Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Keith S. Lowe is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Keith S. Lowe.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Stimulation of the cell cycle and maize transformation by disruption of the plant retinoblastoma pathway

William J. Gordon-Kamm; Brian P. Dilkes; Keith S. Lowe; George J. Hoerster; Xifan Sun; Margit Ross; Laura A. Church; Chris Bunde; Jeff Farrell; Patrea M. Hill; Sheila Maddock; Jane Snyder; Louisa Sykes; Zhongsen Li; Young-Min Woo; Dennis L. Bidney; Brian A. Larkins

The genome of the Mastreviruses encodes a replication-associated protein (RepA) that interacts with members of the plant retinoblastoma-related protein family, which are putative cell cycle regulators. Expression of ZmRb1, a maize retinoblastoma-related gene, and RepA inhibited and stimulated, respectively, cell division in tobacco cell cultures. The effect of RepA was mitigated by over-expression of ZmRb1. RepA increased transformation frequency and callus growth rate of high type II maize germplasm. RepA-containing transgenic maize calli remained embryogenic, were readily regenerable, and produced fertile plants that transmitted transgene expression in a Mendelian fashion. In high type II, transformation frequency increased with the strength of the promoter driving RepA expression. When a construct in which RepA was expressed behind its native LIR promoter was used, primary transformation frequencies did not improve for two elite Pioneer maize inbreds. However, when LIR:RepA-containing transgenic embryos were used in subsequent rounds of transformation, frequencies were higher in the RepA+ embryos. These data demonstrate that RepA can stimulate cell division and callus growth in culture, and improve maize transformation.


Plant Journal | 2013

Male‐sterile maize plants produced by targeted mutagenesis of the cytochrome P450‐like gene (MS26) using a re‐designed I–CreI homing endonuclease

Vesna Djukanovic; Jeff Smith; Keith S. Lowe; Meizhu Yang; Huirong Gao; Spencer Jones; Michael Nicholson; Ande West; Janel Lape; Dennis L. Bidney; Saverio Carl Falco; Derek Jantz; Leszek Alexander Lyznik

The I-CreI homing endonuclease from Chlamydomonas reinhardti has been used as a molecular tool for creating DNA double-strand breaks and enhancing DNA recombination reactions in maize cells. The DNA-binding properties of this protein were re-designed to recognize a 22 bp target sequence in the 5th exon of MS26, a maize fertility gene. Three versions of a single-chain endonuclease, called Ems26, Ems26+ and Ems26++, cleaved their intended DNA site within the context of a reporter assay in a mammalian cell line. When the Ems26++ version was delivered to maize Black Mexican Sweet cells by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, the cleavage resulted in mutations at a co-delivered extra-chromosomal ms26-site in up to 8.9% of the recovered clones. Delivery of the same version of Ems26 to immature embryos resulted in mutations at the predicted genomic ms26-site in 5.8% of transgenic T(0) plants. This targeted mutagenesis procedure yielded small deletions and insertions at the Ems26 target site consistent with products of double-strand break repair generated by non-homologous end joining. One of 21 mutagenized T(0) plants carried two mutated alleles of the MS26 gene. As expected, the bi-allelic mutant T(0) plant and the T(1) progeny homozygous for the ms26 mutant alleles were male-sterile. This paper described the second maize chromosomal locus (liguless-1 being the first one) mutagenized by a re-designed I-CreI-based endonuclease, demonstrating the general utility of these molecules for targeted mutagenesis in plants.


Planta | 2014

Cyclin-dependent kinase complexes in developing maize endosperm: evidence for differential expression and functional specialization

Ricardo A. Dante; Paolo A. Sabelli; Hong N. Nguyen; João T. Leiva-Neto; Yumin Tao; Keith S. Lowe; George J. Hoerster; William J. Gordon-Kamm; Rudolf Jung; Brian A. Larkins

Abstract Endosperm development in maize (Zea mays L.) and related cereals comprises a cell proliferation stage followed by a period of rapid growth coupled to endoreduplication. Regulation of the cell cycle in developing endosperm is poorly understood. We have characterized various subunits of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) complexes, master cell cycle regulators in all eukaryotes. A-, B-, and D-type cyclins as well as A- and B-type cyclin-dependent kinases were characterized with respect to their RNA and protein expression profiles. Two main patterns were identified: one showing expression throughout endosperm development, and another characterized by a sharp down-regulation with the onset of endoreduplication. Cyclin CYCB1;3 and CYCD2;1 proteins were distributed in the cytoplasm and nucleus of cells throughout the endosperm, while cyclin CYCD5 protein was localized in the cytoplasm of peripheral cells. CDKB1;1 expression was strongly associated with cell proliferation. Expression and cyclin-binding patterns suggested that CDKA;1 and CDKA;3 are at least partially redundant. The kinase activity associated with the cyclin CYCA1 was highest during the mitotic stage of development, while that associated with CYCB1;3, CYCD2;1 and CYCD5 peaked at the mitosis-to-endoreduplication transition. A-, B- and D-type cyclins were more resistant to proteasome-dependent degradation in endoreduplicating than in mitotic endosperm extracts. These results indicated that endosperm development is characterized by differential expression and activity of specific cyclins and CDKs, and suggested that endoreduplication is associated with reduced cyclin proteolysis via the ubiquitin–proteasome pathway.


Plant biotechnology 2002 and beyond. Proceedings of the 10th IAPTC&B Congress, Orlando, Florida, USA, 23-28 June, 2002 | 2003

Maize LEC1 Improves Transformation in Both Maize and Wheat

Keith S. Lowe; George J. Hoerster; Xifan Sun; Sonriza Rasco-Gaunt; Paul Lazerri; Sam Ellis; Shane E. Abbitt; Kimberly Glassman; Bill Gordon-Kamm

Since ectopic expression of LEC1 in Arabidopsis can lead to adventive formation of embryo-like structures (Lotan et al., 1998), it was hypothesized that ectopic expression of the maize LEC1 (Lowe et al., 2001) gene could be used to induce somatic embryogenesis in maize and wheat leading to an improved culture response and higher transformation frequencies.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Plant | 2018

Rapid genotype “independent” Zea mays L. (maize) transformation via direct somatic embryogenesis

Keith S. Lowe; Mauricio La Rota; George J. Hoerster; Craig Hastings; Ning Wang; Mark A. Chamberlin; Emily Wu; Todd J. Jones; William J. Gordon-Kamm

Constitutive expression of the Zea mays L. (maize) morphogenic transcription factors Baby Boom (Bbm) and Wuschel2 (Wus2) in maize can not only greatly increase transformation efficiency but can also induce phenotypic abnormalities and sterility. In an effort to alleviate the pleiotropic effects of constitutive expression, a genome wide search was undertaken to find suitable maize promoters to drive tissue and timing-specific expression of the transformation enhancing genes Bbm and Wus2. A promoter from a maize phospholipid transferase protein gene (Zm-PLTPpro) was identified based on its expression in leaves, embryos, and callus while being downregulated in roots, meristems, and reproductive tissues. When Zm-PLTPpro driving Bbm was transformed into immature maize embryos along with a Wus2 expression cassette driven by the nopaline synthase promoter (Nospro::Wus2) abundant somatic embryos rapidly formed on the scutella. These embryos were individual and uniformly transformed and could be directly germinated into plants without a callus phase. Transformed plants could be sent to the greenhouse in as little as 1xa0mo and regenerated plants matched the seed-derived phenotype for the inbred and were fertile. However, T1 seed from these plants had poor germination. Replacing Nospro with a maize auxin-inducible promoter (Zm-Axig1pro) in combination with Zm-PLTPpro::Bbm, allowed healthy, fertile plants to be regenerated. Single-copy T1 seed germinated normally and had a predominantly wild-type inbred phenotype. For maize, this callus-free transformation process has worked in all inbred lines tested.


Plant biotechnology 2002 and beyond. Proceedings of the 10th IAPTC&B Congress, Orlando, Florida, USA, 23-28 June, 2002 | 2003

Using Genes that Stimulate the Cell Cycle to Improve Maize Transformation

Bill Gordon-Kamm; Yumin Tao; Brian P. Dilkes; Keith S. Lowe; George J. Hoerster; Xifan Sun; Margit Ross; Laura A. Church; Chris Bunde; Jeff Farrell; Patrea M. Hill; Sheila Maddock; Jane Snyder; Ricardo A. Dante; Dennis L. Bidney; Ben Bowen; Pete John; Brian A. Larkins

The cell cycle’s impact on plant transformation has been investigated by various groups, showing that S-phase (Villemont et al., 1997), M-phase (Okada et al., 1986) or both (Meyer et al., 1985) appears to be correlated with increased transformation frequencies. While such studies show that cell cycle progression influences transformation, no methods have been reported that stimulate transformation by expressing cell cycle genes.


Archive | 1995

Method for producing transgenic cereal plants

Benjamin A. Bowen; Keith S. Lowe; Margit Ross; Gary A. Sandahl; Dwight T. Tomes; William J. Gordon-Kamm; David D. Songstad


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999

Characterization of maize (Zea mays L.) Wee1 and its activity in developing endosperm

Yuejin Sun; Brian P. Dilkes; Chunsheng Zhang; Ricardo A. Dante; Newton P. Carneiro; Keith S. Lowe; Rudolf Jung; William J. Gordon-Kamm; Brian A. Larkins


Archive | 1999

Cyclin D polynucleotides, polypeptides and uses thereof

Keith S. Lowe; Yumin Tao; William J. Gordon-Kamm; Carolyn A. Gregory; George J. Hoerster; John A. Mcelver


Archive | 1999

Cell cycle genes, proteins and uses thereof

Keith S. Lowe; William J. Gordon-Kamm; Matthew A. Bailey; Xun Wang; Carolyn A. Gregory; John A. Mcelver; George J. Hoerster; Shane E. Abbitt; Brian R. Dilkes; Brian A. Larkins; Benjamin A. Bowen

Collaboration


Dive into the Keith S. Lowe's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Saikat Bhattacharjee

Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge