Browse Articles

Article|01 Feb 2019|OPEN
Virus-induced gene silencing and virus-induced flowering in strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) using apple latent spherical virus vectors
Chunjiang Li1 , Noriko Yamagishi2 , Ichiro Kasajima2 and Nobuyuki Yoshikawa,1,2 ,
1Faculty of Agriculture, Iwate University, Morioka 3-18-8, Iwate 020-8550, Japan
2Agri-Innovation Research Center, Iwate University, Morioka 3-18-8, Iwate 020- 8550, Japan
*Corresponding author. E-mail: yoshikawa@iwate-u.ac.jp

Horticulture Research 6,
Article number: 18 (2019)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-018-0106-2
Views: 1169

Received: 31 Jul 2018
Revised: 22 Sep 2018
Accepted: 28 Oct 2018
Published online: 01 Feb 2019

Abstract

Apple latent spherical virus (ALSV) vector is a convenient alternative to genetic transformation in horticultural plants, especially in species recalcitrant to genetic transformation. ALSV, an RNA virus, can infect a wide variety of plant species including major horticultural plants without inducing symptoms. Here, methodologies were developed for infection of ALSV vectors to strawberry seedlings and plantlets cultured in vitro. A seed-propagated F1 hybrid strawberry cultivar 'Yotsuboshi' was aseptically grown on half-strength Murashige–Skoog medium for 1 month and true leaves were inoculated with an ALSV RNA preparation by particle bombardment. ALSV vector infection rates varied from 58 to 100% according to the insertion sequences, in ‘Yotsuboshi’ seedlings. Plantlets (‘Dover’) propagated in vitro could also be infected with ALSV vector at a similar infection rate. For virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS), we prepared an ALSV vector carrying a 201 nucleotide segment of the strawberry phytoene desaturase gene. ‘Yotsuboshi’ and ‘Dover’ plants infected by this vector generated completely white leaves at fifth or sixth true leaves and above. For virus-induced flowering (VIF), we used an ALSV vector expressing the Arabidopsis thaliana flowering locus T gene. Strawberry seedlings infected by this vector started to flower from about 2 months post inoculation and bore fruits with viable seeds. The ALSV vector was no longer detected in any of the seedlings from early-flowered strawberries. Thus, the ALSV vector may be beneficial for examination of gene functions by VIGS in strawberry, and VIF using ALSV vector constitutes an effective new plant breeding technique for the promotion of cross-breeding in strawberry.