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| United States Patent Application |
20020032916
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
CHARNE, DAVID G.
;   et al.
|
March 14, 2002
|
OILSEED BRASSICA CONTAINING AN IMPROVED FERTILITY RESTORER GENE FOR OGURA
CYTOPLASMIC MALE STERILITY
Abstract
The invention is a Brassica plant comprising a homozygous fertility
restorer gene for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, in addition to
oilseed, meal and oil produced from the plant, and the use of oilseed of
the plant for preparing oil and/or meal. Upon pollination, the plant
yields oilseeds having a total glucosinolate content of not more than
301/4 mol/gram, not more than 251/4 mol/gram or not more than 201/4
mol/gram and, optionally, an erucic acid content of no more than two
percent by weight based upon the total fatty acid content. The Brassica
plant may be Brassica napus. Brassica campestris, or Brassica juncea.
| Inventors: |
CHARNE, DAVID G.; (ONTARIO, CA)
; GRANT, IAN; (ONTARIO, CA)
; KRALING, KONRAD; (SCHWEDENECK, DE)
; PATEL, JAYANTILAL D.; (ONTARIO, CA)
; PRUVOT, JEAN-CLAUDE M.; (BLOIS, FR)
; TULSIERAM, LOMAS K.; (ONTARIO, CA)
|
| Correspondence Address:
|
Marianne H. Michel
Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc.
7100 N.W. 62nd Avenue
P.O. Box 1000
Johnston
IA
50131
US
|
| Serial No.:
|
125296 |
| Series Code:
|
09
|
| Filed:
|
February 10, 1999 |
| PCT Filed:
|
December 19, 1997 |
| PCT NO:
|
PCT/CA97/01005 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
800/278 |
| Class at Publication: |
800/278 |
| International Class: |
A01H 005/00 |
Foreign Application Data
| Date | Code | Application Number |
| Dec 24, 1996 | CA | 2193938 |
| Aug 26, 1997 | EP | 97306490.0 |
Claims
We claim:
1. The use of oilseed of a Brassica plant comprising a homozygous
fertility restorer gene for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility and having a
glucosinolate content of less than 30 .mu.mol per gram, for preparing oil
and/or meal.
2. The use according to claim 1, wherein the oilseed has a glucosinolate
content of less than 25 .mu.mol per gram.
3. The use according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the oilseed has a
glucosinolate content of less than 20 .mu.mol per gram.
4. A Brassica plant comprising a homozygous fertility restorer gene for
ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, wherein upon pollination the plant
yields oilseeds having a total glucosinolate content of not more than 30
.mu.mol per gram
5. A Brassica plant comprising a homozygous fertility restorer gene for
ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, wherein upon pollination the plant
yields oilseeds having a total glucosinolate content of not more than 25
.mu.mol per gram
6. A Brassica plant comprising a homozygous fertility restorer gene for
ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, wherein upon pollination the plant
yields oilseeds having a total glucosinolate content of not more than 20
.mu.mol per gram
7. A Brassica plant comprising a homozygous fertility restorer gene for
ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, wherein upon pollination the plant
yields oilseeds having a total glucosinolate content of not more than 30
.mu.mol per gram and an erucic acid content of no more than 2 percent by
weight based upon the total fatty acid content.
8. A Brassica plant comprising a homozygous fertility restorer gene for
ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, wherein upon pollination the plant
yields oilseeds having a total glucosinolate content of not more than 25
.mu.mol per gram and an erucic acid content of no more than 2 percent by
weight based upon the total fatty acid content.
9. A Brassica plant comprising a homozygous fertility restorer gene for
ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, wherein upon pollination the plant
yields oilseeds having a total glucosinolate content of not more than 20
.mu.mol per gram and an erucic acid content of no more than 2 percent by
weight based upon the total fatty acid content.
10. The Brassica plant of claim 1, 2 or 3, and designated by 95SN-9369,
96FNW-1792, 96FNW-1822, 96FNW-1348, 96FNW-1628 or their sub-lines.
11. The Brassica plant of claim 7, wherein the sub-lines are selected from
a group consisting of 97SN-1650 (sub-line of 95SN-9369), 97SN-1651
(sub-line of 95SN-9369), 96FNW1792-03 (sub-line of 96FNW-1792),
96FNW1822-07 (sub-line of 96FNW1822) and 96FNW1822-08 (sub-line of
96FNW1822).
12. The Brassica plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 or 8 wherein the plant
is Brassica napus .
13. The Brassica plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 or 8 wherein the plant
is Brassica campestris .
14. The Brassica plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 or 8 wherein the plant
is Brassica juncea .
15. An inbred Brassica plant produced using the plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, or 8, wherein upon pollination the plant yields oilseed having a
total glucosinolate content of not more than 30 .mu.mol per gram.
16. An inbred Brassica plant produced using the plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, or 8, wherein upon pollination the plant yields oilseed having a
total glucosinolate content of not more than 25 .mu.mol per gram.
17. An inbred Brassica plant produced using the plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, or 8, wherein upon pollination the plant yields oilseed having a
total glucosinolate content of not more than 20 .mu.mol per gram.
18. A hybrid Brassica plant produced using the plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, or 8, wherein upon pollination the plant yields oilseed having a
total glucosinolate content of not more than 30 .mu.mol per gram.
19. A hybrid Brassica plant produced using the plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, or 8, wherein upon pollination the plant yields oilseed having a
total glucosinolate content of not more than 25 .mu.mol per gram.
20. A hybrid Brassica plant produced using the plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, or 8, wherein upon pollination the plant yields oilseed having a
total glucosinolate content of not more than 20 .mu.mol per gram.
21. An oilseed of the plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,
12, 13, 14, 15, 16 or 17.
22. The oilseed of claim 18 which is present as a component of a
substantially homogeneous assemblage of oilseeds which possess the
specified glucosinolate content.
23. Oil of the oilseed of claim 18.
24. The oil of claim 20, wherein the oilseed was formed on Brassica napus
.
25. The oil of claim 20, wherein the oilseed was formed on Brassica
campestris .
26. The oil of claim 20, wherein the oilseed was formed on Brassica juncea
.
27. Meal which is substantially oil free and which is produced using the
oilseed of claim 18.
28. A part of a Brassica plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, 13, 14, 15,
16 or 17.
29. The plant part of claim 25, wherein the part is selected from a group
consisting of nucleic acid sequences, tissue, cells, pollen, ovules,
roots, leaves, oilseeds, microspores, vegetative parts, whether mature or
embryonic.
30. The plant part of claim 26, wherein the nucleic acid sequences are
selected from a group consisting of RNA, mRNA, DNA, cDNA.
31. A mature Brassica oilseed capable of yielding an endogenous vegetable
oil having a glucosinolate content of no more than 30 .mu.mol per gram.
32. A mature Brassica oilseed capable of yielding an endogenous vegetable
oil having a glucosinolate content of no more than 25 .mu.mol per gram.
33. A mature Brassica oilseed capable of yielding an endogenous vegetable
oil having a glucosinolate content of no more than 20 .mu.mol per gram.
34. Meal produced from the oilseed of claim 18, having a glucosinolate
content of no more than 30 .mu.mol per gram.
35. Meal produced from the oilseed of claim 18, having a glucosinolate
content of no more than 25 .mu.mol per gram.
36. Meal produced from the oilseed of claim 18, having a glucosinolate
content of no more than 20 .mu.mol per gram.
37. The Brassica plant of claim 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, 13 or 14 for the use
of breeding a Brassica line.
38. The use of claim 31, wherein the breeding is selected from a group
consisting of isolation and transformation, conventional breeding,
pedigree breeding, crossing, self-pollination, haploidy, single seed
descent and backcrossing.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] Oilseed from Brassica plants is an increasingly important crop. As
a source of vegetable oil, it presently ranks behind only soybeans and
palm in commercial importance and it is comparable with sunflowers. The
oil is used both as a salad oil and as a cooking oil.
[0002] In its original form, Brassica oil, known as rapeseed oil, was
harmful to humans due to its relatively high level of erucic acid. Erucic
acid is commonly present in native cultivars in concentrations of 30 to
50 percent by weight based upon the total fatty acid content. This
problem was overcome when plant scientists identified a germplasm source
of low erucic acid rapeseed oil (Stefansson, 1983).
[0003] In addition, plant scientists have attempted to improve the fatty
acid profile for rapeseed oil (Robbelen, 1984; Ratledge et al., 1984;
Robbelen et al., 1975; and Rakow et al., 1973). These references are
representative of those attempts.
[0004] Particularly attractive to plant scientists were so-called
"double-low" varieties: those low in erucic acid in the oil and low in
glucosinolates in the solid meal remaining after oil extraction (i.e., an
erucic acid content of less than 2 percent by weight based upon the total
fatty acid content, and a glucosinolate content of less than 30
.mu.mol/gram of the oil-free meal). These higher quality forms of rape,
first developed in Canada, are known as canola.
[0005] More recently, plant scientists have focused their efforts on
reducing the glucosinolate content further, to levels of less than 20
.mu.mol/gram of oil-free meal, as verified by quantifying trimethylsilyl
(TMS) derivatives (Sosulski and Dabrowski, 1984) for spring canola, or
less than 20 .mu.mol/gram of whole, ground seed, as determined by high
performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) (International Organization for
Standardization, reference number ISO 9167-1:1992(E)) for winter canola.
[0006] Glucosinolates are sulfur-based compounds that remain in the solid
component of the seed-the solid meal-after the seed has been ground and
its oil has been extracted. Their structure includes glucose in
combination with aliphatic hydrocarbons (3-butenyl glucosinolate,
4-pentenyl glucosinolate, 2-hydroxy-3-butenyl glucosinolate, and
2-hydroxy-4-pentenyi glucosinolate) or aromatic hydrocarbons
(3-indoylmethyl glucosinolate, 1-methoxy-3-indoyl methyl glucosinolate).
Aliphatic glucosinolates are also known as alkenyl glucosinolates.
Aromatic glucosinolates are also known as indoles.
[0007] High levels of glucosinolates are undesirable because they produce
toxic by-products when acted upon by the enzyme myrosinase. Myrosinase is
a naturally occurring enzyme present in Brassica species. When Brassica
seed is crushed, myrosinase is released and catalyzes the breakdown of
glucosinolates to produce glucose, thiocyanates, isothiocyanate and
nitrites. When separated from glucose, these other products are toxic to
certain mammals. Isothiocyanate, for example, inhibits synthesis of
thryroxine by the thyroid and has other anti-metabolic effects (Paul et
al., 1986). Attempts have been made to inactivate the enzyme myrosinase
(using steam, for example). These attempts have not been entirely
successful.
[0008] Rapeseed possesses high levels of glucosinolates (from 100
.mu.mol/gram to 200 .mu.mol/gram of oil-free meal), whereas canola
possesses lower levels of glucosinolates (less than 30 .mu.mol/gram of
oil-free meal). The levels of glucosinolates in canola are regulated in
many countries. In Europe, for example, winter canola must have a
glucosinolate content of less than 25 .mu.mol/gram of seed at 8.5%
moisture, as measured by HPLC. In Canada, spring canola must have a
glucosinolate content of less than 30 .mu.mol/gram of oil-free meal at 0%
moisture, as measured by TMS. Many countries are requiring even lower
levels of glucosinolates in order to register canola varieties.
[0009] In developing improved new Brassica varieties, breeders use
self-incompatible (SI), cytoplasmic male sterile (CMS) and nuclear male
sterile (NMS) Brassica plants as the female parent. In using these
plants, breeders are attempting to improve the efficiency of seed
production and the quality of the F.sub.1 hybrids and to reduce the
breeding costs. When hybridisation is conducted without using Si, CMS or
NMS plants, it is more difficult to obtain and isolate the desired traits
in the progeny (F.sub.1 generation) because the parents are capable of
undergoing both cross-pollination and self-pollination. If one of the
parents is a SI, CMS or NMS plant that is incapable of producing pollen,
only cross pollination will occur. By eliminating the pollen of one
parental variety in a cross, a plant breeder is assured of obtaining
hybrid seed of uniform quality, provided that the parents are of uniform
quality and the breeder conducts a single cross.
[0010] In one instance, production of F.sub.1 hybrids includes crossing a
CMS Brassica female parent, with a pollen producing male Brassica parent.
To reproduce effectively, however, the male parent of the F.sub.1 hybrid
must have a fertility restorer gene (Rf gene). The presence of a Rf gene
means that the F.sub.1 generation will not be completely or partially
sterile, so that either self-pollination or cross pollination may occur.
Self pollination of the F.sub.1 generation to produce several subsequent
generations is important to ensure that a desired trait is heritable and
stable and that a new variety has been isolated.
[0011] One Brassica plant which is cytoplasmic male sterile and is used in
breeding is ogura (OGU) cytoplasmic male sterile (R. Pellan-Delourme et
al., 1987). A fertility restorer for ogura cytoplasmic male sterile
plants has been transferred from Raphanus sativus (radish) to Brassica by
Institut National de Recherche Agricole (INRA) in Rennes, France
(Pelletier et al., 1987). The restorer gene, Rfl originating from radish,
is described in WO 92/05251 and in Delourme et al., (1991).
[0012] However, this restorer is inadequate in that restorer inbreds and
hybrids carrying this Rf gene have elevated glucosinolate levels and the
restorer is closely related to a decrease in seed set-the number of
ovules per silique-(Pellan-Delourme et al., 1988; Delourme et al., 1994).
In the case of hybrids, the glucosinolate levels are elevated even when
the female parent has reduced glucosinolate content. These levels,
typically more than 30 .mu.mol/gram of oil-free meal, exceed the levels
of glucosinolates allowable for seed registration by most regulatory
authorities in the world. Thus, the restorer can be used for research
purposes, but not to develop directly canola-quality commercial hybrid
varieties. To date, there is no other source of a restorer of fertility
for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility available.
[0013] INRA outlines the difficulties associated with obtaining restorer
lines with low glucosinolate levels for ogura cytoplasmic sterility
(Delourme, et al., 1994; Delourme, et al., 1995). INRA indicates that
these difficulties are due to the linkage between male fertility
restoration and glucosinolate content in its breeding material. INRA
suggests that more radish genetic information needs to be eliminated in
its restorer lines (Delourme, et al., (1995)). Although improvements have
been made to restorers during the past few years, isozyme studies
performed on the improved restorer lines indicate that radish genetic
information still remains around the restorer gene (Delourme et al.,
1994).
[0014] INRA has attempted to develop a restorer having decreased
glucosinolate levels. It reported a heterozygous restorer with about 15
.mu.mol per gram (Delourme et al., 1995). However, (i) this restorer was
heterozygous (Rfrf) not homozygous (RfRf) for the restorer gene, (ii)
this restorer was a single hybrid plant rather than an inbred line, (iii)
there was only a single data point suggesting that this restorer had a
low glucosinolate level rather than multiple data points to support a low
glucosinolate level, (iv) there was no data to demonstrate whether the
low glucosinolate trait was passed on to the progeny of the restorer, and
(v) the restorer was selected and evaluated in a single environment-the
low glucosinolate trait was not demonstrated to be stable in successive
generations in field trials. INRA has not introduced commercially any
homozygous restorer having low glucosinolate levels. Its restorer
(reported in Delourme et al., 1995) cannot be used to develop restorer
inbreds or single cross hybrids products (where the restorer is used as a
male inbred) with decreased glucosinolate levels for commercial
development.
[0015] Canadian patent application 2,143,781 of Yamashita, et al.,
published on Sep. 11, 1995, claims a hybrid breeding method for crop
plants in the family Brassicaceae in which an F.sub.1 seed is produced by
crossing the female parent of a self-incompatible male sterile line with
a male parent. In one embodiment, the male parent possesses a fertility
restorer gene. The fertility restorer gene (IM-B) is for MS-N1-derived
cytoplasm and was derived from a winter variety (IM line). This was then
crossed with a spring double-low line (62We). Although this restorer is
alleged to result in low glucosinolate levels, it is not a restorer for
ogura cytoplasmic male sterility.
[0016] Other breeders have attempted to introduce Rf genes from radish
into rapeseed plants by means of intergeneric crossing. However, these
crosses have not been employed practically. Canadian patent application
2,108,230 of Sakai, et al, published on Oct. 12, 1993, claims a fertility
restorer gene of a Raphanus plant which is introduced into a Brassica
plant by cell fusion or intergeneric cross. This application does not
disclose (1) a restorer of ogura cytoplasmic male sterility which
maintains decreased glucosinolate levels in the oilseed of an F.sub.1
generation or (2) the advantageous use of a restorer to develop restorer
inbreds and to develop single cross hybrid combinations for commercial
products (where the restorer is used as a male inbred).
[0017] To attempt to avoid the high glucosinolate content of INRA's
restorer of ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, INRA and Serasem (UNCAC)
have developed a Brassica napus variety called SYNERGY.RTM.. SYNERGY is a
cross of ogura cytoplasmic male sterile SAMOURAI (bred by INRA) and male
fertile FALCON.RTM. (bred by NPZ). FALCON does not carry the restorer
gene for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility. Therefore, the F.sub.1 hybrid
is male sterile. SYNERGY is sold as a "composite hybrid line" (CHL) which
consists of a blend of roughly 80% male sterile F.sub.1, hybrid (SYNERGY)
and 20% male fertile (FALCON), which provides pollen for seed-set on the
male sterile F.sub.1 plants in the farmer's field.
[0018] There are a number of difficulties, however, in relying upon a
composite hybrid line. The most important are: (1) that Brassica napus is
a self-pollinating species, so under poor pollination conditions (such as
prolonged cool, wet weather) there may be inadequate pollen movement from
the male fertile plants to the F.sub.1 hybrid plants, resulting in poor
seed set and yield, and (2) that the F.sub.1, hybrid plants are more
vigorous than the FALCON plants, so the former may outcompete the latter,
resulting in too little pollen being available for optimal seed set and
yield on the F.sub.1 plants.
[0019] To date, no one has been able to develop an improved restorer
having a homozygous (fixed) restorer gene (RfRf) for ogura cytoplasmic
male sterility whose oilseeds have low glucosinolate levels. The restorer
must be homozygous (RfRf) so that it can be used to develop restorer
inbreds or, as male inbreds, in making single cross hybrid combinations
for commercial product development. Ideally, glucosinolate levels would
be well below those set out in standards for canola in various countries.
That way, breeders could use the improved restorer to produce Brassica
inbreds and hybrids having oilseeds with low glucosinolate levels. This
would benefit farmers, who could then plant Brassica hybrids which,
following pollination, would yield oilseeds having low glucosinolate
levels and other desirable characteristics.
[0020] In many countries, oilseeds produced by farmers for crushing or for
export are not checked for their glucosinolate content. Sometimes a
particular lot of canola may have high glucosinolate content, resulting
in contamination of the bulk grain to which the poor quality canola is
added. It would be an improvement if the glucosinolate content of
oilseeds was well below the standards set by various countries in order
to avoid contamination of the bulk grain.
[0021] Thus, there remains a need for an improved Brassica plant which is
a homozygous restorer of fertility for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility
and which produces an oilseed with low glucosinolate content. To date,
Brassica plants which are restorers of fertility for ogura cytoplasmic
male sterility (i) have been heterozygous, rather than homozygous
(fixed), for the restorer trait, or (ii) have not produced oilseeds with
low glucosinolate content. Indeed, glucosinolate content of such oilseeds
has been higher than 30 .mu.mol/gram of oil-free meal.
[0022] It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved
mature Brassica plant which is a homozygous restorer for ogura
cytoplasmic male sterility and which has a glucosinolate content of less
than 30 .mu.mol/gram of seed. This restorer could be used to produce
restorer inbreds or hybrids with low glucosinolate content. This would
allow production of fully-restored, single cross hybrids with
genetically-low glucosinolate content in both the hybrid seed and in the
oilseed harvested from the hybrid plants.
[0023] It is an object of the present invention to provide a Brassica
oilseed of the Brassica plant containing a nuclear restorer for ogura
cytoplasmic male sterility and having an improved glucosinolate level.
[0024] It is another object of the present invention to provide improved
Brassica inbred lines, using the restorer. Another object is to use the
restorer as a male inbred in making single cross hybrid combinations to
develop commercial products.
[0025] It is another object of the present invention to provide an oil and
edible vegetable meal having an improved glucosinolate level following
simple crushing and extraction.
[0026] These and other objects and advantages of the invention will be
apparent to those skilled in the art from a reading of the following
description and appended claims.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0027] This invention relates to a Brassica plant comprising a homozygous
fertility restorer gene for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, wherein
upon pollination the plant yields oilseeds having a total glucosinolate
content of not more than 30 .mu.mol per gram, 25 .mu.mol per gram or 20
.mu.mol per gram.
[0028] The oilseed of a Brassica plant comprising a homozygous fertility
restorer gene for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility and having a
glucosinolate content of less than than 30 .mu.mol per gram, 25 .mu.mol
per gram or 20 .mu.)mol per gram, may be used for preparing oil and/or
meal.
[0029] This invention also relates to a Brassica plant comprising a
homozygous fertility restorer gene for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility,
wherein upon pollination the plant yields oilseeds having (i) a total
glucosinolate content of not more than 30 .mu.mol per gram and an erucic
acid content of no more than 2 percent by weight based upon the total
fatty acid content, (ii) a total glucosinolate content of not more than
25 .mu.mol per gram and an erucic acid content of no more than 2 percent
by weight based upon the total fatty acid content or (iii) a total
glucosinolate content of not more than 20 .mu.mol per gram and an erucic
acid content of no more than 2 percent by weight based upon the total
fatty acid content.
[0030] The Brassica plant may be Brassica napus , Brassica campestris or
Brassica juncea . It may be designated as 95SN-9369, 96FNW-1792,
96FNW-1822, 96FNW-1348, 96FNW-1628 or their sub-lines. The sub-lines may
be selected from a group consisting of 97SN-1650 (sub-line of 95SN-9369),
97SN-1651 (sub-line of 95SN-9369), 96FNW1792-03 (sub-line of 96FNW-1792),
96FNW1822-07 (sub-line of 96FNW1822) and 96FNW1822-08 (sub-line of
96FNW1822).
[0031] An inbred Brassica plant may be produced using this plant. A hybrid
Brassica plant may be produced using this plant. Upon pollination, the
inbred or hybrid plant yields oilseed having a total glucosinolate
content of (i) not more than 30 .mu.mol per gram, (ii) not more than 25
.mu.mol per gram, or (iii) not more than 20 .mu.mol per gram.
[0032] This invention also includes an oilseed of the Brassica plant or
from the inbred or hybrid Brassica plant. The oilseed may be present as a
component of a substantially homogeneous assemblage of oilseeds which
possess the specified glucosinolate content. Oil of the oilseed is also
part of this invention. The oilseed may be formed on Brassica napus ,
Brassica campestris or Brassica juncea. The mature Brassica oilseed is
capable of yielding an endogenous vegetable oil having a glucosinolate
content of no more than (i) 30 .mu.mol per gram, (ii) 25 .mu.mol per
gram, or (iii) 20 .mu.mol per gram.
[0033] Meal which is substantially oil free and which is produced from
this oilseed is also part of this invention. The meal has a glucosinolate
content of no more than (i) 30 .mu.mol per gram, (ii) 25 .mu.mol per
gram, or (iii) 20 .mu.mol per gram.
[0034] This invention also relates to a part of the Brassica plant of this
invention. The plant part may be selected from a group consisting of
nucleic acid sequences (RNA, mRNA, DNA, cDNA), tissue, cells, pollen,
ovules, roots, leaves, oilseeds, microspores, vegetative parts, whether
mature or embryonic.
[0035] The Brassica plant of this invention may be used to breed a novel
Brassica line. The breeding may be selected from a group consisting of
isolation and transformation, conventional breeding, pedigree breeding,
crossing, self-pollination, haploidy, single seed descent and
backcrossing.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0036] The invention will now be described in relation to the figures in
which:
[0037] FIG. 1 illustrates by way of exemplification the formation of new
Brassica napus plant material in accordance with the present invention
designated 96FNW-1822 as described in greater detail in Example 3.
[0038] FIG. 2 illustrates by way of exemplification the formation of new
Brassica napus plant material in accordance with the present invention
designated 96FNW-1348 as described in greater detail in Examples 3 and 4.
[0039] FIG. 3 illustrates by way of exemplification the formation of new
Brassica napus plant material in accordance with the present invention
designated 96FNW-1628 as described in greater detail in Example 3.
[0040] FIG. 4 illustrates by way of exemplification the formation of new
Brassica napus plant material in accordance with the present invention
designated 96FNW-1792 as described in greater detail in Example 1 and 2.
[0041] FIG. 5 illustrates by way of exemplification the formation of new
Brassica napus plant material in accordance with the present invention
designated 95SN-9369 and its Descendants (97SN-1650, 97SN-1651 and
others) as described in greater detail in Example 6.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0042] Methods for Determining Glucosinolates
[0043] The glucosinolate levels discussed herein are determined in
accordance with two standard procedures, namely (1) high performance
liquid chromatography (HPLC), as described in ISO 9167-1:1992(E), for
quantification of total, intact glucosinolates, and (2) gas-liquid
chromatography for quantification of trimethylsilyl (TMS) derivatives of
extracted and purified desulfoglucosinolates, as described by Sosulski
and Dabrowski (1984). Both the HPLC and TMS methods for determining the
glucosinolate levels discussed herein involve analysis of the solid
component of the seed after crushing and oil extraction, (i.e., the
de-fatted or oil-free meal).
[0044] Method for Determining Fatty Acid Profile
[0045] The fatty acid concentrations discussed herein are determined in
accordance with a standard procedure wherein the oil is removed from the
Brassica oilseeds by crushing and is extracted as fatty acid methyl
esters following reaction with methanol and sodium methoxide. Next the
resulting ester is analyzed for fatty acid content by gas liquid
chromatography using a capillary column which allows separation on the
basis of the degree of unsaturation and chain length. This analysis
procedure is described in the work of J.K. Daun et al, 1983, which is
herein incorporated by reference.
[0046] Statement of Invention
[0047] A novel edible endogenous vegetable meal is obtained from an
improved Brassica oilseed that possesses glucosinolate and, optionally,
erucic acid, in a low concentration. The Brassica oilseed contains the
homozygous nuclear restorer gene for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility.
Fewer glucosinolates are subjected to the enzyme myrosinase, which
produces toxic by-products. The novel edible endogenous meal of the
present invention is formed by the simple crushing of the Brassica
oilseeds and the simple physical separation of the solid component of the
seed - the solid meal -from the oil component.
[0048] The Brassica oilseeds of the present invention possess a
glucosinolate content in the solid component before crushing and
extraction of the oil component of less than 30 .mu.mol/gram, and most
preferably, less than 20 .mu.mol/gram. The glucosinolate content may be
any one or a mixture of alkenyl (3-butenyl glucosinolate, 4-pentenyl
glucosinolate, 2-hydroxy-3-butenyl glucosinolate, and
2-hydroxy-4-pentenyl glucosinolate), MSGL (methylthiobutenyl
glucosinolate and methylthiopentenyl glucosinolate) and indole
(3-indoylmethyl glucosinolate and 1-methoxy-3-indoylmethyl
glucosinolate). The glucosinolate determination preferably is made on the
air-dry-oil-free solid as measured by the gas liquid chromatography
(TMS-based) method of the Canadian Grain Commission. The glucosinolate
levels commonly are made possible by selecting starting materials which
already are known to form the desired glucosinolate content, and by
making selections which retain this value following combination with the
recited traits.
[0049] Generating Inbred Plants Using Restorer
[0050] The restorer Brassica plant of this invention may be used for
inbreeding using known techniques. The homozygous restorer gene of the
Brassica plant can be introduced into Brassica inbred lines by repeated
backcrosses of the Brassica plant. For instance, the resulting oilseeds
may be planted in accordance with conventional Brassica-growing
procedures and following self-pollination Brassica oilseeds are formed
thereon. Again, the resulting oilseeds may be planted and following
self-pollination, next generation Brassica oilseeds are formed thereon.
The initial development of the line (the first couple of generations of
the Brassica oilseed) preferably is carried out in a greenhouse in which
the pollination is carefully controlled and monitored. This way, the
glucosinolate content of the Brassica oilseed for subsequent use in field
trials can be verified. In subsequent generations, planting of the
Brassica oilseed preferably is carried out in field trials. Additional
Brassica oilseeds which are formed as a result of such self-pollination
in the present or a subsequent generation are harvested and are subjected
to analysis for the desired trait, using techniques known to those
skilled in the art.
[0051] Generating Hybrid Plants Using Restorer as Male Parent
[0052] This invention enables a plant breeder to incorporate the desirable
qualities of an ogura restorer of cytoplasmic male sterility into a
commercially desirable Brassica hybrid variety. Brassica plants may be
regenerated from the ogura restorer of this invention using known
techniques. For instance, the resulting oilseeds may be planted in
accordance with conventional Brassica-growing procedures and following
cross-pollination Brassica oilseeds are formed on the female parent. The
planting of the Brassica oilseed may be carried out in a greenhouse or in
field trials. Additional Brassica oilseeds which are formed as a result
of such cross-pollination in the present generation are harvested and are
subjected to analysis for the desired trait. Brassica napus , Brassica
campestris , and Brassica juncea are Brassica species which could be used
in this invention using known techniques.
[0053] The hybrid may be a single-cross hybrid, a double-cross hybrid, a
three-way cross hybrid, a composite hybrid, a blended hybrid, a fully
restored hybrid and any other hybrid or synthetic variety that is know to
those skilled in the art, using the restorer of this invention.
[0054] In generating hybrid plants, it is critical that the female parent
(P.sub.1) that is cross-bred with the ogura restorer (P.sub.2) have a
glucosinolate level that is sufficiently low to ensure that the seed of
the F.sub.1 hybrid has glucosinolate levels within regulatory levels. The
glucosinolate level of the seed harvested from the F.sub.1 hybrid is
roughly the average of the glucosinolate levels of the female parent
(P.sub.1) and of the male parent (P.sub.2). The glucosinolate level of
the hybrid grain (F.sub.2) is reflective of the genotype of the F.sub.1
hybrid. For example, if the objective is to obtain hybrid grain (F.sub.2)
having a glucosinolate level of less than 20 .mu.mol/gram, and the male
parent (ogura restorer) has a glucosinolate level of 15 .mu.mol/gram, the
female parent must have a glucosinolate level of less than 25
.mu.mol/gram.
[0055] Generating Plants from Plant Parts
[0056] Brassica plants may be regenerated from the plant parts of the
restorer Brassica plant of this invention using known techniques. For
instance, the resulting oilseeds may be planted in accordance with
conventional Brassica-growing procedures and following self-pollination
Brassica oilseeds are formed thereon. Alternatively, doubled haploid
plantlets may be extracted to immediately form homozygous plants.
[0057] Vegetable meal
[0058] In accordance with the present invention it is essential that the
edible endogenous vegetable meal of the Brassica oilseed contain
glucosinolate levels of not more than 30 .mu.mol/gram of seed. The female
parent which can be used in breeding Brassica plants to yield oilseed
Brassica germplasm containing the requisite genetic determinant for this
glucosinolate trait is known and is publicly available. For instance,
Brassica germplasm for this trait has been available in North America
since the mid-1970's.
[0059] Representative winter rape varieties that include the genetic means
for the expression of low glucosinolate content and that are commercially
available in Europe, for example, include, PRESTOL.RTM., EUROL.RTM.,
BRISTOL.RTM. (each available from Semences Cargill), TAPIDOR.RTM.,
SAMOURAI.RTM. (available from Serasem). Representative spring rape
varieties that include the genetic means for the expression of low
glucosinolate content and that are commercially available in Canada, for
example, include BULLET.RTM., GARRISON.RTM. and KRISTANA.RTM. (each
available from Svalof Weibull).
[0060] Other winter rape varieties that include the genetic means for the
expression of low glucosinolate content and that are commercially
available in Europe include APEX.RTM. GOELAND.RTM., FALCON.RTM.,
LIRAJET.RTM., CAPITOL.RTM. and EXPRESS.RTM..
[0061] Also, genetic means for the expression of low glucosinolate trait
can be obtained from American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, Md
20852. Seeds were deposited with the ATCC, comprising restorer line
97SN-1650 (Accession No. ATCC 97838), 97SN-1651 (Accession No. ATCC
97839), 96FNW1792-03 (Accession No. ATCC 209001) and 96FNW1822-07
(Accession No. 209002), discussed hereafter. Such low levels of
glucosinolates in the oilseed Brassica serve to impart increased
commercial value to the meal.
[0062] The edible endogenous vegetable oil of the Brassica oilseeds
contains fatty acids and other traits that are controlled by genetic
means (see US Patent Application entitled, "Improved Oilseed Brassica
Bearing An Endogenous Oil Wherein the Levels of Oleic, Alpha-Linolenic
and Saturated Fatty Acids Are Simultaneously Provided In An Atypical
Highly Beneficial Distribution Via Genetic Control", of Pioneer Hi-Bred
International, Inc., W091/15578; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,387,758,
incorporated herein by reference.) Preferably erucic acid of the Brassica
oilseed is included in a low concentration of no more than 2 percent by
weight based upon the total fatty acid content that is controlled by
genetic means in combination with the other recited components as
specified. The genetic means for the expression of such erucic acid trait
can be derived from numerous commercially available canola varieties
having good agronomic characteristics, such as 46A05, 46A65, BOUNTY.RTM.,
CYCLONE.RTM., DELTA.RTM., EBONY.RTM., GARRISON.RTM., IMPACT.RTM.,
LEGACY.RTM., LEGEND.RTM., PROFIT.RTM., and QUANTUM.RTM.. Each of these
varieties is registered in Canada and is commercially available in that
country.
[0063] Herbicide Resistance
[0064] As is known to those skilled in the art, it is possible to use this
invention to develop a Brassica plant which is a restorer of fertility
for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, produces oilseeds having low
glucosinolate content and has other desirable traits. Additional traits
which are commercially desirable are those which would reduce the cost of
production of the Brassica crop or which would increase the quality of
the Brassica crop. Herbicide resistance, for example, is a desirable
trait (see Example 4-1 and 4-2 in which ogura restorer lines with low
glucosinolate content and different types of herbicide resistance have
been developed).
[0065] If desired, a genetic means for tolerance to a herbicide when
applied at a rate which is capable of destroying rape plants which lack
said genetic means optionally may also be incorporated in the rape plants
of the present invention as described in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No.
5,387,758, that is herein incorporated by reference.
[0066] Breeding Techniques
[0067] It has been found that the combination of desired 20 traits
described herein, once established, can be transferred into other plants
within the same Brassica napus , Brassica campestris , or Brassica juncea
species by conventional plant breeding techniques involving
cross-pollination and selection of the progeny. It surprisingly has been
demonstrated that the restorer gene in combination with low glucosinolate
levels is highly heritable, can be transmitted to progeny, and can be
recovered in segregating progeny in subsequent generations following
crossing.
[0068] Also, once established the desired traits can be transferred
between the napus, campestris, and juncea species using the same
conventional plant breeding techniques involving pollen transfer and
selection. The transfer of traits between Brassica species, such as napus
and campestris, by standard plant breeding techniques is already well
documented in the technical literature. (See, for instance, Tsunada et
al., 1980).
[0069] As an example of the transfer of the desired traits described
herein from napus to campestris, one may select a commercially available
campestris variety such as REWARD.RTM., GOLDRUSH.RTM., and KLONDIKE.RTM.,
and carry out an interspecific cross with an appropriate plant derived
from a napus breeding line, such as that discussed hereafter (i.e.,
95SN-9369). Alternatively, other napus breeding lines may be reliably and
independently developed using known techniques. After the interspecific
cross, members of the F.sub.1 generation are self-pollinated to produce
F.sub.2 oilseed. Selection for the desired traits is then conducted on
single F.sub.2 plants which are then backcrossed with the campestris
parent through the number of generations required to obtain a euploid
(n=10) campestris line exhibiting the desired combination of traits.
[0070] In order to avoid inbreeding depression (e.g., loss of vigor and
fertility) that may accompany the inbreeding of Brassica campestris ,
selected, i.e. BC.sub.1 plants that exhibit similar desired traits while
under genetic control advantageously can be sib-mated. The resulting
oilseed from these crosses can be designated BC.sub.1SIB.sub.1 oilseed.
Accordingly, the fixation of the desired alleles can be achieved in a
manner analogous to self-pollination while simultaneously minimizing the
fixation of other alleles that potentially exhibit a negative influence
on vigor and fertility.
[0071] A representative Brassica juncea variety of low glucosinolate
content and low erucic acid content into which the desired traits can be
similarly transferred include the breeding lines, 96SJ-2690, 96SJ-2691,
and 96SJ-2692.
[0072] Stand of Plants
[0073] The oilseed Brassica plants of the present invention preferably are
provided as a substantially uniform stand of plants that are capable of
forming oilseeds providing a meal which exhibits the recited improved
glucosinolate levels. The Brassica oilseeds of the present invention
preferably are provided as a substantially homogeneous assemblage of
oilseeds which possess the improved glucosinolate levels.
[0074] The improved oilseed Brassica plant of the present invention is
capable of production in the field under conventional oilseed Brassica
growing conditions that are commonly utilized during oilseed production
on a commercial scale. Such oilseed Brassica exhibits satisfactory
agronomic characteristics and is capable upon self-pollination of forming
oilseeds that possess the glucosinolate levels within the meal present
therein. For the purposes of the present invention, "satisfactory
agronomic characteristics" is defined as the ability to yield an oilseed
harvest under standard field growing conditions having glucosinolate
levels that are sufficiently low for registration of canola varieties
(suitable for commercial use).
[0075] The ability to provide in a single edible endogenous vegetable meal
the improved glucosinolate levels of the present invention using the
ogura restorer of the present invention, is considered to be totally
unexpected. An edible endogenous meal as presently claimed is novel and
its production previously eluded all other researchers. One skilled in
oilseed Brassica technology reasonably would have concluded that the
ogura restorer is genetically linked to the gene regulating glucosinolate
levels, i.e. that both genes are on a fragment of Raphanus DNA that has
been integrated into a B. napus chromosome. Whereas there is no alletic
variation within the Raphanus DNA fragment, there is no opportunity for a
crossover event to separate the Rf gene from the gene coding for elevated
glucosinolate content, thus precluding the simultaneous expression of the
restorer and low glucosinolate levels.
[0076] The improved edible endogenous vegetable meal of the present
invention, in a preferred embodiment, exhibits a satisfactory flavor that
can be described as being generally comparable to that of canola meal.
Representative uses of the meal include feed for livestock.
Representative uses of the oil include salad, frying, cooking, spraying,
and viscous-food product applications. Handling and inventory
considerations are greatly simplified since the endogenous vegetable meal
and oil of the present invention fulfills the requirements for a wide
variety of end uses. Each of these benefits is achieved in a
straightforward manner in an endogenous product that inherently possesses
superior health and nutritional properties.
[0077] The following Examples are presented as specific illustrations of
the present invention. It should be understood, however, that the
invention is not limited to the specific details set forth in the
Examples.
EXAMPLE 1
[0078] Development of the improved OGURA restorer line, 96FNW-1792,
including methodology for glucosinolate determination and assessment of
fixity of the Rf gene (see FIG. 4).
1
Generation: Parent to Fl
Time Period: November,
1992 to April, 1993
Seed Planted: R40 (original restorer source
from INRA) and
BRISTOL (commercial winter canola from Semences
Cargill, France)
Seed Harvested: Fl = 93CWN-867 (= R40
.times. BRISTOL)
Methods: Parents were grown, and all crossing was
carried out
in a controlled environment in the greenhouse. R40
(restorer source) was used as the female parent so
that all
resulting materials would carry the OGURA
cytoplasm.
Generation: F1 to F2
Time Period: May, 1993 to November, 1993
Seed Planted: F1 = 93CWN-867 (= R40 .times. BRISTOL)
Seed
Harvested: F2 = 94CWN-2133
Methods: F1 plants were grown out to
flowering in the
greenhouse. Sterile plants were discarded;
fertile
plants were self-pollinated to produce F2 seed. At
maturity, F2 seed was harvested from each F1 plant
separately.
Each F2 seedlot was screened for glucosinolates using
the
glucose reaction method. The seedlots with the
lowest
glucosinolate content were bulked to produce
the F2 seed of
94CWN-2133 which could be sampled
for F3 production.
Generation; F2 to F3
Time Period: December, 1993 to June, 1994
Seed Planted: F2 = 94CWN-2133
Seed Harvested: F3 = 95FNW-7703
(selected F3 line)
Methods: Five hundred F2 plants from the
seedlot,
94CWN-2133, were grown out in the greenhouse.
Sterile plants were discarded at flowering, and fertile
plants
were self-pollinated. At maturity, F3 seed was
harvested from
each F2 plant individually.
Each F3 seed line was screened for
glucosinolate
content, using the Palladium method. Seed of
checks,
grown in the same greenhouse environment as the F3s,
was included in this analysis. The F3 seed line,
95FNW-7703,
was identified as having less than
25 umol/g total glucosinolate
content, so was advanced
into the field nursery program.
Generation: F3 to F4
Time Period: August, 1994 to July, 1995
Seed Planted: F3 = 95FNW-7703
Seed Harvested: F4 = 96FNW1792
(selected F4 line)
Methods: 95FNW-7703 was planted in the restorer
selection
nursery in Frouville, France in August, 1994.
Following emergence, there were Ca. 60 plants in a
two row
nursery plot. Two elite commercial checks,
Bristol and Goeland,
were included at frequent
intervals in the nursery as checks for
comparison.
[0079] At early flowering, 10 single plants within 95FNW-7703 were
self-pollinated by bagging. The fertility of all plants within the line
was assessed by scoring pollen production (male fertility) and seed set
within developing pods (female fertility). At the end of flowering, the
pollination bags were removed.
[0080] At maturity, F4 seed was harvested from each of the 10 selfed
plants individually. Seed quality on each of the F4 seedlots was
assessed; lines with shrivelled and/or mouldy seed were discarded.
[0081] Mature, cleaned seed of the remaining F4 lines was analysed for
glucosinolate content by the Palladium method. Seed of the Bristol and
Goeland checks was harvested, and glucosinolates determined by HPLC. Seed
from these checks was included in the Palladium analysis to allow
selection of low glucosinolate Rf lines. The average of Bristol and
Goeland plus one standard deviation (ca. 18 umol/g total glucosinolates)
was used as a culling level. The F4 seed line, 96FNW-1792, had less than
18 umol glucosinolate content, and had the lowest glucosinolate content
of any of the 95FNW-7703-derived lines.
[0082] The fertility assessment of 95FNW-7703 identified no sterile plants
in a sample of ca. 50 individuals. As the Rf gene is a single, dominant
gene, if 95FNW-7703 was segregating for the Rf gene, steriles would be
expected in a frequency of 0.25 with perfect sampling. Statistically, the
probability of finding no steriles in a sample of 50 if the line is
segregating is .000000562. Based on this, we can conclude that 95FNW-7703
is fixed for the Rf gene, meaning that it was derived from an F2 plant
which was homozygous Rf.
EXAMPLE 2
[0083] Development of F5 sub-lines of the improved OGURA restorer,
96FNW-1792 (continued from Example 1, see FIG. 4).
2
Generation: F4 to F5
Time Period: August, 1995 to
July, 1996
Seed Planted: F4 = 96FNW-1792
Seed Harvested: F5
= 96FNW-1792-02, -03, and -04
Methods: 96FNW-1792 was planted in a
four row plot in the
1995/96 restorer nursery at Frouville,
France. After
emergence, there were >100 plants in the nursery
plot.
BRISTOL and GOELAND were planted as running
checks
in the nursery.
[0084] During the winter of 95/96, the homozygosity of 20 individual
plants within 96FNW-1792 was assessed by determining the PGI-2 isozyme
phenotype on leaf tissue extract subjected to starch gel electrophoresis,
as described by Delourme and Eber (1992). All plants were found to be
homozygous for the radish PGI-2 phenotype. Since this phenotype is the
product of a PGI-2 allele from radish, which is very tightly linked to
the OGURA Rf gene, these results indicate that 96FNW-1792, and the 20
specific plants sampled, are fixed for the Rf gene (RfRf).
[0085] At flowering, the 20 selected plants were self-pollinated by
bagging. Male and female fertility of all plants within the 96FNW-1792
plot were assessed as described in Example 1. No sterile plants were
found in the sample of 100 plants, again indicating that 96FNW-1792 is
fixed for the Rf gene. Seed set (number of ovules per silique) was within
the normal range for Brassica napus . Pollination bags were removed at
the end of flowering.
[0086] At maturity, seed of each of the 20 plants was harvested
individually, threshed and cleaned. The lines with the best seed quality
were selected, and total glucosinolate content on these materials was
determined by HPLC. The total gluclosinolate content
(indole+MSGL+alkenyl) for three of the selected sub-lines is given in
FIG. 4 (F5 generation).
[0087] A sample of 20 plants of each of these three sub-lines was grown
out in the greenhouse. Leaf tissue was sampled from each plant within
each sub-line, and PGI-2 isozyme analysis carried out. The results
indicated that the three lines, and all of the plants within them, are
fixed for the Rf gene.
[0088] The three sub-lines (96FNW-1792-02, -03, and -04) are currently
being finished as restorer inbreds. They are also being used as male
inbreds in making numerous single cross hybrid combinations for
commercial product development.
EXAMPLE 3
[0089] Development of the improved OGURA restorer lines 96FNW-1822,
96FNW-1348, 96FNW-1628 (see FIGS. 1, 2 and 3).
[0090] Generations of plants shown in FIGS. 1, 2 and 3 were grown in the
time periods and using similar source material and methods indicated in
Example 1. Glucosinolate and fertility assessments were conducted as
indicated in Example 1. Elite commercial checks were included at frequent
intervals as checks for comparison. Again, results of fertility
assessments indicated that a number of sub-lines (as shown in FIGS. 1, 2
and 3) were fixed for the Rf gene and had low glucosinolate levels.
[0091] Plants of sub-lines of restorer lines 96FNW-1822 and 96FNW-1348
were grown in France during the winter of 1996-97. Sound seed of these
plants was assessed for fertility, and analysed for glucosinolate content
by HPLC. Fertility observations showed that the sub-lines were fixed for
the Rf gene. The HPLC analysis revealed less than 15 uM glucosinolate
content in each of these sub-lines. Test crosses were conducted to assess
transmission of the restorer gene. Table 1 below illustrates the results
of the fertility assessments and glucosinolate content.
3TABLE 1
Fertility observations and glucosinolate
content of sub-lines grown in
France during the winter of 1996/97.
Total
Glucosinolates No. of fertile and sterile plants
in a
CVN BLN (umol/g by HPLC) sample (France, 1997)*
Code
Code 1996/97 Inbred Test Cross
(New) (Previous) (France) Fertile
Sterile Fertile Sterile
NW1717 96FNW-1822-2 8.73 2,000 0
321 1
96FNW-1822-5 10.16 2,000 0 412 1
96FNW-1822-7 8.14
2,000 0 420 0
96FNW-1822-8 9.82 2,000 0 346 2
NW1712
96FNW-1348-6 14.71 2,000 0 375 2
*Fertile/sterile
classification by visual inspection of flower morphology
EXAMPLE 4
[0092] Development of the improved OGURA restorer line, 96FNW-1348, which
combines low glucosinolate content with desirable agronomic traits and
disease tolerance.
[0093] The following table shows performance data for four fully-restored,
single-cross hybrids involving elite female inbreds and 96FNW-1348. This
data was collected from yield trials at nine European locations in the
1995/96 testing season. Comparisons are made to SYNERGY, a composite
hybrid-line developed by Serasem, France.
4
Yield Maturity Lodging Stem
Hybrid: (% Chk)
Height (1-9)* (1-9) Disease
95-90013 107% 163 5.0 6.5 4.2
95-90002 106% 160 4.0 7.5 5.6
95-90004 106% 148 3.8 5.8 4.2
95-90010 105% 165 3.9 7.5 4.6
95-90006 104% 155 4.0 7.2 4.8
SYNERGY 100% 155 5.4 7.3 4.0
*maturity, lodging and
stem disease scores are on 1-9 scale, where 1 = earliest, most lodging
susceptible, most disease susceptible, and 9 = latest, most lodging
resistant, most disease resistant
EXAMPLE 5
[0094] Development of improved OGURA restorer lines with low glucosinolate
content, desirable agronomic traits, and herbicide resistance.
5-1: Development of elite OGURA restorer lines with resistance to
imidazolinone herbicides:
[0095] 1. Produce F.sub.1 of 96FNW1348 (winter low glucosinolate Rf
line).times.45A71 (spring Pursuit Smart.RTM. variety)
[0096] 2. Germinate F.sub.1 spray seedlings with 100 g/ha of PURSUIT to
confirm resistance
[0097] 3. Produce BC.sub.1F.sub.1 by crossing F.sub.1 to 96FNW1348
[0098] 4. Germinate BC.sub.1F.sub.1 spray seedlings with 100 g/ha PURSUIT,
select 25% of plants with highest level of resistance
[0099] 5. Produce BC.sub.1F.sub.2 by selfing selected plants
[0100] 6. Germinate BC.sub.1F.sub.2, spray seedlings with 400 g/ha
PURSUIT, self most resistant plants, harvest F.sub.3S
[0101] 7. Germinate F.sub.3 lines, spray with 400 g/ha PURSUIT; select
lines in which all plants are resistant, self-pollinate, harvest F4 seed,
confirm low glucosinolate content
[0102] 8. Continue self-pollination with selection in the nursery;
testcross selected imidazolinone resistant (IR) restorer inbreds to elite
IR female inbreds, then evaluate low glucosinolate IR hybrids in yield
trails
5-2: Development of elite OGURA restorer lines with other forms of
herbicide resistance, i.e. Roundup Ready.RTM.), Liberty Link.RTM.:
[0103] 1. Follow procedures outlined for development of IR inbreds and
hybrids, starting with fixed herbicide resistant source
[0104] 2. Once elite, low glucosinolate, herbicide resistant restorer
lines have been identified, these should be used as parents in subsequent
cycles, for crossing with other elite source materials. New herbicide
resistant, low glucosinolate restorer lines can be isolated from these
source materials by haploidy, pedigree breeding, or backcrossing, all of
which are methods familiar to those skilled in the art of rapeseed
breeding.
EXAMPLE 6
[0105] Development of improved OGURA restorer line, designated 95SN-9369
and Descendants (97SN-1650, 97SN-1651 and others) with low glucosinolate
content and desirable agronomic traits
5
Generation: Parent to F1 (two steps: C1 = three-way
cross,
C2 = complex cross)
Time Period: C1 = January, 1994
to April, 1994; C2 = May, 1994 to
August, 1994
Seed
Planted: C1: female = R40 .times. TAPIDOR .RTM. (winter);
male =
BULLET .RTM. (spring) C2: female = C1;
male = KRISTINA .RTM.
.times. GARRISON .RTM.
Methods: All materials were grown and
crossing was performed
in controlled environment greenhouses. The
R40 .times.
TAPIDOR .RTM. F1 used as the female in C1 was from
the winter canola breeding program. C2 was made
using
several fertile C1 plants as female, and a bulk
pollen sample
from several male plants. The final
product of C2 was the complex
cross F1, ((R40 .times.
TAPIDOR .RTM.) .times. BULLET .RTM.)
.times. (KRISTINA .RTM. .times.
GARRISON .RTM.).
Generation: F1 to F2
Time Period: September to December, 1994
Seed Planted: F1 = ((R40 .times. TAPIDOR .RTM.) .times. BULLET .RTM.)
.times.
(KRISTINA .RTM. .times. GARRISON .RTM.)
Seed
Harvested: F2 = 95SN-7805
Methods: 32 F1 plants were grown to
flowering in the
greenhouse and self-pollinated to produce F2
seed.
At maturity, F2 seed from each F1 plant was harvested
separately and analysed for glucosinolate content by
thymol
method (colorimetric quantification). F2
seedlots with the lowest
glucosinolate content, in
comparison to a check variety, were
selected for
further breeding.
Generation: F2 to F3
Time Period: January, 1995 to April, 1995
Seed Planted: F2 =
95SN-7805
Seed Harvested: F3 = 95SN-9369 (selected F3)
Methods: Several hundred F2 plants were grown out in the
greenhouse. At flowering, sterile plants were
discarded, and all
fertile plants were self-pollinated
by bagging. Bags were removed
at the end of
flowering, and seed was allowed to fully mature on
the plants prior to harvest. All F3 seed lines (harvested
from individual F2 plants) were screened for
glucosinolate
content by the thymol method. The F3
seed line, 95SN-9369 was
selected as being among the
lowest in glucosinolate content.
Generation: F3 to F4
Time Period: May, 1995 to August, 1995
Seed Planted: F3 = 95SN-9369
Seed Harvested: F4 = 96SN-3077,
96SN-0853, and others (see
Figure 5)
Methods: A large
sample of F3 plants from 95SN-9369 was
grown to flowering in the
greenhouse, and bagged to
produce F4 seed. Bags were removed at
the end of
flowering; F4 seed was harvested from each F3 plant
individually at full maturity. Each F4 seed line (seed
harvested from a single F3 plant) was analysed for
glucosinolate
content by the thymol method. Five F4s
were selected for further
breeding (see Figure 5),
including 96SN-3077 and 96SN-0853.
Generation: F4 to F5
Time Period: September, 1995 to December,
1995
Seed Planted: F4 = 96SN-3077, 96SN-0853 and others (see
Figure 5)
Seed Harvested: F5 = 96SN-3424 (from 96SN-0853),
97SN-0180 (from
96SN-3077) and others (see Figure 5 for details).
Methods: Fifteen plants of each of the selected F4 lines were
planted in the greenhouse, along with check varieties
(for
glucosinolate selection). Each plant was bagged at
flowering;
bags were removed at the end of flowering
and seed was harvested
from individual plants at full
maturity. Each F5 seed line (seed
from a single F4
plant) was analysed for glucosinolate content by
the
thymol method. The best F5 from each F4 was
selected
for further breeding.
Generation: F5 to F6 (97SN-0180 was not
included in this
planting)
Time Period: January, 1996 to
April, 1996
Seed Planted: F5 = 96SN-3424 and others (see Figure 5)
Seed Harvested: F6 = 96SN-9142 (from 96SN-3424) and others (see
Figure 5 for details)
Methods: Fifteen plants of each of the
selected F5 lines were
planted in the greenhouse, along with
check varieties
(for glucosinolate selection). Each plant was
bagged at
flowering; bags were removed at the end of flowering
and seed was harvested from individual plants at full
maturity. Each F6 seed line (seed from a single F5
plant) was
analysed for glucosinolate content by the
thymol method. The best
F6 from each F5 was
selected for further breeding.
Generation: Field evaluation - F5 to F6 for 97SN-0180; F6 to F7
for 96SN-9142
Time Period: May, 1996 to August, 1996
Seed
Planted: F5 = 975N-0180
F6 = 96SN-9142 and others (see Figure 5)
Seed Harvested: F6 = 97SN-1650
F7 = 975N-1651 (from
965N-9142) and others (see
Figure 5 for details)
Methods:
Selected lines were planted in two row plots in an
isolation near
Hillsburgh, Ontario. After emergence,
there were more than 100
plants per line. At flowering,
every plant in a selected line was
scored for
fertility/sterility, and 20 plants were bagged to
produce
selfed seed. Bags were removed at the end of
flowering, and seed was harvested at full maturity.
Single plants
with sound seed were analysed for
glucosinolate content by TMS.
Fertility observations
showed that both 97SN-1651 and 97SN-1650
were
fixed (homozygous) for the Rf gene. The TMS
analysis
revealed less than 15 uM glucosinolate
content in both of these
lines (see Figure 5 for precise
data). Both lines were observed
to have acceptable
maturity, standability (lodging resistance)
and plant
type in the nursery. These lines, and line 97SN-1649,
have been advanced into seed production during the
winter
of 1996/97 in Chile, where they are being
crossed to several
elite ogura male sterile inbreds
(females) to produce single
cross hybrids. The
resulting hybrids were evaluated in
multi-locations
trials in western Canada in summer, 1997. Seed
from
the plants grown in Chile during the winter of 1996/97
were planted in Ontario in 1997. Seeds from the
resulting
plants were harvested in the summer of 1997
and evaluated for
fertility and glucosinolate content.
Test crosses were conducted
to assess transmission of
the restorer gene. The results are
shown in Table 2
below.
[0106]
6TABLE 2
Results of fertility observations and
glucosinolate analysis of lines 97SN-
1649 and 97SN-1650 grown in
Chile during 1996-97 and Ontario during
the spring of 1997.
No. of fertile and sterile
Total Glucosino- plants in a
sample (On-
lates (umol/g by tario, 1997)*
CVN BLN TMS)
Inbred Test Cross
Code Code 96/97 1997 Fert- Ster- Fert- Ster-
(New) (Previous) (Chile) (Ontario) ile ile ile ile
NS3059 97SN-1649 11.45 11.32 600 0 38 2
NS3060 97SN-1650 14.40
14.01 600 0 42 0
*Fertile/sterile classification by visual
inspection of flower morphology
[0107] A person skilled in the art could use the Brassica plant of this
invention to develop a Brassica plant which is a restorer of fertility
for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, produces oilseeds having low
glucosinolate content and which is resistant to one or more herbicides.
Herbicide resistance could include, for example, resistance to the
herbicide glyphosate, sold by Monsanto under the trade mark ROUNDUP.
Glyphosate is an extremely popular herbicide as it accumulates only in
growing parts of plants and has little or no
soil residue.
[0108] There are two genes involved in glyphosate resistance in canola.
One is for an enzyme which detoxifies the herbicide: it is called GOX,
glyphosate oxidoreductase. The other is a mutant target gene, for a
mutant form of EPSP synthase. One skilled in the art could use GOX or CP4
with promoters in canola. Basically, the genes are introduced into a
plant cell, such as a plant cell of this invention carrying the restorer
gene for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, and then the plant cell grown
into a Brassica plant.
[0109] As another example, a person skilled in the art could use the
Brassica plant of this invention to develop a Brassica plant which is a
restorer of fertility for ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, produces
oilseeds having low glucosinolate content and which is resistant to the
family of imidazoline herbicides, sold by Cyanamid under trade-marks such
as PURSUIT. Resistance to the imidazolines Cyanamid under trade-marks
such as PURSUIT. Resistance to the imidazolines is conferred by the gene
AHAS or ALS. One skilled in the art could introduce the mutant form of
AHAS present in varieties such as the Pioneer.RTM. spring canola variety,
45A71, into a Brassica plant which also carries the Rf gene for the ogura
cytoplasm. Alternatively, one could introduce a modified form of the AHAS
gene with a suitable promoter into a canola plant cell through any of
several methods. Basically, the genes are introduced into a plant cell,
such as a plant cell of this invention carrying the restorer gene for
ogura cytoplasmic male sterility, and then the plant cell grown into a
Brassica plant.
[0110] All publications, patents and patent applications are herein
incorporated by reference in their entirety to the same extent as if each
individual publication, patent or patent application was specifically and
individually indicated to be incorporated by reference in its entirety.
[0111] The present invention has been described in detail and with
particular reference to the preferred embodiments; however, it will be
understood by one having ordinary skill in the art that changes can be
made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope thereof.
REFERENCES
[0112] J.K. Daun et al, J. Amer. Oil Chem. Soc., 60:1751-1754 (1983)
[0113] Delourme R., F. Eber, M. Renard. "Breeding Double Low Restorer
Lines in Radish Cytoplasmic Male Sterility of Rapeseed (Brassica Napus
L.)." Proc. 9th Int. Rapeseed Conf. Cambridge. England (1995).
[0114] Delourme R., F. Eber, M. Renard. "Radish Cytoplasmic Male Sterility
in Rapeseed: Breeding Restorer Lines with a Good Female Fertility." Proc
8th Int. Rapeseed Conf., Saskatoon, Canada. 1506-1510 (1991).
[0115] Delourme R., A. Bouchereau, N. Hubert, M. Renard, B.S. Landry.
"Identification of RAPD Markers Linked to a Fertility Restorer Gene for
the Ogura Radish Cytoplasmic Male Sterility of Rapeseed (Brassica napus
L.)." Theor. Appi. Gener. 88: 741-748 (1994).
[0116] Delourme, R. and F. Eber. "Linkage Between an Isozyme Marker and a
Restorer Gene in Radish Cytoplasmic Male Sterility of Rapeseed (Brassica
napus L.)." Theor. Appl. Genet. 85:222-228 (1992).
[0117] International Standard ISO 9167-1:1992(E). "Rapeseed -
Determination of glucosinolates content - Part 1: Method using
high-performance liquid chromatography."
[0118] Paul, et al., Theor. Appl. Genet. 72:706-709, (1986).
[0119] Pellan-Delourme, R., Eber, F., Renard, M. 1987. Male fertility
restoration in Brassica napus with radish cytoplasmic male
sterility.Proc. 7th Int. Rapeseed Conf., Poznan, Poland: 199-203.
[0120] Pellan-Delourme, R. and Renard, M. 1988. Cytoplasmic male sterility
in rapeseed (Brassica napus L.): Female fertility of restored rapeseed
with "ogura" and cybrids cytoplasms. Genome 30:234-238.
[0121] Pelletier G., C. Primard. "Molecular. Phenotypic and Genetic
Characterization of Mitochondrial Recombinants in Rapeseed." Proc. 7 th
Int. Rapeseed Conf. Poznau. Poland 113-118 (1987).
[0122] Rakow, G. and D.l. McGregor. "Opportunities and Problems in
Modification of Levels of Rapeseed C.sub.18 Unsaturated Fatty Acids." J.
Am. Oil Chem. Soc. 50(10): 400403, (1973).
[0123] Ratledge, Colin, Dawson, Peter and Rattray, James. 1984.
Biotechnology for the Oils and Fats Industry. American Oil Chemists'
Society, Champaign. 328pp
[0124] Robbelen, Gerhard. "Changes and Limitations of Breeding for
Improved Polyenic Fatty Acids Content in Rapeseed." (Chapter 10) in
"Biotechnology for the Oils and Fats Industry" edited by Colin Ratledge,
Peter Dawson and James Rattray, American Oil Chemists' Society, (1984).
Robbelen, G. and A. Nitsch. Genetical and Physiological Investigations on
Mutants for Polyenic Fatty Acids in Rapeseed, Brassica napus L. Z.
Planzenzuchtg., 75: 93-105, (1975).
[0125] Sosulski, F., and K. Dabrowski. "Determination of Glucosinolates in
Canola Meal and Protein Products by Desulfation and Capillary Gas-Liquid
Chromatrography." J. Agric. Food Chem. 32: 1172-1175 (1984).
[0126] Stefansson, B.R. "The Development of Improved Rapeseed Cultivars."
(Chapter 6) in "High and Low Erucic Acid Rapeseed Oils" edited by John
K.G. Kramer, John K.G., Frank D. Sauer. and Wallace J. Pigden. Academic
Press Canada, Toronto (1983).
[0127] Tsunada, S, K. Hinata, and Gomex Campo. "Brassica Crops and Wild
Alleles Biology and Breeding." Japan Scientific Press, Tokyo (1980).
[0128] The seeds of the subject invention were deposited in the American
Type Culture Collection (ATCC), 12301 Parklawn Drive, Rockville, Md.,
20852, USA
7
Accession
Seed No. Deposit Date
Brassica napus oleifera 97SN-1650 97638 Dec. 23 1996
Brassica
napus oleifera 97SN-1651 97839 Dec. 23 1996
Brassica napus
oteifera 97FNW-1792-03 209001 Apr. 28 1997
Brassica napus oleifera
96FNW-1822-07 209002 Apr. 28 1997
* * * * *