A new type of geranium, genetically engineered to be long-lived and lack pollen, offers the promise of sneeze-free plants for allergy sufferers.
Researchers in Spain have used a genetically modified bacterium to "infect" geraniums, creating plants that are not able to spread allergens nor reproduce with wild plants ? a handy modification to prevent so-called "transgenic" plants from contaminating natural stock, said study researcher Luis Ca?as, a scientist at the Instituto de Biolog?a Molecular y Celular de Plantas in Spain.
-
Science news from NBCNews.com
-
9,000-year-old charms?unearthed in Israel
Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: Israeli archaeologists find 9,000-year-old figurines that apparently reflect the religious practices common in the region several millennia before Moses.
- Frozen soda explodes, injures boy
- Scientists test marine robot hurricane-hunters
- King Richard III's grave ? a tantalizing find
-
9,000-year-old charms?unearthed in Israel
"These biotechnological approaches could be used in other ornamental or crop species," Ca?as told LiveScience.
The researchers chose to modify Pelargonium plants, flowering shrubs known colloquially as geraniums or storkbills. These plants have long been selectively bred for traits such as colorful flowers, but Ca?as and his colleagues wanted to bestow long life on the plants. They also wanted to make them sterile, removing their ability to produce pollen.
"The lack of pollen not only is great for hay fever sufferers, but also prevents accidental release of the transgenes into the environment," Ca?as said.
To do so, the researchers genetically altered Agrobacterium tumefaciens, the bacteria that causes the plant ailment crown gall disease, to carry a modified gene that would increase the production of the plant hormone cytokinin, which has an anti-aging effect on plant cells. They modified another gene that would interfere with the production of pollen and anthers, the little round lobes that hold the pollen on the flower.
The bacteria carried these modified genes into the Pelargonium cells, changing their DNA. The researchers then grew new plants from these modified plant cells. The researchers detailed the process Friday in the journal BMC Plant Biology.
The result was small-leaved geraniums with more vibrant ? and longer-lived ? flowers than usual. These allergy-free geraniums aren't yet available at a greenhouse near you (as genetically modified organisms, they will have to go through a regulatory approval process), Ca?as said, but the idea is that they will be someday.
"The overall goal of our work is to delay the senescence [aging] process and to produce long-lived plants, which could have commercial interest both for producers and consumers of ornamental plants," Ca?as said.?
Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook and Google+.
? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.
Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48878969/ns/technology_and_science-science/
kwame brown martin luther king day blue ivy devil inside dash diet how to make moonshine joel osteen
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.