Periodic Reporting for period 1 - DEFPOLL (Origins of trait diversity in flowering plants: understanding interactions between plant defence and pollination using molecular, phenotypic and ecological studies of natural selection)
Período documentado: 2018-06-01 hasta 2020-05-31
Results:
Obj/WP 1) Use CRISPR technology to develop “neo-selfing” genotypes from multiple genetic backgrounds.
We sequenced a conserved region of the S-locus for replicate genetic families from an outcrossing population of the study species, Arabidopsis lyrata ssp. lyrata, and then attempted to implement CRISPR-Cas9 based silencing of the S-locus by designing targets unique to each allele. During this time the EU/ECJ passed legislation which placed CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing under the same regulatory framework as GMOs, making it difficult to continue with the planned approach. We thus implemented a parallel approach, relying on manual pollinations. This technique is extremely laborious, thus we focused on a single population, rather than 4-5 populations, and generated replicate seed families that could be used in experiments in lieu of the GM lines.
Obj/WP 2) Conduct a semi-natural experiment to test how herbivores and pollinators impose natural selection on plant traits following the shift to selfing.
This objective was to be completed in the second phase of the project (mos. 13-24), and was thus not met.
Obj/WP 3) Phenotype relevant plant traits (leaf defence and floral traits) and identify how transitions to selfing change expression of defence-related genes.
As per the DoA, this objective was originally to be completed in the second phase of the project (mos. 13-24). Nevertheless, we were able to conduct pilot-scale phenotyping of defence and growth rate dynamics using a subset of the manually self-pollinated lines described above.