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Background: Plants engineered for abiotic stress tolerance may soon be commercialized. The engineering of these
plants typically involves the manipulation of complex multigene networks and may therefore have a greater
potential to introduce pleiotropic effects than the simple monogenic traits that currently dominate the plant
biotechnology market. While research on unintended effects in transgenic plant systems has been instrumental in
demonstrating the substantial equivalence of many transgenic plant systems, it is essential that such analyses be
extended to transgenic plants engineered for stress tolerance. Drought-tolerant Arabidopsis thaliana were
engineered through overexpression of the transcription factor ABF3 in order to investigate unintended pleiotropic
effects. In order to eliminate position effects, the Cre/lox recombination system was used to create control plant
lines that contain identical T-DNA insertion sites but with the ABF3 transgene excised. This additionally allowed us
to determine if Cre recombinase can cause unintended effects that impact the transcriptome.
Results: Microarray analysis of control plant lines that underwent Cre-mediated excision of the ABF3 transgene
revealed only two genes that were differentially expressed in more than one plant line, suggesting that the impact of
Cre recombinase on the transcriptome was minimal. In the absence of drought stress, overexpression of ABF3 had no
effect on the transcriptome, but following drought stress, differences were observed in the gene expression patterns
of plants overexpressing ABF3 relative to control plants. Examination of the functional distribution of the differentially
expressed genes revealed strong similarity indicating that unintended pathways were not activated.
Conclusions: The action of ABF3 is tightly controlled in Arabidopsis. In the absence of drought stress, ectopic
activation of drought response pathways does not occur. In response to drought stress, overexpression of ABF3
results in a reprogramming of the drought response, which is characterized by changes in the timing or strength
of expression of some drought response genes, without activating any unexpected gene networks. These results
illustrate that important gene networks are highly regulated in Arabidopsis and that engineering stress tolerance
may not necessarily cause extensive changes to the transcriptome. |
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