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Development of cDNA Microarrays for Gene Expression Research in Floriculture Crops Dave Clark University of Florida Environmental Horticulture Dept.

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Presentation on theme: "Development of cDNA Microarrays for Gene Expression Research in Floriculture Crops Dave Clark University of Florida Environmental Horticulture Dept."— Presentation transcript:

1 Development of cDNA Microarrays for Gene Expression Research in Floriculture Crops Dave Clark University of Florida Environmental Horticulture Dept.

2 UF Floriculture Biotech Lab (est. 1995) Our main goal: To bridge the gap between basic molecular biology and applied floriculture –Florida produces 20% of US floriculture crops

3 UF Floriculture Biotech Development: Phase 1 – 1995-2000 (then) – Biotechnology Phase 2 – 2000-2005 (now) – Functional Genomics Phase 3 – 2005-2010 (next) – Gene Function

4 Phase 1 – 1995-2000 Establish a biotech system – Petunia hybrida Proof of concept research – Expansion of available technology Build critical personnel mass – Recruit good people – Make strong collaborations

5 Phase 1 – 1995-2000 Transgenic Plants - hormones Gibberellins – Dwarf plants Cytokinins – “Stay Green” leaves Ethylene – Long lasting flowers

6 Internal Growth Regulators AtGA2ox7 Makes dwarf tobacco Schomburg et al. 2003

7 Internal Growth Regulators AtGA2ox7 - Makes dwarf petunia

8 Stay Green Leaves sag-IPT Makes leaves stay green longer in tobacco Gan & Amasino 1995

9 sag-IPT Makes leaves stay greener longer in petunia Clark et al. in press

10 sag-IPT – Drought Tolerance

11 Long Lasting Flowers Etr1-1 ETR1-1 - Makes plants ethylene insensitive

12 ControlEtr1-1 Long Lasting Flowers

13 Problems with 35S::etr1-1 etr1-1 petunias – commercially limitedetr1-1 petunias – commercially limited ‘MD’ etr1-1 rooting pathogens – etr1-1

14 Conclusions – Phase 1 We have a good experimental system We have good people in the lab We have good collaborators We need different genes We need better promoters

15 Phase 2 – 2000-2005 Functional Genomics – New tools for genetics research Exploration for new technologies – New and novel genes Controlling gene expression – Petal specific promoters

16 Functional Genomics Tools that help discover the biological function of genes Uncovers how groups of genes work together in a biological process Encompasses many traditional biological and genetic approaches

17 Tissue collection mRNA extraction library synthesis EST sequencing Bioinformatics and Microarrays Petunia EST Project (EST = Expressed Sequence Tags)

18 Petunia Flower Genes Petunia gene sequencing: Floral development library 2774 C 2 H 4 -treated flower library 3264 Pollinated flower library 1824 Other libraries 1046 Total genes sequenced 8908

19 Petunia EST Database

20 Microarray Construction 4200 unique petunia genes

21 Microarray analysis – Ethylene Regulated Genes Control (A) Ethylene (B) Green A>B Yellow A=B Red A<B A+B

22 Ethylene Regulated Genes We have isolated approximately 50 genes that are regulated by ethylene Some of these genes are thought to be involved in making floral scent volatiles –Benzoic acid carboxyl methyltransferase

23 Phase 2 – Still going We still bridge the gap between basic molecular biology and applied floriculture –We have a petunia EST database –Microarrays are working well –We have many new and novel genes –We have good promoters

24 Phase 3 – 2005-2010 Gene Function – We are ahead of schedule: – Experimental system (phase 1) Adopted by several groups – New genetic tools (phase 2) Available to floriculture researchers – Understanding gene function

25 Measuring Floral Scent

26 Flower Scent Composition - Petunia Benzoic acid carboxyl methyltransferase (BAMT) - makes methyl benzoate in petunia

27 Stop and Smell the Roses! US consumers bought almost 130 million roses on Valentine’s Day 2003 US consumers spent over $7.5B on cut flowers in 2002

28 Opportunity Knocks! Commercial cut rose varieties don’t have much fragrance

29 Flower Scent Composition - Rose

30 The Future We plan to maintain and grow the genetics database We plan to make transgenic plants expressing new genes We plan to knock out 1 gene a week – functional analysis We plan to continue making new collaborations

31 Who supports us? Financially –USDA Floriculture Initiative –American Floral Endowment –Fred Gloeckner Foundation –Florida FIRST –The Scotts Company Intellectually –Harry Klee – UF –Bill Farmerie – UF –Don McCarty – UF –Michelle Jones – OSU –Jim Giovannoni – USDA/Cornell –EU PetNet Group

32 UF Floriculture Biotechnology 2002-2003

33 Questions?


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