Pak. J. Bot., 48(3): 1067-1072, 2016. |
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Updated: 16-06-16 | ||||
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OVER-EXPRESSION OF ZmARG ENCODING AN ARGINASE IMPROVES GRAIN PRODUCTION IN MAIZE
HONG DI1, ROU LI1, YU TIAN1, XIANYU MENG1, PEI ZHANG1, DAN LIU1, XING ZENG1 AND ZHENHUA WANG1*
Abstract: Arginase, as one of the three key enzymes in nitrogen catabolism, the physiological role of Arg catabolism in cereal crops has not been fully clarified. Studies have shown that arginase-encoding genes play a key role in providing nitrogen to developing seedlings in many plant species.Yield is a primary trait in many crop breeding programs, which can be increased by modification of genes related to photosynthesis, nitrogen assimilation, carbon distribution, plant architecture, and transcriptional networks controlling plant development. In the present study, a maize arginase gene ZmARG was cloned and introduced into maize inbred lines by Agrobacterium tumefaciens- mediated transformation. Putative transgenic plants were confirmed by PCR, Southern blotting RT-PCR analysis. The expression of the ZmARG gene increased arginase activity in several tissues in transgenic lines. Transgenic maize plants had significantly higher ear weight and 100-seed weight as compared with wild-type control. Our results suggested that ZmARG was a potential target gene for crop yield improvement.
Key words: ZmARG gene; Transgenic maize; Arginase; Grain yield; Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
Northeast Agricultural University, Harbin 150030, Heilongjiang Province, China *Corresponding author’s email: zhenhuawang_2006@163.com |
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