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Featured researches published by Yidong Ran.


The Plant Cell | 2010

Functional Analyses of Caffeic Acid O-Methyltransferase and Cinnamoyl-CoA-Reductase Genes from Perennial Ryegrass (Lolium perenne)

Yi Tu; Simone Rochfort; Zhiqian Liu; Yidong Ran; Megan Griffith; Pieter Badenhorst; Gordon V. Louie; Marianne E. Bowman; K. F. Smith; Joseph P. Noel; Aidyn Mouradov; German Spangenberg

The authors show enhanced digestibility of cinnamoyl CoA-reductase and caffeic acid O-methyltransferase-deficient perennial ryegrass plants grown under glasshouse and field conditions. This indicates that both of these lignin biosynthetic genes are promising targets for transgenic approaches aiming to enhance forage quality and improve feedstock plants for biofuel production. Cinnamoyl CoA-reductase (CCR) and caffeic acid O-methyltransferase (COMT) catalyze key steps in the biosynthesis of monolignols, which serve as building blocks in the formation of plant lignin. We identified candidate genes encoding these two enzymes in perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) and show that the spatio-temporal expression patterns of these genes in planta correlate well with the developmental profile of lignin deposition. Downregulation of CCR1 and caffeic acid O-methyltransferase 1 (OMT1) using an RNA interference–mediated silencing strategy caused dramatic changes in lignin level and composition in transgenic perennial ryegrass plants grown under both glasshouse and field conditions. In CCR1-deficient perennial ryegrass plants, metabolic profiling indicates the redirection of intermediates both within and beyond the core phenylpropanoid pathway. The combined results strongly support a key role for the OMT1 gene product in the biosynthesis of both syringyl- and guaiacyl-lignin subunits in perennial ryegrass. Both field-grown OMT1-deficient and CCR1-deficient perennial ryegrass plants showed enhanced digestibility without obvious detrimental effects on either plant fitness or biomass production. This highlights the potential of metabolic engineering not only to enhance the forage quality of grasses but also to produce optimal feedstock plants for biofuel production.


Transgenic Research | 2014

Reduced lignin content and altered lignin composition in the warm season forage grass Paspalum dilatatum by down-regulation of a Cinnamoyl CoA Reductase Gene

Andrea Giordano; Zhiqian Liu; Stephen Panter; Adam M. Dimech; Yongjin Shang; Hewage Wijesinghe; Karen Fulgueras; Yidong Ran; Aidyn Mouradov; Simone Rochfort; Nicola J. Patron; German Spangenberg

C4 grasses are favoured as forage crops in warm, humid climates. The use of C4 grasses in pastures is expected to increase because the tropical belt is widening due to global climate change. While the forage quality of Paspalum dilatatum (dallisgrass) is higher than that of other C4 forage grass species, digestibility of warm-season grasses is, in general, poor compared with most temperate grasses. The presence of thick-walled parenchyma bundle-sheath cells around the vascular bundles found in the C4 forage grasses are associated with the deposition of lignin polymers in cell walls. High lignin content correlates negatively with digestibility, which is further reduced by a high ratio of syringyl (S) to guaiacyl (G) lignin subunits. Cinnamoyl-CoA reductase (CCR) catalyses the conversion of cinnamoyl CoA to cinnemaldehyde in the monolignol biosynthetic pathway and is considered to be the first step in the lignin-specific branch of the phenylpropanoid pathway. We have isolated three putative CCR1 cDNAs from P. dilatatum and demonstrated that their spatio-temporal expression pattern correlates with the developmental profile of lignin deposition. Further, transgenic P. dilatatum plants were produced in which a sense-suppression gene cassette, delivered free of vector backbone and integrated separately to the selectable marker, reduced CCR1 transcript levels. This resulted in the reduction of lignin, largely attributable to a decrease in G lignin.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2018

Zinc finger nuclease-mediated precision genome editing of an endogenous gene in hexaploid bread wheat (Triticum aestivum) using a DNA repair template

Yidong Ran; Nicola J. Patron; Pippa Kay; Debbie Wong; Margaret Buchanan; Yingying Cao; Tim Sawbridge; John P. Davies; John Mason; Steven R. Webb; German Spangenberg; William Michael Ainley; Terence A. Walsh; Matthew J. Hayden

Summary Sequence‐specific nucleases have been used to engineer targeted genome modifications in various plants. While targeted gene knockouts resulting in loss of function have been reported with relatively high rates of success, targeted gene editing using an exogenously supplied DNA repair template and site‐specific transgene integration has been more challenging. Here, we report the first application of zinc finger nuclease (ZFN)‐mediated, nonhomologous end‐joining (NHEJ)‐directed editing of a native gene in allohexaploid bread wheat to introduce, via a supplied DNA repair template, a specific single amino acid change into the coding sequence of acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) to confer resistance to imidazolinone herbicides. We recovered edited wheat plants having the targeted amino acid modification in one or more AHAS homoalleles via direct selection for resistance to imazamox, an AHAS‐inhibiting imidazolinone herbicide. Using a cotransformation strategy based on chemical selection for an exogenous marker, we achieved a 1.2% recovery rate of edited plants having the desired amino acid change and a 2.9% recovery of plants with targeted mutations at the AHAS locus resulting in a loss‐of‐function gene knockout. The latter results demonstrate a broadly applicable approach to introduce targeted modifications into native genes for nonselectable traits. All ZFN‐mediated changes were faithfully transmitted to the next generation.


Archive | 2013

Selection of symbiota by screening multiple host-symbiont associations

German Spangenberg; John Forster; Noel O. I. Cogan; Yidong Ran; John Mason; Timothy Ivor Sawbridge; Ben J. Hayes; Matthew J. Hayden; Kathryn Michaela Guthridge; Simone Rochfort; Ben Cocks; Hans Daetwyler


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 2014

Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Lolium rigidum Gaud.

Yidong Ran; Nicola J. Patron; Qin Yu; Suzan Georges; John Mason; German Spangenberg


Archive | 2013

Method for large scale generation of artificial seeds comprising symbiota

German Spangenberg; Kathryn Michaela Guthridge; Yidong Ran; John Mason


Archive | 2017

seleção de simbiotas por triagem de múltiplas associações de hospedeiro-simbiota

Ben Cocks; Ben J. Hayes; German Spangenberg; Hans Daetwyler; John Mason; John Forster; Kathryn Michaela Guthridge; Matthew J. Hayden; Noel O. I. Cogan; Simone Rochfort; Timothy Ivor Sawbridge; Yidong Ran


Archive | 2015

MÉTODOS Y COMPOSICIONES PARA LA INTEGRACIÓN DE UNA SECUENCIA EXÓGENA DENTRO DEL GENOMA DE LAS PLANTAS

W. Michael Ainley; Dmitry Guschin; Matthew J. Hayden; Daniel Isenegger; John Mason; Jeffrey C. Miller; Joseph F. Petolino; Yidong Ran; Tim Sawbridge; German Spangenberg; Steven R. Webb


Archive | 2014

Manipulación de la Auto-incompatibilidad en Plantas

German Spangenberg; John Forster; Noel O. I. Cogan; Yidong Ran; Hiroshi Shinozuka; Nicola J. Patron; Luke W. Pembleton


Archive | 2014

Procédés et compositions permettant d'intégrer une séquence exogène au sein du génome de plantes

W. Michael Ainley; Dmitry Guschin; Matthew J. Hayden; Daniel Isenegger; John Mason; Jeffrey C. Miller; Joseph F. Petolino; Yidong Ran; Tim Sawbridge; German Spangenberg; Steven R. Webb

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