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Featured researches published by Daina H. Simmonds.


Planta | 1996

Induction of embryogenesis with colchicine instead of heat in microspores ofBrassica napus L. cv. Topas

Jiping Zhao; Daina H. Simmonds; William Newcomb

Prior to this report, heat treatment (32.5°C, 24 h) was the method used to induce embryogenesis fromBrassica napus microspores. Continuous culture at 25°C results in pollen development. This study shows that colchicine alone, at the non-inductive temperature of 25°C, can induce embryogenesis, thus demonstrating that heat shock is not required for embryogenic induction inB. napus cv. Topas. Embryogenic frequencies of over 15% were obtained by culturing isolated microspores with 25 μM colchicine for 42 h at 25°C. The microspore developmental stages responsive to colchicine were unicellular vacuolate and late unicellular, somewhat earlier stages than the population responsive to heat induction. Other groups have reported that heat-shock proteins are essential to the induction of embryogenesis. The present study offers a method of embryogenic induction without the use of heat which will allow discrimination between the factors associated with response to heat shock and those involved with changing cell development.


Plant Cell Reports | 1990

Effects of culture density, conditioned medium and feeder cultures on microspore embryogenesis in Brassica napus L. cv. Topas.

Bin Huang; Sharon Bird; Roger Kemble; Daina H. Simmonds; Wilf Keller; Brian Miki

SummaryIn microspore cultures of Brassica napus L. cv. Topas, embryo yield increases with culture density up to about 40,000 microspores per ml. A much higher density (100,000 per ml) appears inhibitory to embryogenesis. A relatively high culture density (30,000 or 40,000 per ml) for the first 2–4 days of culture is crucial for embryogenesis, after which cultures may be diluted to allow better embryo growth.Medium conditioned by culturing microspores at 30,000 or 40,000 per ml for 1 day improved microspore-embryo yield in low density cultures (3,000 or 4,000 per ml) more than 3-fold. In contrast, media conditioned with microspores from 1–4 days or 0–4 days of culture were inhibitory.Use of feeder cultures resulted in up to 10-fold increase of embryo yield in low density microspore cultures, depending on the method used. Filter papers and other membranes placed on top of feeders greatly inhibited embryogenesis in the feeder layer as well as microspores cultured on the feeder, possibly due to poorer gaseous exchange.


Plant Cell Reports | 2000

Susceptibility to Agrobacterium tumefaciens and cotyledonary node transformation in short-season soybean

P. A. Donaldson; Daina H. Simmonds

Abstract Short-season adapted soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merrill] genotypes (maturity group 0 and 00) were susceptible to Agrobacterium tumefaciens in tumor-formation assays with A. tumefaciens strains A281, C58 and ACH5. The response was bacterial-strain and plant-cultivar dependent. In vitro Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of cotyledonary node explants of these genotypes with A. tumefaciens EHA105/pBI121 was inefficient but resulted in a transgenic AC Colibri plant carrying a linked insertion of the neomycin phosphotransferase and β-glucuronidase (gus) transgenes. The transgenes were transmitted to the progeny and stable gus expression was detected in the T7 generation. The low rate of recovery of transgenic plants from the co-cultured cotyledonary explants was attributed to inefficient transformation of regenerable cells, and/or poor selection or survival of such cells and not to poor susceptibility to Agrobacterium, since, depending on the cultivar, explants were transformed at a rate of 27–92%, but transformation events were usually restricted to non-regenerable callus.


Protoplasma | 1995

Cellular changes during heat shock induction and embryo development of cultured microspores ofBrassica napus cv. Topas

Cheryl A. Telmer; William Newcomb; Daina H. Simmonds

SummaryBrassica napus cv. Topas microspores, isolated and cultured near the time of the first pollen mitosis and subjected to a heat treatment of 24 h, can be induced to develop into haploid embryos. This is a study of microspore structure during induction and embryo determination. Early during the 32.5 °C incubation period the nucleus moved away from the edge of the cell, and granules, 30 to 60 nm in diameter, appeared in the mitochondria and as a cluster in the cytoplasm. Cells divided symmetrically and at the end of the heat treatment, acquired the features of induced bicellular structures described previously. The features persisted as the cells divided randomly within the exine for 4–7 days following heat induction. Multicellular structures released from the exine underwent periclinal divisions resulting in protoderm differentiation of the globular embryo, thus determining embryo development. The cytoplasm of early heart-stage embryos contains abundant polyribosomes. Non-embryogenic development was indicated by large accumulations of starch and/or lipid and thickened cell walls or an unorganized pattern of cell division following release of the multicellular structures from the exine. Embryogenesis is discussed in terms of induction, embryo determination and development.


Plant Cell Reports | 1996

High frequency production of doubled haploid plants of Brassica napus cv. Topas derived from colchicine-induced microspore embryogenesis without heat shock

Jiping Zhao; Daina H. Simmonds; William Newcomb

This report describes a very high genome doubling efficiency of Brassica napus cv. Topas plants, derived from microspores induced to undergo embryogenesis with a colchicine treatment, without the use of a heat treatment. The plants showed normal growth and development, and 90% were fertile. In contrast, only 6% of the plants derived from heat-induced embryos were fertile diploids. All cytological analysis of the progeny of fertile plants showed 2n=38 chromosomes. These results show that colchicine can simultaneously induce microspore embryogenesis and double the ploidy level to produce doubled haploid plants.


Protoplasma | 1993

Microspore development inBrassica napus and the effect of high temperature on division in vivo and in vitro

Cheryl A. Telmer; William Newcomb; Daina H. Simmonds

SummaryBrassica napus cv. Topas microspores isolated and cultured near the first pollen mitosis and subjected to a heat treatment develop into haploid embryos at a frequency of about 20%. In order to obtain a greater understanding of the induction process and embryogenesis, transmission electron microscopy was used to study the development of pollen from the mid-uninucleate to the bicellular microspore stage. The effect of 24 h of high temperature (32.5 °C) on microspore development was examined by heat treating microspore cultures or entire plants. Mid-uninucleate microspores contained small vacuoles. Late-uninucleate vacuolate microspores contained a large vacuole. The large vacuole of the vacuolate stage was fragmented into numerous small vacuoles in the late-uninucleate stage. The late-uninucleate stage contained an increased number of ribosomes, a pollen coat covering the exine and a laterally positioned nucleus. Prior to the first pollen mitosis the nucleus of the lateuninucleate microspore appeared to be appressed to the plasma membrane; numerous perinuclear microtubules were observed. Microspores developing into pollen divided asymmetrically to form a large vegetative cell with amyloplasts and a small generative cell without plastids. The cells were separated by a lens-shaped cell wall which later diminished. At the late-bicellular stage the generative cell was observed within the vegetative cell. Starch and lipid reserves were present in the vegetative cell and the rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi were abundant. The microspore isolation procedure removed the pollen coat, but did not redistribute or alter the morphology of the organelles. Microspores cultured at 25 °C for 24 h resembled late-bicellular microspores except more starch and a thicker intine were present. A more equal division of microspores occurred during the 24 h heat treatment (32.5 °C) of the entire plant or of cultures. A planar wall separated the cells of the bicellular microspores. Both daughter cells contained plastids and the nuclei were of similar size. Cultured embryogenie microspores contained electron-dense deposits at the plasma membrane/cell wall interface, vesicle-like structures in the cell walls and organelle-free regions in the cytoplasm. The results are related to embryogenesis and a possible mechanism of induction is discussed.


Planta | 1999

Significance of preprophase bands of microtubules in the induction of microspore embryogenesis of Brassica napus

Daina H. Simmonds; Wilfred A. Keller

Abstract. Microspores of Brassica napus L. cv. Topas, undergo embryogenesis when cultured at 32.5 °C for the first 18–24 h and then at 25 °C. The first division in heat-treated microspores is a symmetric division in contrast to the asymmetric division found after the first pollen mitosis in-planta or in microspores cultured continuously at 25 °C. This asymmetric division is unique in higher plants as it results in daughter cells separated by a non-consolidated wall. The cytoskeleton has an important role in such morphological changes. We examined microtubule (MT) organization during the first 24 h of heat induction in the embryogenic B. napus cv. Topas and the non-embryogenic B. napus breeding line 0025. Preprophase bands (PPBs) of MTs appeared in cv. Topas microspores in late uninucleate microspores and in prophase figures after 4–8 h of heat treatment. However, more than 60% of the PPBs were not continuous bands. In contrast, PPBs were never observed in pollen mitosis; MT strands radiated from the surface of the nuclear envelope throughout microspore maturation to the end of prophase of pollen mitosis I, during in-planta development and in microspores cultured at 25 °C. Following 24 h of heat treatment, over 95% of the microspores appeared to have divided symmetrically as indicated by the similar size of the daughter nuclei, but only 7–16% of the microspores eventually formed embryos. Discontinuous walls were observed in more than 50% of the divisions and it is probable that the discontinuous PPBs gave rise to such wall abnormalities which may then obstruct embryo development. Preprophase bands were not formed in heat-treated microspores of the non-embryogenic line 0025 and the ensuing divisions showed discontinuous walls. It is concluded that the appearance of PPBs in heat-induced microspores marks sporophytic development and that continuous PPBs are required for cell wall consolidation and embryogenesis. It follows that induced structures with two equally condensed nuclei, do not necessarily denote symmetric divisions.


Plant Physiology | 1994

Regulation of BN115, a Low-Temperature-Responsive Gene from Winter Brassica napus

Theresa C. White; Daina H. Simmonds; Pauline Donaldson; Jas Singh

The genomic clone for BN115, a low-temperature-responsive gene, was isolated from winter Brassica napus and its sequence was determined. A 1.2-kb fragment of the 5[prime] regulatory region (from bp -1107 to +100) was fused to the [beta]-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene and BN115-promoted GUS expression was observed in green tissues of transgenic B. napus plants only after incubation at 2[deg]C. No expression was observed after incubation at 22[deg]C, either in the presence or the absence of ABA. Microprojectile bombardment of winter B. napus leaves with a BN115 promoter/GUS construct yielded similar results and was used to analyze a series of deletions from the 5[prime] end of the promoter. Results obtained from transient expression studies showed that the low-temperature regulation of BN115 expression involves a possible enhancer region between bp -1107 and -802 and a second positive regulatory region located between bp -302 and -274. Deletion analyses and results from replacement with a truncated cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter suggest that the minimal size required for any maintenance of low-temperature GUS expression is a -300-bp fragment. Within this fragment are two 8-bp elements with the sequence TGGCCGAC, which are identical to those present in the positive regulatory region of the promoter of the homologous Arabidopsis cor15a gene and to a 5-bp core sequence in the low-temperature- and dehydration-responsive elements identified in the promoter regions of several cold-responsive Arabidopsis thaliana genes.


Plant Cell Reports | 2000

Genotype screening for proliferative embryogenesis and biolistic transformation of short-season soybean genotypes

Daina H. Simmonds; P. A. Donaldson

Abstract Eighteen of 20 short-season soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merrill) genotypes (maturity group 0 and 00) screened for proliferative embryogenic capacity formed secondary globular embryos, at rates of 1–70% of cultured immature cotyledons. Five genotypes produced embryogenic cultures which were proliferative for at least 6 months. Proliferative embryogenic cultures of AC Colibri and X2650–7–2–3 were bombarded using a Bio-Rad PDS-1000/He particle gun. Co-bombardments with plasmid pairs pHygr (encoding a type IV aminoglycoside phosphotransferase;aphIV) and pRD300pat (encoding a phosphinothricin N-acetyltransferase;pat) or pRD300pat and pFF19G (β-glucuronidase;uidA or gus) resulted, respectively, in 12 hygromycin-selected lines with multiple insertions of aphIV and pat, and two l-phosphinothricin-selected lines plus three β-glucuronidase-positive lines recovered without selection. Although fertile plants were recovered from young proliferative cultures, transgenic plants, which were derived from cultures 12–14 months of age, were sterile.


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 1991

High plating efficiency and plant regeneration frequency in low density protoplast cultures derived from an embryogenic Brassica napus cell suspension

Daina H. Simmonds; Nancy E. Long; Wilfred A. Keller

Protoplasts were isolated from an embryogenic cell suspension culture derived from microspores of Brassica napus cv. Jet Neuf. Protoplast yield varied with the cell suspension growth medium. Optimization of protoplast plating density, manipulation of culture medium, carbon source and medium matrix, and inclusion of Ficoll resulted in protoplast plating efficiencies close to 30%. Placement of the protoplasts close to the gas interface contributed greatly to the elevated plating efficiency. Low density cultures could be induced to regenerate calli at optimum plating efficiencies if grown in the presence of nurse culture. This is of great advantage for manipulation of individual protoplasts or for microinjection. Plants were regenerated directly from the cell suspension or from the protoplast cultures.

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Laureen Blahut-Beatty

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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John Simmonds

University of New Brunswick

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Asuka Itaya

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Pauline Donaldson

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Suqin Zheng

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Yunfang Zhang

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Bonnie Bancroft

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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