Methods and Protocols (Nov 2018)

Genetic Transformation of Recalcitrant Cassava by Embryo Selection and Increased Hormone Levels

  • Ezequiel Matías Lentz,
  • Sabrina Eisner,
  • Emily Jane McCallum,
  • Kim Schlegel,
  • Francisco de Assis de Paiva Campos,
  • Wilhelm Gruissem,
  • Hervé Vanderschuren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/mps1040042
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 4
p. 42

Abstract

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Genetic engineering is considered to be an important tool for the improvement of cassava. Cassava is a highly heterozygous crop species for which conventional breeding is a lengthy and tedious process. Robust transformation is based on Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of friable embryogenic callus (FEC). Production of FEC is genotype-dependent and considered to be a major bottleneck for the genetic transformation of cassava. As a consequence, routine genetic transformation has only been established for a handful of cassava cultivars. Therefore, development of procedures enabling efficient production of high-quality cassava FEC is required to allow the translation of research from the model cultivar to farmer-preferred cassava cultivars. Here we study the FEC production capacity of Brazilian cassava cultivars and report the modification of the protocol for the genetic transformation of Verdinha (BRS 222), a recalcitrant cultivar with high potential for protein production that is extensively used by farmers in Brazil.

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