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Featured researches published by Aaron T. Woosley.


The Plant Cell | 1998

Ribozymes targeted to stearoyl-ACP delta 9 desaturase mRNA produce heritable increases of stearic acid in transgenic maize leaves

Ann Owens Merlo; Neil M. Cowen; Tom Delate; Brent E. Edington; Otto Folkerts; Nicole L. Hopkins; Christine Lemeiux; Tom Skokut; Kelley A. Smith; Aaron T. Woosley; Yajing Yang; Scott A. Young; Michael Zwick

Ribozymes are RNAs that can be designed to catalyze the specific cleavage or ligation of target RNAs. We have explored the possibility of using ribozymes in maize to downregulate the expression of the stearoyl–acyl carrier protein (Δ9) desaturase gene. Based on site accessibility and catalytic activity, several ribozyme constructs were designed and transformed into regenerable maize lines. One of these constructs, a multimer hammerhead ribozyme linked to a selectable marker gene, was shown to increase leaf stearate in two of 13 maize lines. There were concomitant decreases in Δ9 desaturase mRNA and protein. The plants with the altered stearate phenotype were shown to express ribozyme RNA. The ribozyme-mediated trait was heritable, as evidenced by stearate increases in the leaves of the R1 plants derived from a high-stearate line. The increase in stearate correlated with the presence of the ribozyme gene. A catalytically inactive version of this ribozyme did not produce any significant effect in transgenic maize. This is evidence that ribozymes can be used to modulate the expression of endogenous genes in maize.


Transgenic Research | 2000

Expression of murine adenosine deaminase (ADA) in transgenic maize.

Joseph F. Petolino; Scott A. Young; Nicole L. Hopkins; Kitisri Sukhapinda; Aaron T. Woosley; Connie Hayes; Larry A Pelcher

A murine adenosine deaminase (ADA) gene, driven by the maize ubi-1 promoter and intron region, was transformed into embryogenic maize callus, along with a bar and gusA gene-containing plasmid, using microparticle bombardment. Selection in the presence of either the herbicide Basta® or the adenosine analogue 2′-deoxyadenosine resulted in transgenic cultures that expressed GUS and accumulated a 41kD protein that immunoprecipated with an ADA-specific polyclonal antibody. ADA enzyme activity was observed in extracts from transgenic callus as well as regenerated plants and progeny. Cultures expressing ADA grew in the presence of 200mg/l 2′-deoxyadenosine, a concentration which completely inhibited the growth of non-transgenic cultures. ADA activity appeared to segregate in progeny of regenerated plants as a single, dominant Mendelian trait. These results suggest that ADA, in combination with adenosine analogue selection, represents a potentially viable selectable marker system for transgenic maize production.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Insecticidal activity of Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1Bh1 against Ostrinia nubilalis (Hubner) (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) and other lepidopteran pests.

Justin M. Lira; Jeff Beringer; Stephanie L. Burton; Samantha Griffin; Joel J. Sheets; Sek Yee Tan; Aaron T. Woosley; Sarah E. Worden; Kenneth E. Narva

ABSTRACT Bacillus thuringiensis is an important source of insect resistance traits in commercial crops. In an effort to prolong B. thuringiensis trait durability, insect resistance management programs often include combinations of insecticidal proteins that are not cross resistant or have demonstrable differences in their site of action as a means to mitigate the development of resistant insect populations. In this report, we describe the activity spectrum of a novel B. thuringiensis Cry protein, Cry1Bh1, against several lepidopteran pests, including laboratory-selected B. thuringiensis-resistant strains of Ostrinia nubilalis and Heliothis virescens and progeny of field-evolved B. thuringiensis-resistant strains of Plutella xylostella and Spodoptera frugiperda. Cry1Bh1 is active against susceptible and B. thuringiensis-resistant colonies of O. nubilalis, P. xylostella, and H. virescens in laboratory diet-based assays, implying a lack of cross-resistance in these insects. However, Cry1Bh1 is not active against susceptible or Cry1F-resistant S. frugiperda. Further, Cry1Bh1 does not compete with Cry1Fa or Cry1Ab for O. nubilalis midgut brush border membrane binding sites. Cry1Bh1-expressing corn, while not completely resistant to insect damage, provided significantly better leaf protection against Cry1Fa-resistant O. nubilalis than did Cry1Fa-expressing hybrid corn. The lack of cross-resistance with Cry1Ab and Cry1Fa along with independent membrane binding sites in O. nubilalis makes Cry1Bh1 a candidate to further optimize for in-plant resistance to this pest.


Nature plants | 2017

GC-rich coding sequences reduce transposon-like, small RNA-mediated transgene silencing

Lyudmila Sidorenko; Tzuu-fen Lee; Aaron T. Woosley; William A. Moskal; Scott Bevan; P. Ann Owens Merlo; Terence A. Walsh; Xiujuan Wang; Staci Weaver; Todd P. Glancy; Pohao Wang; Xiaozeng Yang; Shreedharan Sriram; Blake C. Meyers

The molecular basis of transgene susceptibility to silencing is poorly characterized in plants; thus, we evaluated several transgene design parameters as means to reduce heritable transgene silencing. Analyses of Arabidopsis plants with transgenes encoding a microalgal polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) synthase revealed that small RNA (sRNA)-mediated silencing, combined with the use of repetitive regulatory elements, led to aggressive transposon-like silencing of canola-biased PUFA synthase transgenes. Diversifying regulatory sequences and using native microalgal coding sequences (CDSs) with higher GC content improved transgene expression and resulted in a remarkable trans-generational stability via reduced accumulation of sRNAs and DNA methylation. Further experiments in maize with transgenes individually expressing three crystal (Cry) proteins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) tested the impact of CDS recoding using different codon bias tables. Transgenes with higher GC content exhibited increased transcript and protein accumulation. These results demonstrate that the sequence composition of transgene CDSs can directly impact silencing, providing design strategies for increasing transgene expression levels and reducing risks of heritable loss of transgene expression.The molecular basis underlying transgene susceptibility to silencing remains elusive. Now, using multiple examples, a study shows that higher GC content of coding sequences can reduce susceptibility of transgenes to heritable silencing.


Archive | 1998

Regulatory sequences for transgenic plants

Michael W. Ainley; Katherine Armstrong; Scott Indianapolis Belmar; Otto Folkerts; Nicole L. Hopkins; Michael A. Menke; Dayakar Pareddy; Joseph F. Petolino; Kelley A. Smith; Aaron T. Woosley


Archive | 2010

DIG-13 insecticidal cry toxins

Justin M. Lira; Holly Jean Butler; Doug Smith; Kenneth E. Narva; Aaron T. Woosley


Archive | 1999

Artificial matrix attachment region for increasing expression of genes introduced in plant cells

Der Geest Apolonia H.M. Van; W. Michael Ainley; Neil M. Cowen; Mary E. Welter; Aaron T. Woosley


Archive | 2010

COMBINED USE OF CRY1Ca AND CRY1Fa PROTEINS FOR INSECT RESISTANCE MANAGEMENT

Thomas Meade; Kenneth E. Narva; Nicholas P. Storer; Joel J. Sheets; Aaron T. Woosley; Stephanie L. Burton


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2004

A short synthetic MAR positively affects transgene expression in rice and Arabidopsis

Apolonia H. M. Van der Geest; Mary E. Welter; Aaron T. Woosley; Dayakar Pareddy; Sarah E. Pavelko; Michiyo Skokut; William Michael Ainley


Archive | 1999

Regulatory sequences useful for gene expression in plant embryo tissue

Katherine Armstrong; Dayakar Pareddy; Aaron T. Woosley; Beth Rubin-Wilson; Timothy D. Hey; Otto Folkerts; Kelley A. Smith

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