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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Molecular EcologyVolume 17 Issue 5, Pages 1387 - 1395 Published Online: 29 Oct 2007 © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 162K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Do escaped transgenes persist in nature? The case of an herbicide resistance transgene in a weedy Brassica rapa population Copyright Journal compilation © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd KEYWORDS
Brassica napus
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Brassica rapa
• gene flow • genetically modified crops • hybridization • transgene escape ABSTRACTThe existence of transgenic hybrids resulting from transgene escape from genetically modified (GM) crops to wild or weedy relatives is well documented but the fate of the transgene over time in recipient wild species populations is still relatively unknown. This is the first report of the persistence and apparent introgression, i.e. stable incorporation of genes from one differentiated gene pool into another, of an herbicide resistance transgene from Brassica napus into the gene pool of its weedy relative, Brassica rapa, monitored under natural commercial field conditions. Hybridization between glyphosate-resistant [herbicide resistance (HR)]B. napus and B. rapa was first observed at two Québec sites, Ste Agathe and St Henri, in 2001. B. rapa populations at these two locations were monitored in 2002, 2003 and 2005 for the presence of hybrids and transgene persistence. Hybrid numbers decreased over the 3-year period, from 85 out of ~200 plants surveyed in 2002 to only five out of 200 plants in 2005 (St Henri site). Most hybrids had the HR trait, reduced male fertility, intermediate genome structure, and presence of both species-specific amplified fragment length polymorphism markers. Both F Received 15 April 2007; revision accepted 28 August 2007 |