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Dive into the research topics where Rebecca Grumet is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebecca Grumet.


Plant Cell Reports | 1990

Agrobacterium tumefaciens mediated transformation and regeneration of muskmelon plants

Guowei Fang; Rebecca Grumet

Transgenic muskmelon (Cucumis melo L.) plants were produced efficiently by inoculating cotyledon explants with Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain LBA4404 bearing a Ti plasmid with the NPT II gene for kanaymcin resistance. After co-cultivation for three days, expiants were transferred to melon regeneration medium with kanamycin to select for transformed tissue. Shoot regeneration occurred within 3–5 weeks; excised shoots were rooted on medium containing kanamycin before transferring to soil. Morphologically normal plants were produced in three months. Southern blot analysis confirmed that ca. 85% of the regenerated plants contained the NPT gene. Dot blot analysis and leaf callus assay of progeny of transgenic plants verified transmission of the introduced gene(s) to the next generation. Factors affecting transformation efficiency are discussed.


Genetic Improvement of Vegetable Crops | 1993

Melon: Cucumis melo L.

James D. McCreight; Haim Nerson; Rebecca Grumet

Publisher Summary Melon is a member of the genus Cucumis, subtribe Cucumerinae, tribe Melothrieae, subfamily Cucurbitoideae, and family Cucurbitaceae. Immature melons are used fresh in salads, cooked—soup, stew, curry, stir-fry—or pickled. Mature fruit is eaten fresh as a dessert fruit or in a canned form or used for syrup or jam; dehydrated slices—lightly processed—for short-term or moderate-term storage can be reconstituted, and the pressed juice may be canned. Melon seeds are a dietary source of unsaturated vegetable oil and protein and may be lightly roasted and eaten like nuts. Melon has a base chromosome number of 12 and is a diploid species, 2n = 24. Polysomatic cells regularly occur in melon. Seven polyploid—allopolyploid and autopolyploid—Cucumis species occur but none appears to be closely related to melon. The 96 genes reported in melon can be roughly classified into six categories with different categories and number of genes in each: (1) plant, 24, (2) flower, 16, (3) fruit, 19, (4) disease resistance, 22, (5) insect resistance, 5, and (6) isozyme, 14. Inheritance and dominance relationships of economically important plant and fruit characters of melon are not as simple as their quantitative descriptions and gene symbols imply. Sex expression is one of the more challenging genetic problems in front of melon breeders. This chapter discusses the germplasm resources and reproductive biology of melon. It further reviews the selection of breeding methods for melon and the breeding methods and strategies used for melon. It also discusses some objectives of breeding in melon.


Critical Reviews in Biotechnology | 2008

Melon Fruits: Genetic Diversity, Physiology, and Biotechnology Features

Héctor Gordon Núñez-Palenius; Miguel Ángel Gómez-Lim; Neftalí Ochoa-Alejo; Rebecca Grumet; Gene E. Lester; Daniel J. Cantliffe

Among Cucurbitaceae, Cucumis melo is one of the most important cultivated cucurbits. They are grown primarily for their fruit, which generally have a sweet aromatic flavor, with great diversity and size (50 g to 15 kg), flesh color (orange, green, white, and pink), rind color (green, yellow, white, orange, red, and gray), form (round, flat, and elongated), and dimension (4 to 200 cm). C. melo can be broken down into seven distinct types based on the previously discussed variations in the species. The melon fruits can be either climacteric or nonclimacteric, and as such, fruit can adhere to the stem or have an abscission layer where they will fall from the plant naturally at maturity. Traditional plant breeding of melons has been done for 100 years wherein plants were primarily developed as open-pollinated cultivars. More recently, in the past 30 years, melon improvement has been done by more traditional hybridization techniques. An improvement in germplasm is relatively slow and is limited by a restricted gene pool. Strong sexual incompatibility at the interspecific and intergeneric levels has restricted rapid development of new cultivars with high levels of disease resistance, insect resistance, flavor, and sweetness. In order to increase the rate and diversity of new traits in melon it would be advantageous to introduce new genes needed to enhance both melon productivity and melon fruit quality. This requires plant tissue and plant transformation techniques to introduce new or foreign genes into C. melo germplasm. In order to achieve a successful commercial application from biotechnology, a competent plant regeneration system of in vitro cultures for melon is required. More than 40 in vitro melon regeneration programs have been reported; however, regeneration of the various melon types has been highly variable and in some cases impossible. The reasons for this are still unknown, but this plays a heavy negative role on trying to use plant transformation technology to improve melon germplasm. In vitro manipulation of melon is difficult; genotypic responses to the culture method (i.e., organogenesis, somatic embryogenesis, etc.) as well as conditions for environmental and hormonal requirements for plant growth and regeneration continue to be poorly understood for developing simple in vitro procedures to culture and transform all C. melo genotypes. In many cases, this has to be done on an individual line basis. The present paper describes the various research findings related to successful approaches to plant regeneration and transgenic transformation of C. melo. It also describes potential improvement of melon to improve fruit quality characteristics and postharvest handling. Despite more than 140 transgenic melon field trials in the United States in 1996, there are still no commercial transgenic melon cultivars on the market. This may be a combination of technical or performance factors, intellectual property rights concerns, and, most likely, a lack of public acceptance. Regardless, the future for improvement of melon germplasm is bright when considering the knowledge base for both techniques and gene pools potentially useable for melon improvement.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

Global gene expression analysis of transgenic, mannitol-producing, and salt-tolerant Arabidopsis thaliana indicates widespread changes in abiotic and biotic stress-related genes

Zhulong Chan; Rebecca Grumet; Wayne Loescher

Mannitol is a putative osmoprotectant contributing to salt tolerance in several species. Arabidopsis plants transformed with the mannose-6-phosphate reductase (M6PR) gene from celery were dramatically more salt tolerant (at 100 mM NaCl) as exhibited by reduced salt injury, less inhibition of vegetative growth, and increased seed production relative to the wild type (WT). When treated with 200 mM NaCl, transformants produced no seeds, but did bolt, and exhibited less chlorosis/necrosis and greater survival and dry weights than the WT. Without salt there were no M6PR effects on growth or phenotype, but expression levels of 2272 genes were altered. Many fewer differences (1039) were observed between M6PR and WT plants in the presence of salt, suggesting that M6PR pre-conditioned the plants to stress. Previous work suggested that mannitol is an osmoprotectant, but mannitol levels are invariably quite low, perhaps inadequate for osmoprotectant effects. In this study, transcriptome analysis reveals that the M6PR transgene activated the downstream abscisic acid (ABA) pathway by up-regulation of ABA receptor genes (PYL4, PYL5, and PYL6) and down-regulation of protein phosphatase 2C genes (ABI1 and ABI2). In the M6PR transgenic lines there were also increases in transcripts related to redox and cell wall-strengthening pathways. These data indicate that mannitol-enhanced stress tolerance is due at least in part to increased expression of a variety of stress-inducible genes.


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 1996

High frequency shoot regeneration from leaf explants of muskmelon

R.C. Yadav; Mohamed T. Saleh; Rebecca Grumet

Efficient in vitro plant regeneration systems are critical for many purposes including plant transformation. Current regeneration systems for melon (Cucumis melo L.) plants generally utilize cotyledon explants; regeneration from melon leaves has received limited attention. We investigated several factors that influence regeneration from melon leaves including: genotype growth conditions and age of the source plant, leaf age, explant orientation, gelling agent, and the addition of silver nitrate and sulfonylurea herbicide to the culture media. Critical factors that influenced regeneration were preculture conditions of the donor plants, leaf size, and the use of silver nitrate and Phytagel in the medium. The best results were obtained with 3–4 cm diam leaves excised from pot grown greenhouse or growth chamber plants cultured on MS medium with 5 μM IAA, 5 μM BA, 1 μM ABA, 30 μM silver nitrate and 2.6 g l-1 Phytagel. Low concentratons of sulfonylurea herbicide (0.25 mg l-1 DPX-M 6316) also enhanced regeneration. Under optimized conditions 80–100% of the explants regenerated, with 10–100 shoots per explant


BMC Genomics | 2012

Transcriptome analyses of early cucumber fruit growth identifies distinct gene modules associated with phases of development

Kaori Ando; Kevin M. Carr; Rebecca Grumet

BackgroundEarly stages of fruit development from initial set through exponential growth are critical determinants of size and yield, however, there has been little detailed analysis of this phase of development. In this study we combined morphological analysis with 454 pyrosequencing to study transcript level changes occurring in young cucumber fruit at five ages from anthesis through the end of exponential growth.ResultsThe fruit samples produced 1.13 million ESTs which were assembled into 27,859 contigs with a mean length of 834 base pairs and a mean of 67 reads per contig. All contigs were mapped to the cucumber genome. Principal component analysis separated the fruit ages into three groups corresponding with cell division/pre-exponential growth (0 and 4 days post pollination (dpp)), peak exponential expansion (8dpp), and late/post-exponential expansion stages of growth (12 and 16 dpp). Transcripts predominantly expressed at 0 and 4 dpp included homologs of histones, cyclins, and plastid and photosynthesis related genes. The group of genes with peak transcript levels at 8dpp included cytoskeleton, cell wall, lipid metabolism and phloem related proteins. This group was also dominated by genes with unknown function or without known homologs outside of cucurbits. A second shift in transcript profile was observed at 12-16dpp, which was characterized by abiotic and biotic stress related genes and significant enrichment for transcription factor gene homologs, including many associated with stress response and development.ConclusionsThe transcriptome data coupled with morphological analyses provide an informative picture of early fruit development. Progressive waves of transcript abundance were associated with cell division, development of photosynthetic capacity, cell expansion and fruit growth, phloem activity, protection of the fruit surface, and finally transition away from fruit growth toward a stage of enhanced stress responses. These results suggest that the interval between expansive growth and ripening includes further developmental differentiation with an emphasis on defense. The increased transcript levels of cucurbit-specific genes during the exponential growth stage may indicate unique factors contributing to rapid growth in cucurbits.


Plant Physiology | 1997

Molecular cloning of mannose-6-phosphate reductase and its developmental expression in celery.

John D. Everard; Claudio Cantini; Rebecca Grumet; Julie Plummer; Wayne Loescher

Compared with other primary photosynthetic products (e.g. sucrose and starch), little is known about sugar alcohol metabolism, its regulation, and the manner in which it is integrated with other pathways. Mannose-6-phosphate reductase (M6PR) is a key enzyme that is involved in mannitol biosynthesis in celery (Apium graveolens L.). The M6PR gene was cloned from a leaf cDNA library, and clonal authenticity was established by assays of M6PR activity, western blots, and comparisons of the deduced amino acid sequence with a celery M6PR tryptic digestion product. Recombinant M6PR, purified from Escherichia coli, had specific activity, molecular mass, and kinetic characteristics indistinguishable from those of authentic celery M6PR. Sequence analyses showed M6PR to be a member of the aldo-keto reductase superfamily, which includes both animal and plant enzymes. The greatest sequence similarity was with aldose-6-phosphate reductase (EC 1.1.1.200), a key enzyme in sorbitol synthesis in Rosaceae. Developmental studies showed M6PR to be limited to green tissues and to be under tight transcriptional regulation during leaf initiation, expansion, and maturation. These data confirmed a close relationship between the development of photosynthetic capacity, mannitol synthesis, and M6PR activity.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2005

Effect of modified endogenous ethylene production on sex expression, bisexual flower development and fruit production in melon (Cucumis melo L.)

Ekaterina Papadopoulou; Holly A. Little; Sue A. Hammar; Rebecca Grumet

Members of the Cucurbitaceae family display a range of sexual phenotypes including various combinations of male, female, or bisexual flowers. Ethylene appears to be a key hormone regulating the sex determination process. Application of ethylene, or inhibition of ethylene action, increases or decreases the number of pistil-bearing buds, respectively. Elevated levels of ethylene production and expression of genes for ethylene biosynthesis, have been correlated with pistillate flower production. In this study, we sought to determine the effect of modified endogenous ethylene production on sex expression by constitutively expressing ACS (1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate synthase), the first committed enzyme for ethylene biosynthesis, in transgenic melons (Cucumis melo L.). Most melon genotypes are andromonoecious, where an initial phase of male flowers is followed by a mixture of bisexual and male flowers. ACS melon plants showed increased ethylene production by leaves and flower buds, and increased femaleness as measured by earlier and increased number of bisexual buds. ACS melons also had earlier and increased number of bisexual buds that matured to anthesis, suggesting that ethylene is important not only for sex determination, but also for development of the bisexual bud to maturity. Field studies showed that ACS melons had earlier mature bisexual flowers, earlier fruit set, and increased number of fruit set on closely spaced nodes on the main stem. These results provide a direct demonstration of the importance of endogenous ethylene production for female reproductive processes in melon.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2012

Comparison of salt stress resistance genes in transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana indicates that extent of transcriptomic change may not predict secondary phenotypic or fitness effects.

Zhulong Chan; Patrick J. Bigelow; Wayne Loescher; Rebecca Grumet

Engineered abiotic stress resistance is an important target for increasing agricultural productivity. There are concerns, however, regarding possible ecological impacts of transgenic crops. In contrast to the first wave of transgenic crops, many abiotic stress resistance genes can initiate complex downstream changes. Transcriptome profiling has been suggested as a comprehensive non-targeted approach to examine the secondary effects. We compared phenotypic and transcriptomic effects of constitutive expression of genes intended to confer salt stress tolerance by three different mechanisms: a transcription factor, CBF3/DREB1a; a metabolic gene, M6PR, for mannitol biosynthesis; and the Na⁺/H⁺ antiporter, SOS1. Transgenic CBF3, M6PR and SOS1 Arabidopsis thaliana were grown together in the growth chamber, greenhouse and field. In the absence of salt, M6PR and SOS1 lines performed comparably with wild type; CBF3 lines exhibited dwarfing as reported previously. All three transgenes conferred fitness advantage when subjected to 100 mm NaCl in the growth chamber. CBF3 and M6PR affected transcription of numerous abiotic stress-related genes as measured by Affymetrix microarray analysis. M6PR additionally modified expression of biotic stress and oxidative stress genes. Transcriptional effects of SOS1 in the absence of salt were smaller and primarily limited to redox-related genes. The extent of transcriptome change, however, did not correlate with the effects on growth and reproduction. Thus, the magnitude of global transcriptome differences may not predict phenotypic differences upon which environment and selection act to influence fitness. These observations have implications for interpretation of transcriptome analyses in the context of risk assessment and emphasize the importance of evaluation within a phenotypic context.


Cab Reviews: Perspectives in Agriculture, Veterinary Science, Nutrition and Natural Resources | 2007

Manipulation of plant architecture to enhance crop disease control

Kaori Ando; Rebecca Grumet; Karolyn Terpstra; James D. Kelly

Yield and quality losses due to disease are major factors limiting crop productivity; thus breeding for disease resistance is a primary goal for many plant breeding programmes. Unfortunately, specific sources of resistance are not always available. In cases where sources of genetic resistance are limited or non-existent, manipulating plant architecture to facilitate disease avoidance may be a valuable alternate approach to mitigate disease severity. Modifications of plant architecture can be used to reduce contact with the pathogen, create barriers to pathogen growth and development, or create an unfavourable microclimate for disease development. Architectural variants have long been observed by plant breeders and geneticists, and are frequently utilized to develop new plant types. Key variants that may facilitate disease control include altered plant height, determinacy, branching patterns, branch or leaf angle, flower position, organ coverage or shape, or root structure patterns. Implementing disease avoidance by an architectural approach requires an understanding of both the life cycle of the pathogen and the genetic basis for the desired morphological traits. This review examines examples where modified architecture can be employed to reduce disease. Among the better-documented cases are modified canopy structure to reduce white mould in dry bean and tightly closed ears to reduce Fusarium ear rot of corn. These examples demonstrate that breeding for modified plant architecture can be a valuable component of a broader disease control strategy that also includes genetic resistance and cultural and chemical controls.

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Kaori Ando

Michigan State University

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Marivi Colle

Michigan State University

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Sue A. Hammar

Michigan State University

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Wayne Loescher

Michigan State University

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Holly A. Little

Michigan State University

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Yiqun Weng

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Zhulong Chan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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