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Plant Physiol, June 2000, Vol. 123, pp. 427-438
Genetic Repair of Mutations in Plant Cell-Free Extracts Directed
by Specific Chimeric Oligonucleotides1
Michael C.
Rice,
Gregory D.
May,2
Peter B.
Kipp,3
Hetal
Parekh, and
Eric B.
Kmiec*
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Delaware, Newark,
Delaware 19716
Chimeric oligonucleotides are synthetic molecules comprised of RNA
and DNA bases assembled in a double hairpin conformation. These
molecules have been shown to direct gene conversion events in mammalian
cells and animals through a process involving at least one protein from
the DNA mismatch repair pathway. The mechanism of action for gene
repair in mammalian cells has been partially elucidated through the use
of a cell-free extract system. Recent experiments have expanded the
utility of chimeric oligonucleotides to plants and have demonstrated
genotypic and phenotypic conversion, as well as Mendelian transmission.
Although these experiments showed correction of point and frameshift
mutations, the biochemical and mechanistic aspects of the process were
not addressed. In this paper, we describe the establishment of
cell-free extract systems from maize (Zea mays),
banana (Musa acuminata cv Rasthali), and
tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). Using a genetic
readout system in bacteria and chimeric oligonucleotides designed to
direct the conversion of mutations in antibiotic-resistant
genes, we demonstrate gene repair of point and frameshift mutations.
Whereas extracts from banana and maize catalyzed repair of mutations in
a precise fashion, cell-free extracts prepared from tobacco exhibited
either partial repair or non-targeted nucleotide conversion. In
addition, an all-DNA hairpin molecule also mediated repair albeit in an imprecise fashion in all cell-free extracts tested. This system enables
the mechanistic study of gene repair in plants and may facilitate the
identification of DNA repair proteins operating in plant cells.
1
This work was sponsored in part by the Boyce
Thompson Institute for Plant Research and by The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation.
2
Present address: Plant Biology Division, The
Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Ardmore, OK 73402.
3
Present address: Boyce Thompson Institute for
Plant Research, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail ekmiec{at}udel.edu; fax 302-831-8786.
© 2000 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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