UNIVERSITY PARK (Centre Co.) A gene long suspected of controlling the self-incompatibili ty mating system in plants has finally been caught in the act by a team of Penn State biologists. Led by Teh-hui Kao, associate professor of biochemistry and molecular biology, the team is the first to show directly that this gene determines whether a plant is able to fertilize itself. For more than 130 years, since Darwin observed that some plants can fertilize themselves with their own pollen while others cannot, scientists have been trying to understand exactly what controls this aspect of plant mating. Now, in a paper published in the Feb. 10 issue of the journal Nature, the Penn State biologists have pro vided the first direct evidence con firming a theory of genetic self incompatibility that is the founda tion for years of research in plant genetics. The cornerstone of this theory is the self-incompatibility gene, or “S gene.” According to the theory, a plant that cannot fertilize itself has an S gene that is “turned on,” enabling it to produce in its pistil a protein that recognizes and rejects its own pollen. If a plant’s S gene is “turned off,” it does not produce the S protein, so it is able to fertil ize itself. “A protein identified in the ear ly 1980 s seemed to be the predict ed S protein,” said Kao, “but our strongest clues until now were on ly from indirect evidence.” By harnessing standard genetic engineering techniques, Kao’s team was able to neutralize the gene in a group of petunia plants, reversing their inherited inability to fertilize themselves and en abling them to produce seeds. The biologists also inserted the gene into another group of plants, giv ing them the ability to reject pol Win Top Awards In Contest Farmers DEKALB, 111. Richard Schmaltz of Doylestown, Pa. won the state first-place award in the National Grain Sorghum Produc ers (NGSP) yield and manage ment contest, non-irrigated divi sion. This is his third consecutive win. R. Gregory Manners of Rin goes, NJ. won the state first-place award in the National Grain Sor ghum Producers (NGSP) yield and management contest, non-irri gated division. This is his third consecutive win. Also, Schmaltz won the award with DeKalb DK37 sorghum which produced 90.32 bushels per acre. Tbe yield ranked him among DeKalb’s 14 national and state first-place winners. He will be honored along with other state and national winners at the NGSP's annual convention in Nashville, Tenn. DeKalb Plant Genetics also will present him Classified ads! £ PAYOFF! 1 Plant Mating Mystery Solved len with a specific genetic identi ty- The biologists performed two experiments to show that a plant’s ability to produce seeds when self pollinated depends on the pre sence or absence of an active S gene. In the first experiment, they disabled an S gene in aline of self incompatible plants, then attempt ed to fertilize them with their own pollen. “We reasoned that if an S pro tein is required for self-incompati bility interactions between pistil and pollen then inhibition of its synthesis should lead to the break down of self incompatibility,” Kao said. Each plant has two varieties of the S gene, called S alleles, which it inherits from the parent plants. Kao used petunia plants that had alleles called S 2 and S 3. He used a genetic engineering technique to produce an “antisense” S 3 allele whose DNA sequence order is the reverse of a normal S 3 allele’s. Normal alleles produce RNA in a normal sequence order that makes genetic “sense.” “Antisense RNA is able to block the synthesis of protein from sense RNA in a mysterious way that we do not yet under stand,” Kao said. Next, the team, including post doctoral fellow Hyun-Sook Lee and graduate student Shihshieh Huang, incorporated the antisense S 3 allele into a bacterium that they then used to infect the petunia leaves. From these leaves, they grew transgenic plants containing the three alleles, S 2, S 3 and anti sense S 3. “Although this is a standard procedure, it turned out to be the most critical step in this experi ment,” Kao says. “We struggled for about a year before we were able to successfully grow trans genic petunias.” with an award during a special re ception. Manners won the award with DeKalb DK37 sorghum which produced 109.93 bushels per acre. The yield ranked him among De- Kalb’s 14 national and state first place winners. He also will be honored at the NGSP’s annual convention in Nashville, Tenn. DeKalb Plant Genetics also will present him with an award during a special re ception. Schmaltz, who has been farm ing 40 years and has been a De- Kalb dealer more than 30 years, grows com, sorghum, soybeans and wheat on 573 acres. He plants 193 acres of that to sorghum. Manners, who has been farming 21 years, plants 80 of his 700 acres tp sorghum. On the other acreage he grows com, soybeans, oats, rye, hay, sorghum/Sudan grass. He also raises about 30 head of cattle. The team tested these transgen ic plants, found they were not pro ducing any S 3 protein and at tempted to fertilize them with S 3 pollen. “A normal plant with S 2 and S 3 alleles, when pollinated with S 3 pollen, will reject the pollen be cause the S allele types match. The flower’s pistil recognizes the pollen as 'self pollen,’ fertilization fails, and the plant does not pro duce seeds,” said the Penn State biologists. “But our transgenic pe tunias produced the same large number of seeds as you would get from compatible pollination, showing that they had lost the ability to reject self pollen.” Kao says this is the first suc cessful attempt to use the anti sense approach in any self-incom patible plant species. Growers of self-incompatible crops such as apples could benefit from this part of Kao’s research, according to George Greene, asso ciate professor of pomology at Penn State. Because apples arc self-incom patible, commercial apple growers typically mix, in a single orchard block, three varieties that they carefully select to provide sources of compatible pollen. Cultivation of a single self-compatible variety would increase efficiency. Greene said by reducing several cultural and harvesting problems. In their second experiment, Kao’s team put an S 3 gene into petunias that contained SI and S 2 alleles. A normal plant with SI and S 2 alleles will accept S 3 pol len because the S 3 allele carried by the pollen is different from the SI and S 2 alleles carried by the flower’s pistil. However, Kao’s team found that some of the trans FARM \EQUIPMENT lOkw Generator set, new, Onan diesel, 1 or 3 phase; 610-489-4126. 1150 MF. field ready. $5500; AC-019, gas, good condition, $2800; IH W/450, gas, w/pully, $l5OO. 717/872-8445. 12' JO roller harrow, $675; 18' JO grain drill, on rub ber. $200; 16' Oliver gram drill, large rubber tires, $275, 3 axle 9-ton trailer, $l6OO, Nl manure spreader $425 Other items, selling out 609-723-2574. 12 no-til coulters fit JO 7000 planters; 6&12 row squeeze pumps. 717/745-3579. 1495 NH self-propelled haybine, 1973 Ford cattle truck w/12‘ body Stump Acres, York Co, (717)792-3216 16.9x30 Goodyear (lb), $230; General $255; Fire stone $275. Kelly (Ib/sb) $275, Goodyear (Ib/sb) $285, Installation available within reasonable dis tance Berrier's Farm Tire Service, Uniata County Call between Sam- Bpm (717)436-9774 16' wooden feeder wagon, very nice, $6OO. (301)898-7426 1845 C Case skidloader, very good, new tires, 1-owner, aux valve, 3000 hrs.. $12,500. 717-267-3492 genic plants produced no seeds at all when pollinated with S 3 pol len. 'The transgenic plants that fail ed to produce any seeds at all had normal levels of S 3 protein for a plant containing an S 3 gene, which enabled them to acquire the ability to completely reject S 3 pol len,” Kai said. “The transgenic plants that produced a few seeds when pollinated with S 3 pollen had levels of S 3 protein that were much lower than normal, and those transgenic plants producing the most seeds did not have any detectable amount of S 3 protein.” He said that this experiment shows that S-protein levels alone control a plant’s ability to reject its own pollen or pollen whose S allele type is identical to one of those contained in the flower’s pistil. “The ability to prevent plants from fertilizing themselves could double the yield and reduce by one-third to two-thirds the labor costs involved in hybrid seed pro duction,” said Richard Craig, pro fessor of plant breeding and the Styer Professor of Horticultural Botany at Penn State. Virtually all commercially im portant vegetables and many im portant flowers are produced from FI hybrid seeds, the result of crossing two purebred plant lines, in order to assure the uniformity of hybrid seeds, growers typically must remove by hand the pollen producing organs from the seed producing parent plants, then dis card the seed produced by the pol len patents sacrificing half the seed crop. “If the plants were 100 percent self-incompatible, you could har vest seed from every plant while Late Int 715, German diesel, gram head & corn head, $7,950. Larry Stalter “The Combine Man’ 1-800-248-2151 LOADER ATTACHMENTS New Ou-AI, fits all makes & models, 20% off 410-833-9091 1947 John Deere A, John Deere 420 crawler; BN. 215-267-2497 after 4PM 1951 MM BF Avery gas tractor, runs. Located in WV. $750. 215/766-0393. 1975 IH 1466 tractor, origi nal owner, duals, 3400 hours, new TA, VG condi tion 610/488-7695 1989 Stirco Rotomaster feed mixer with scale, $12,000 610-488-1632 1 JD 210 C Backhoe Loader 717-573-2215 1R Pixall bean picker, even feeder, viberating table, packing belt; 1R Pixall corn picker, 3pt, CAT 11, Durand- Wayland, 4-size, 2-lane, fruit/vegetable sizer 609-561-1153 2200 gallon vacuum tank, tandem, top-fill, hydraulic shut off, $5OOO (610)255-4311 evenings 230 Int. fast hitch tractor w/2x plows, sickle bar mower, 3pt hitch disc, Nl manure spreader w/new drag 301/898-9841 • 2R units for White 5100 planter, dry fertilizer boxes and disc openers (717)653-6701 2" Vacuum line for 34 stalls, 2 T Patz silage con veyor w/motor. 717/766-3970. Lanemar Arming, Saturday, Fabruary H, 1894-D7 using much less costly and more efficient fertilization procedures," Craig said. “In addition, Dr. Kao’s work could provide the key to pro ducing hybrids in many crops where this technique previously has been either inefficient or im possible.” “Confirmation that the S gene encodes the key protein in self-re cognition comes as a huge relief to scientists who have published analyses based on that assump tion,” said Andrew Clark, profes sor of biology at Penn Suite and an authority on the molecular evolu tion of S alleles. Craig said, “Many generations of scientists have devoted their lives to understanding the beauti ful system of self-incompatibility in plants. Dr. Kao has added something to this effort that we have been seeking for half a cen tury. His impressively simple and elegant contribution to our under standing of this biological process brings it into the era of modem molicular biology.” Keo said his team’s next re search goals are to determine whether the S protein, a ribonucle ase, digests the pollen’s RNA or blocks its growth in some other way and to identify exactly which of the protein’s amino acids re cognize self-pollen. “We have not yet captured the holy grail of this field, which is to determine the precise bio-chemi cal mechanism of self-incompati bility,” Kao ;aid, “but this goal is the focus of our work, which looks like it could turn out to be a life time project. ’ This research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation and the United States Department of Agriculture. Knight little augie, portable Landoll Tilloll 10 ft primary TMR mixer, eaton scales, or secondary tillage tool. 170 cubic foot, very nice set of disc, 14 sweep, roller cond (814)793-3874 or basket, mid-west harrow (814)793-3559 (717)672-2213 316 NH baler, used 2 sea sons (or straw only; 1066 IH turbo tractor, only 2700 hrs , dual tires, 710 IH automatic reset 16' plow, (2) 20' hay wagons, 10' high, w/10 ton chassis, w/ big tires, Harvest Handler, 16', aluminum elevator, 14' 750 MF diesel combine, used for small gram, 1964 IH tandem dump truck 345 V-8 engine, 3 speed accel ery, 5 speed bans, double hoist to raise 17* steel box w/wooden sides, 13 ton legal All items excellent condition 717-683-5887 3300 JD combine. 2200 hours, 2R corn head, 10' grain head, excellent shape, $9OOO 717/642-5951 (3) JD high pressure cylin der. Round hog feeder, (2) 6-hole wooden Smidley feeders, Metal 4-hole feeder, Front mounted woodsaw, Krause Trans port disc, 15', 3pt tool bar, 3pt Carry-all, International 16 disc gram drill, JD 2020 diesel, rubber 30%, remote valve, 3pt JD toolbar w/ twisted teeth 717 632-4022 3 PTH Equipment, Me chanical 1R Transplanter, Bartville 1R Water Wheel Planter (New), 5' disc, IX 12" plow; 1R cultivator. S' MC flail mower w/bagger & roller. Thom Wheary (717)687-0102 3 JD A’s, 3 Farmall H's, 1 Super M, 1 W 4, 1 Farmall regular After 6PM, (304)823-1717 3pt, SHP Honda irrigation pump, used, $350, Agryl row cover. NEW, 50'x800', $350 717-436-6611 (3) Rissler conveyors, 20' Badger silo unloader, 100' Patz belt feeder, feed cart, barn drive spreader 717-529-6488 456 Ford New Holland trailer mower, used very little, new tiger jaw blade 717/354-6197 460 Farmall, fast hitch, WF, 2 remotes, nice condi tion 410/721-2897 476 GM diesel engine for -parts 6V71 Detroit rebuilt, Cummins 250, 10 speed, trans Mack engine WANTED 16hp Bnggs& Stratton engine (717)866-2091 4R7000 JD cornplanters Choose from 6 4/6R 7000 dry fertilizer auger till On row band sprayers for any type cormnplanter Used 2R planters Pequea Planter, 1-3/4 mi North of Gap on Fit 897 Call ABC Groff, (717)354-4191, ask for Bill Beck 5400 White corn plater. 4 row, 30 inch, dry fertilizer insecticide monitor 717-738-1327 Lancaster Co $9OO