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Asad Maroufi

Asad Maroufi

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 35622395700
Faculty: Faculty of Agriculture
Address: Department of Plant Breeding, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Kurdistan, Pasdaran Blvd., Sanandaj, Kurdistan, Iran. Postal Code: 66177-15175
Phone: 0098-8733620552-3

Research

Title
Improvement of Plant Regeneration and Agrobacteriummediated Genetic Transformation Efficiency in Red Clover (Trifolium pratense L.)
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Red clover, plant regeneration, somatic embryogenesis, plant transformation, Agrobacterium
Year
2011
Journal RESEARCH JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
DOI
Researchers Khosro Mehdikhanlou ، Mansour Karimi ، Asad Maroufi ، Erik Van Bockstaele

Abstract

Red clover (Trifolium pretense L.) is one of the important forage crops in most temperate agricultural regions. Red clover germplasm has limited genetic variation for disease resistance. Application of an efficient gene transformation protocol to introduce genes against diseases is considered the only approach for developing new resistant cultivars. In this study, in order to establish an efficient regeneration system in red clover, highly regenerative genotypes were utilized for evaluation of different media sequences for their suitability to utilize potentiality of regeneration capacity. Media sequence KBC-SPL-SPL significantly increased the efficiency of somatic embryogenesis of red clover. There was no relationship between regeneration ability and fresh callus weight. Also, no interaction was observed between genotypes and media sequences for fresh callus weight, number of embryos and number of developed shoots. To develop an efficient gene transfer system, some parameters were investigated, including evaluation of suitable concentration of selection agent, examination of the effect of pre-culturing of explants on efficiency of transformation and comparison of different Agrobacterium strains for efficiency of gene transformation. The effect of preculturing explants was increased slightly by the frequency of gene transferring. Highly infective Agrobacterium strain C58C1 can increase the transformation efficiency for red clover to 83%. PCR and histochemical GUS assay of transformed plants confirmed successful integration of the T-DNA into the red clover genome. Our established system will be a platform for genetic manipulation of red clover to broaden its genetic variation and for germplasm innovation.