgatgagac ttttctcatg tgaaacgttt attaaaactt caaaatggtg 240 cagatgttgc t 251 <210> 12 <211> 5031 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mavs <220>
<221> misc_~eature <222> (1813)..(1994) <223> EXON I
<220>
<221> misc_Leature <222> (2871)..(2954) <223> EXON II
<220>
<221> misc_::eature <222> (3202)..(3258) <223> EXON III
<220>
<221> misc_~eature <222> (4066)..(4166) <223> EXON I'J
<220>
<221> misc_'=ature <222> (4248)..(4289) <223> EXON V
<220>
<221> misc =eature <222> (4367;..(4449) <223> EXON 'J1 <220>
<221> m~sc_Leat~_=
<222> !s523)..(4676) <223> ERON VII
<220>
<400> 12 ctgaagctgt cgtgttcctc acgtgcattg gctacaaatg tatgtaacat agtaaatctg 60 attgaaaagt taaatcttaa taattattat tacgacaaac taaaaaccta ttccatttct 120 ttgcatatga aaaatacagg tattccatgt aatataggaa caaatgtata atgcggctac 180 tttgatgaac aatttataaa tgcattaaaa ggtatgtaac ataataaatc cgtcatgtaa 240 tgttgtaact atataaaata gcaacataaa tttaattgca actaaaaacc gcctttttct 300 atgcgaaata atttacacta gcttcatata ggaatagatg gaaaaccaaa tcattaatgt 360 ctgcattatc atgcattatt ctggtatgaa gaaagagcgc gtatagccag catgacagat 420 ccattgttta caacaaatgt tcaaaggtgg taaagtaaag acctcgaccg gaaccattgg 480 gcccacttgc aaaatttaat ggtgattcta catctaaaat gttttgtttc aaatataaga 540 caatatggtt gtatctttgc ttttacccca atgggttcta tcaatgatgg ttgaggtcct 600 ccattattta ggatgtggtc aagtgcatca acgaatatga tcacttctac actcgacggt 660 tctcctaaat ttatacagta ttacagttat atatttatag ttatatattt atgatacttt 720 aaatggaatc agaaatagaa tgcaatgctt aaataaaacc aatgaatctt aaagaaagat 780 ttggatccag atatagtcca gcaacttatg acaatagtat acatataatg ccaatgccaa 840 catgtttcaa gtgctcttaa aaactatgta cattttctgc ttcgtttact caaatacgta 900 aaatagcact gctctataat aagtacatct attatcacct ataaaacttt ttccagcaac 960 atttatataa tttgtgcatc attaatttta acaacactta taaattagct caaatacgta 1020 acaaagcgcg cccatgggcg cgctcaagct actagttctt atacagtgaa aacaatacta 1080 ctatattaga cataaaatta ggtgtagttt atttatttac tggtactact tctttaagtc 1140 ataattaggt gtactagaag ctactacgcc ctgacggaga caagcacgca caatagaaaa 1200 gagcgccctc gtgctcagag tgctcgcctt tagtttcgtg gctactatat actagctgcg 1260 acgattttta ttttctttct cttctgggct atcattagca cggccattta ggggtaatga 1320 gcagcggcca ataaacaaag ccctggggta gccaatcggg tgtcgccgtg cgcgcgcgcg 1380 cgcgtctggc ctcctgccct cctcctccct ttccttgcta aataaagcaa gtagcagata 1440 ggggaaagtc tgctcgcaag ttgcatccgc cctgcgccaa gaaaagccat cgttcttccc 1500 acaaacgcac acatagaagc atcattcccc tctcggctag cttcctcctc tctccctcct 1560 cttcgtcttc ctctttcctt ctcccttggg aaacctgctg cctttgagct ttcttcttcg 1620 agtgctccca ccagatctcc tcctccttac cttctttggc acgttcggcg gcgcgcgcgg 1680 agatagatag atcccgccat cgtcgtcgcc gtccttgctt ccgatcggag ggccacaacc 1740 acaacctctc gctccttagc gtgcgcgcgc gagccagggt caagaagaga gctagctata 1800 ggccggagat cgatggggag gggaaagatc gtgatccgca ggatcgataa ctccacgagc 1860 cggcaggtga ccttctccaa gcgccggaac gggatcttca agaaggccaa ggagctcgcc 1920 atcctctgcg atgcggaggt cggcctcgtc atcttctcca gcaccggccg cctctacgag 1980 tactctagca ccaggtcgtc gcccttcgat tattatccgt ccctgcttta attaatttaa 2040 tacttcaata atgccaactg ttttcttgct cctgttgaag cgatatacta tatataataa 2100 tagagttgtt cttggcttct tgctttaatt agtttgggtt atcgattgca ttttatgatt 2160 tgaaactaca cactacctgt ctcatataca tggactggcg agagtgatta tggacctata 2220 caccatgtat acacaagtcc taaggtagac aaaagatttt aatttacctg tcgattgtcg 2280 aatattgact gtacatatag cgcacagagc tagcaacaac actcctggtt tctttgacgg 2340 ggcaagcaag atctgtgtat gcggtctaac aataaaatac aatctttggt acggttagta 2400 tttgtgtttt tgcccctctt cttccttgtt gtttggtcta tttgaactat tattcctctc 2-X60 caaaaaattc cctatgtatc atcggaattt atactcatcc cttgcattgt gtgccatata 2520 ttgagtggca tatagtaggg aacatatgca aaactaaatt taattagctt tgtcatattg 2580 tttcatgtga tcaactcgac acagcatgtc attgcagtag gaaacgcata ggcttttgtg 2640 atgtaagata tatgtgtgta tatatatgca tggggttcta tccacagggg ctggtagtgt 2700 tactgccatc agagagtttt tccctagaga gagagagaga gagagcctag atcctaactc 2760 ctgtaattaa gattttaact tttttagata gctataaact taatatttta caacgaatag 2820 catagtaata gttttttttt gggataaact gacatttgtg ctgtgtgcag catgaaatca 2880 gttatagatc ggtacggcaa ggccaaggaa gagcagcaag tcgtcgcaaa tcccaactcg 2940 gagcttaagt tttgctctag ataatttttt ctctctattc tgaagtgttt gcttgtttaa 3000 ctaaaagatt gctatatttt ttttgctttc gttttgatat atatatcctt taagtttatg 3060 gtttttaagg atgggaagaa attacacaac tatggtcaca tcaacaagcg tcctaccttt 3120 ttttatctta tccagctgct tgatcttttc tagttaccag cccgggccgt cgaccacgcg 3180 tgccctatag tgagtcgtaa cgcaaaggga ggcagcaagc ~tgagacaac aactgcacaa 3240 cttgcaagaa aattatcgta tggttcgaaa accctgcaaa agtttcaagc aagttattca 3300 ttagaaactt gagtg,.~cag agacagaagc acaatgcaca agcatgcaa~ atccaaatgc 3360 aggtacaact attacacatt catagataac agaaacaatt agcaagagtc aaattatcat 3420 gtgaaaggct agacattaga catcaaaata cttcatacga gataagttga acatgtgaaa 3480 attattctac ggccaacaat aaaactaaaa caaaacaggg acatcacagt taaactactt 3540 cccctgcttc attttaaagg tgcatttgca tttgcatttg aacaagtttt taaggctgtc 3600 tctaacagct accctatcac atcccctatc ttacctcata ttacaaactt cattcagcaa 3660 acagtgtaat ctagagtaca gtgcaaatcc tctattttac acaatcttgc tgcggatagc 3720 ctaacattgt actttgacca tgaatttctc ttatccaata aatccaaacc cagaaaattc 3780 aatgttgttt caaaagcttt gtgagatatg aataatgata caattttcat acactaagac 3840 tgcatataat ttgattaact gttagacaaa ttttgtaaaa ttaaacggcc ttttttccat 3900 acaaaagaaa cagagggtat atcaaaacat atcctgatga tgctccaaac atttatagag 3960 aaaacacaca catatattgg caattggcaa acataagcta gactgtgtgt gtataattgt 4020 ataatacaca acattaattg ctgatgccta ttaatttgtt acagggcagt tgacgggaga 4080 tgatctttct gggctgaatg tcaaagaact gcagtccctg gagaatcaat tggaaacaag 4140 cctgcgtggt gtccgcgcaa agaaggtttg attcttaatc aaatttctat aatcaattgt 4200 tcaataaatt actaaagatc gttactactg ttgatgctct taacaggacc atctcttgat 4260 agatgagatt cacgatttga atcgaaaggt ctgtaatatc gtgaatttat agttatgtgt 4320 tttatttgat ttagtagcac tgactaacca ctttgttggt cacaggcaag tttatttcac 4380 caagaaaata cagacttgta caataagatc aacctgattc gccaagaaaa tgatgagtta 4440 cataaaaagg tagctgatga attgaacaaa aataccacta actgcctaac cacacatatg 4500 acatgatatt aattgttctc agatctatga gactgaagga ccaagtggag ttaatcggga 4560 gtcaccgact ccattcaact ttgcagtagt agaaaccaga gatgttccag tgcaacttga 4620 actcagcaca ctgccacaac aaaataacat tgagccatct actgctccta agctagggta 4680 taacatttat tctctctata tatttcaatt ggttaactag tgttgactac agtgctataa 4740 tgagttgcta aacacatgca gattgcaatt aattccatga agaagagtaa aactgccgtc 4800 ttatgatgct gaaggaaact atttattgtg aagagatgat actcagagaa agacatattt 4860 gtggcaggga gatttgagat atgaacttat aaatgtaatg caaataattt tcagactgga 4920 atggggtcgt ggaattcaga ggatgattgc tttctagttg catttgatgt ttgatgagac 4980 ttttctcatg tgaaacgttt attaaaactt caaaatggtg cagatgttgc t 5031 <210> 13 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 13 atggggaggg gaaggattga 20 <210> 14 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 14 ctgttgttgg cgtactcgta g 21 <210> 15 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 15 aggggcaaga tcgacatcaa g 21 <210> 16 <211> 19 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 1~
gkcgwactcg tagaggcgg 19 <210> 17 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea maws <400> 17 atggggaggg gacgmgttga 20 <210> 18 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 18 gctgccgaac tcgtagagct 20 <210> 19 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 19 gttgttggcg tactcgtaga g 21 <210> 20 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mans <400> 20 gggcgcaagg tacagctgaa 20 <210> 21 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea maws <400> 21 gttgttggcg tactcgtaga g 21 <210> 22 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 22 aagggcaaga c gagatcaa g 21 <210> 23 <211> 23 <212> DNA
9 PCT/EP00/08001 <213> Zea maws <400> 23 cacttgaact cttttacgct tat 23 <210> 24 <211> 23 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 24 gacaatcttg acacatgtat gaa 23 <210> 25 <211> 22 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 25 cgattcaaat cgtgaatctc at 22 <210> 26 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 26 cccccgggct gcaggaattc 20 <210> 27 <211> 22 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 27 ttttagcaac atctgcacca tt 22 <210> 28 <211> 19 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 28 tctcggctag cttcctcct 19 <210> 29 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 29 cggcctatag ctagctctct tcttgaccct 30 <210> 30 <211> 27
<213> Zea mays <400> 24 gacaatcttg acacatgtat gaa 23 <210> 25 <211> 22 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 25 cgattcaaat cgtgaatctc at 22 <210> 26 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 26 cccccgggct gcaggaattc 20 <210> 27 <211> 22 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 27 ttttagcaac atctgcacca tt 22 <210> 28 <211> 19 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 28 tctcggctag cttcctcct 19 <210> 29 <211> 30 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 29 cggcctatag ctagctctct tcttgaccct 30 <210> 30 <211> 27
10 PCT/EP00/08001 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 30 agggtcaaga agagagctag ctatagg 27 <210> 31 <211> 28 <212> DNA
<213> Zea maws <400> 31 gctaaggagc gagaggttgt ggttgtgg 28 <210> 32 <211> 26 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 32 ccacaaccac aacctctcgc tcctta 26 <210> 33 <211> 19 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 33 tcggcagttg acgggagat 19 <210> 34 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 34 ttagcaactc attatagcac 20 <210> 35 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 35 agaaaccaga gatgttccag 20 <210> 36 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 36 caacatctgc accattttga a 21 <210> 37
<213> Zea mays <400> 30 agggtcaaga agagagctag ctatagg 27 <210> 31 <211> 28 <212> DNA
<213> Zea maws <400> 31 gctaaggagc gagaggttgt ggttgtgg 28 <210> 32 <211> 26 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 32 ccacaaccac aacctctcgc tcctta 26 <210> 33 <211> 19 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 33 tcggcagttg acgggagat 19 <210> 34 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 34 ttagcaactc attatagcac 20 <210> 35 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 35 agaaaccaga gatgttccag 20 <210> 36 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 36 caacatctgc accattttga a 21 <210> 37
11 PCT/EP00/08001 <211> 23 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 37 gtcacatcaa caagcgtcct acc 23 <210> 38 <211> 23 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 38 taagagcatc aacagtagta acg 23 <210> 39 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 39 agaaaccaga gatgttccag 20 <210> 40 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 40 caacatctgc accattttga a 21
<213> Zea mays <400> 37 gtcacatcaa caagcgtcct acc 23 <210> 38 <211> 23 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 38 taagagcatc aacagtagta acg 23 <210> 39 <211> 20 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 39 agaaaccaga gatgttccag 20 <210> 40 <211> 21 <212> DNA
<213> Zea mays <400> 40 caacatctgc accattttga a 21
Claims (24)
1. A nucleic acid molecule for use in cloning and expressing a late pollen specific nucleic acid se-quence essential for pollen tube growth in a plant which is selected from the group consisting of (a) the nucleic acid sequence defined in any one of SEQ ID No. 1 or 12, or a complementary strand thereof, (b) a nucleic acid sequence encoding a protein or peptide with the amino acid sequence defined in SEQ
ID No. 2 or a complementary strand thereof, (c) a nucleic acid sequence having a degree of identity of more than 70% to the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a) or (b), or a complementary strand thereof, (d) a nucleic acid sequence which is degenerate as a result of the genetic code to the nucleic acid sequence defined in (a), (b) or (c), or a comple-mentary strand thereof, and (e) alleles or derivatives of the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a), (b), (c) or (d), or a com-plementary strand thereof.
ID No. 2 or a complementary strand thereof, (c) a nucleic acid sequence having a degree of identity of more than 70% to the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a) or (b), or a complementary strand thereof, (d) a nucleic acid sequence which is degenerate as a result of the genetic code to the nucleic acid sequence defined in (a), (b) or (c), or a comple-mentary strand thereof, and (e) alleles or derivatives of the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a), (b), (c) or (d), or a com-plementary strand thereof.
2. A nucleic acid molecule for use in cloning and expressing a pollen specific nucleic acid sequence essential for pollen tube growth in a plant which is selected from the group consisting of (a) the nucleic acid sequence set out in SEQ ID No.
3 to 11, or a complementary strand thereof.
(b) a nucleic acid sequence having a degree of identity of more than 70% to the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a), or a complementary strand thereof, (c) alleles or derivatives of the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a) or (b), or a complementary strand thereof.
3 to 11, or a complementary strand thereof.
(b) a nucleic acid sequence having a degree of identity of more than 70% to the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a), or a complementary strand thereof, (c) alleles or derivatives of the nucleic acid se-quence defined in (a) or (b), or a complementary strand thereof.
3. The nucleic acid molecule of claim 1 or 2, which is derived from maize.
4. The nucleic acid molecule of claim 1, 2 or which is a DNA, cDNA or RNA molecule.
5. A vector comprising the nucleic acid molecule of any one of claims 1 to 4.
6. The vector of claim 5, which is a bacterial or viral vector.
7. The vector of any one of claims 5 or 6, wherein the nucleic acid molecule of any one of claims 1, 3 or 4 is operably linked to at least one regulating element, in particular in antisense orientation.
8. The vector of any one of claims 5 to 7, wherein the regulatory element is a 5' or 3' element.
9. The vector of claim 8, wherein the 5' regulatory element is a promoter, in particular the CaMV 35S
promoter.
promoter.
10. The vector of claim 8 or 9, wherein the 3' regulatory element is a termination and poly A ad-dition sequence, in particular from the NOS gene of Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
11. The vector according to any one of claims 5 to 10, which furthermore contains T-DNA, in particular the left, the right or both T-DNA borders.
12. The vector according to claim 11, wherein the nucleic acid molecule, optionally in conjunction with at least one regulatory element, is located within the T-DNA or adjacent to it.
13. A host cell containing the vector of any one of claims 5 to 12 or a cell deriving therefrom.
19. The host cell of claim 13, which is a plant, yeast or bacterial cell, in particular a cell from a monocotyledonous or dicotyledonous plant or a cell deriving therefrom.
15. A cell culture, preferably a plant cell culture comprising a cell according to any one of claims 13 or 14.
16. A method of genetically modifying a cell by transforming a cell with a nucleic acid molecule of any one of claims 1 to 4 or a vector according to any one of claims 5 to 12, wherein the nucleic acid molecule of claims 1 to 4 contained in the vector is expressible in the cell.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the cell is a plant, bacterial or yeast cell.
18. The method of claims 16 or 17, wherein the transformed cell is regenerated into a differenti-ated plant.
19. The method of any one of claims 16 to 18, wherein the cell is transformed by transfer of the nucleic acid molecule or vector from a bacterium to the cell.
20. The method of any one of claims 16 to 19, wherein the cell is transformed by direct uptake of nucleic acid sequences, by microinjection of nu-cleic acid sequences or particle bombardment.
21. A method for isolating a pollen specific gene from a plant, whereby a nucleic acid sequence of any one of claims 1 to 4 is used to screen nucleic acid sequences derived from the plant.
22. A plant comprising a host cell according to any one of claims 13 or 14 or produced according to a method according to any one of claims 16 to 21 or progeny thereof.
23. Propagation and harvest material, in particular seeds and plant tissue, comprising a host cell ac-cording to any one of claims 13 or 14 or derived from a plant according to claim 22.
24. A method for the production of a male sterile genetically modified plant with a distorted pollen development, wherein a plant cell is transformed with a nucleic acid molecule according to claims 1 to 4 or a vector according to claims 5 to 12 and the transformed cell is regenerated into a plant.
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP99116267 | 1999-08-18 | ||
EP99116267.8 | 1999-08-18 | ||
PCT/EP2000/008001 WO2001012798A2 (en) | 1999-08-18 | 2000-08-16 | Male sterile plants |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA2381330A1 true CA2381330A1 (en) | 2001-02-22 |
Family
ID=8238810
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA002381330A Abandoned CA2381330A1 (en) | 1999-08-18 | 2000-08-16 | Male sterile plants |
Country Status (4)
Country | Link |
---|---|
EP (1) | EP1210436A2 (en) |
AU (1) | AU6442500A (en) |
CA (1) | CA2381330A1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO2001012798A2 (en) |
Families Citing this family (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US8022274B2 (en) | 1998-09-22 | 2011-09-20 | Mendel Biotechnology, Inc. | Plant tolerance to low water, low nitrogen and cold |
HUP0302542A2 (en) * | 2000-10-05 | 2003-10-28 | Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc. | A nitrate-responsive root transcriptional factor |
US7309816B1 (en) | 2004-08-04 | 2007-12-18 | Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc. | Zinc finger proteins expressed in plant meristem |
US10815493B2 (en) * | 2007-07-20 | 2020-10-27 | Mendel Biotechnology, Inc. | Plant tolerance to low water, low nitrogen and cold II |
CN108822195B (en) * | 2018-06-14 | 2020-10-23 | 南京农业大学 | Protein with function of promoting growth of pollen tube of Dangshan pear, coding gene PbrTTS1 and application of coding gene PbrTTS1 |
Family Cites Families (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5086169A (en) * | 1989-04-20 | 1992-02-04 | The Research Foundation Of State University Of New York | Isolated pollen-specific promoter of corn |
DK0651814T3 (en) * | 1992-07-09 | 1997-06-30 | Pioneer Hi Bred Int | Maize pollen-specific polygalacturonase gene |
US5744693A (en) * | 1992-10-02 | 1998-04-28 | California Institute Of Technology | Plants having altered floral development |
AU715462B2 (en) * | 1994-11-22 | 2000-02-03 | Commonwealth Scientific And Industrial Research Organisation | Engineered sterile plants and uses therefor |
AUPN816196A0 (en) * | 1996-02-19 | 1996-03-14 | Forbio Research Pty Ltd | Regulation of eukaryotic gene expression |
WO1998013503A1 (en) * | 1996-09-23 | 1998-04-02 | F.B. Investments Pty. Ltd. | A plant and method of modification |
CA2227940A1 (en) * | 1998-04-06 | 1999-10-06 | Steven H. Strauss | Floral homeotic genes for manipulation of flowering in poplar trees and other plant species |
EP1033405A3 (en) * | 1999-02-25 | 2001-08-01 | Ceres Incorporated | Sequence-determined DNA fragments and corresponding polypeptides encoded thereby |
AR033940A1 (en) * | 1999-03-17 | 2004-01-21 | Carter Holt Harvey Ltd | A POLINUCLEOTIDE, A PLANT REPRODUCTIVE FABRIC PROMOTER, A DNA CONSTRUCTION AND THE TRANSGEN PLANT OBTAINED |
-
2000
- 2000-08-16 EP EP00951520A patent/EP1210436A2/en not_active Withdrawn
- 2000-08-16 AU AU64425/00A patent/AU6442500A/en not_active Abandoned
- 2000-08-16 CA CA002381330A patent/CA2381330A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2000-08-16 WO PCT/EP2000/008001 patent/WO2001012798A2/en not_active Application Discontinuation
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
AU6442500A (en) | 2001-03-13 |
WO2001012798A2 (en) | 2001-02-22 |
WO2001012798A3 (en) | 2001-06-07 |
EP1210436A2 (en) | 2002-06-05 |
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