Home pagePress monitoringWeirdo mutant plant opens doors for food security

Weirdo mutant plant opens doors for food security

Date: 17.6.2015 

The discovery that an Australian tobacco plant studied internationally as part of plant breeding programs is actually the genetic "weirdo" of its family holds huge potential for food security, experts say.

Susceptible to infection by more than 500 plant viruses, Nicotiana benthamiana is the plant of choice for studies in plant virology and foreign gene expression.

But research by Murdoch University's Dr Stephen Wylie and colleagues shows the lab strain of N. benthamiana is the exception, not the rule. Dr Wylie's team collected 23 strains of wild N. benthamiana in northern WA, comparing their response to viral infection with that of the single-source lab strain.

"It was always a puzzle why N. benthamiana is so unusually susceptible to viruses; that should place the species on a fast track to extinction. Now the puzzle is solved," Dr Wylie says. "The lab strain has a weird mutation in its RDR1 gene, making it respond with more severe symptoms to some virus infections," he says. "The wild strains have a functional RDR1, and respond with much milder symptoms."

N. benthamiana is related to valuable crop species including the potato, tomato, capsicum and eggplant, so the finding has direct implications for food security, Dr Wylie says.

The discovery means many plant studies have been conducted on a Nicotiana strain that not only responds atypically to viruses, but most likely experiences other genetic abnormalities as well. "The RDR1 gene controls many developmental processes in the plant, responding to viruses is just the tip of the iceberg," Dr Wylie says.

 


 

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