Particle bombardment and the genetic enhancement of crops: myths and realities
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 04:08authored byF Altpeter, N Baisakh, R Beachy, R Bock, T Capell, P Christou, H Daniell, Kamalesh Datta, Sambit Datta, P Dix, C Fauquet, N Huang, A Kohli, H Mooibroek, L Nicholson, Thanh Nguyen, Gregory Nugent, K Raemakers, Angela Romano, D Somers, E Stoger, N Taylor, R Visser
DNA transfer by particle bombardment makes use of physical processes to achieve the transformation of crop plants. There is no dependence on bacteria, so the limitations inherent in organisms such as Agrobacterium tumefaciens do not apply. The absence of biological constraints, at least until DNA has entered the plant cell, means that particle bombardment is a versatile and effective transformation method, not limited by cell type, species or genotype. There are no intrinsic vector requirements so transgenes of any size and arrangement can be introduced, and multiple gene cotransformation is straightforward. The perceived disadvantages of particle bombardment compared to Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, i.e. the tendency to generate large transgene arrays containing rearranged and broken transgene copies, are not borne out by the recent detailed structural analysis of transgene loci produced by each of the methods.