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Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture 33: 227-236, 1993. © 1993KluwerAcademic Publishers. Printedin the Netherlands. Special section on particle bombardment Direct DNA transfer using electric discharge particle acceleration (ACCELL T M technology) Dennis McCabe & Paul Christou* Agracetus, Inc., 8520 University Green, Middleton, WI 53562, USA (*requests for offprints) Key words: dicot transformation, monocot transformation, particle bombardment, transgenic cotton Gossypium hirsutum, transgenic rice Oryza sativa, transgenic soybean Glycine max Abstract Direct D N A transfer methods based on particle bombardment have revolutionized plant genetic engineering. Major agronomic crops previously considered recalcitrant to gene transfer have been engineered using variations of this technology. In many cases variety-independent and efficient transformation methods have been developed enabling application of molecular biology techniques to crop improvement. The focus of this article is the development and performance of electric discharge particle bombardment (ACCELL TM) technology. Unique advantages of this methodology compared to alternative propulsion technologies are discussed in terms of the range of species and genotypes that have been engineered, and the high transformation frequencies for major agronomic crops that enabled the technology to move from the R&D phase to commercialization. Creation of transgenic soybeans, cotton, and rice will be used as examples to illustrate the development of variety-independent and efficient gene transfer methods for most of the major agronomic crops. To our knowledge, no other gene transfer method based on particle bombardment has resulted in variety-independent and practical generation of large numbers of independently-derived crop plants. ACCELL TM technology is currently being utilized for the routine transfer of valuable genes into elite germplasm of soybean, cotton, bean, rice, corn, peanut and woody species. Introduction In order to develop a practical transformation system for any crop, a number of criteria need to be fulfilled to make engineering of the crop useful: - transformation systems have to be independent of genotype or cultivar in order to facilitate introduction of useful genes into elite varieties; -large numbers of transgenic plants should be recovered in order to assess useful levels of gene expression; and -extensive tissue culture manipulations involving time-consuming and labor-intensive operations such as protoplast and embryogenic suspension cultures should be minimized or if possible eliminated in order to avoid cultureinduced mutations and somaclonal variation. It is apparent that promising reported gene transfer methods for many important crops suffer from some or all of the above drawbacks. An example is the engineering of maize by biolistic particle bombardment which requires development of regenerable embryogenic suspension cultures (Gordon-Kamm et al. 1990; Fromm et al. 1990) amenable to transformation, a not so trivial task. The requirement for developing such cultures compatible with current transformation technologies make practical engineering of elite cultivars of maize elusive, and represents an unfortunate under-utilization of the potential of particle bombardment-based technologies. 228 Particle bombardment employs high velocity metal particles to deliver biologically active D N A into plant cells. The concept has been described in detail by Sanford (Sanford 1988, 1990). Christou et al. (1988) demonstrated that the process could be used to deliver biologically active D N A into living cells and result in the recovery of stable transformants. The ability to deliver foreign D N A into regenerable cells, tissues or organs, appears to provide the best method, at present, for achieving truly genotypeindependent transformation in many agronomic crops bypassing Agrobacterium host-specificity and tissue-culture related regeneration difficulties. Due to the physical nature of the technique there is no biological limitation to the actual D N A delivery process thus genotype should not be a limiting factor. Combining the relative ease of D N A introduction into plant cells with an efficient regeneration protocol avoiding protoplast or suspension culture, we appear to have the most optimum system in place for transformation. Important advancements and refinements in the process described subsequently, using soybean.(McCabe et al. 1988; Christou et al. 1990), cotton (McCabe & Martinell 1991), and rice (Christou et al. 1991, 1992) as models for dicots and monocots demonstrated the power of the technique. A number of advantages make microprojectile bombardment the method of choice for engineering various crops. ferent species. Even though recovery of transgenic plants has not been reported from a number of important agronomic crops, this deficit is more due to the lack of a favorable tissue culture response than due to the D N A delivery method. Transformation of recalcitrant species Most of the important agronomic crops such as soybean, cotton, maize etc., cannot be engineered using conventional methods. In the case of soybean (Glycine max Merril.), Agrobacterium host-specificity restricts utilization of this method to one specific variety which is of no commercial importance (Hinchee et al. 1988) whereas for cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.), tissue culture limitations only allow engineering of a specific variety (Umbeck et al. 1987). For maize (Zea mays L.), transformation using electroporation and protoplasts resulted in the recovery of infertile plants (Rhodes et al. 1988). Study of basic plant developmental processes By utilizing chromogenic markers it is possible to study developmental processes and also clarify the origin of germline in regenerated plants (Christou & McCabe 1992). Chimeras can be created very easily (Christou 1990) and contribution of the various cell layers in the apical meristem to the ontogeny of plants can now be studied. Transformation of organized tissue The ability to engineer organized and potentially regenerable tissue permits introduction of foreign genes into elite germplasm. Consequently, backcrossing is not required to restore the original line as compared to other transformation methods limited by genotype and host-specificity. Recovery of transformed R1 seed is considerably shortened and this is of paramount importance in commercial programs where timing is vital in bringing products to market. Universal delivery system Transient gene expression has been demonstrated in numerous tissues representing many dif- Critical variables A number of parameters have been identified and need to be considered very carefully in experiments involving transformation through particle bombardment. These can be classified in three general categories: - physical parameters, -environmental factors and - biological factors. Physical parameters include: the nature, chemical and physical properties of the metal particles utilized to carry the foreign DNA; nature, preparation and binding of D N A onto the particles; target tissue. Particles should be of 229 high enough mass in order to possess adequate momentum to penetrate into the appropriate tissue. Suitable metal particles include gold, tungsten, palladium, rhodium, platinum, iridium and possibly other second and third row transition metals. Metals should be chemically inert to prevent adverse reactions with the DNA or cell components and they should also be able to form organometallic complexes with the DNA possessing the correct stereochemistry that will allow optimal dissociation of the metal-DNA entity once the coated particle enters the target cell. Additional desirable properties for the metal include size and shape as well as agglomeration and dispersion properties. The nature, form and concentration of the DNA need also be carefully considered. In the process of coating the metal particles with exogenous DNA, certain additives such as spermidine and calcium chloride appear to be useful. The nature of the DNA, e.g. single versus double stranded may also be important under some conditions, even though this was shown not to be a significant variable in specific cases. Finally, it is very important to target the appropriate cells that are competent for both transformation and regeneration. It is apparent that different tissues have different requirements; extensive histology needs to be performed in order to ascertain the origin of regenerating tissue in a particular transformation study. Depth of penetration thus becomes one of the most important variables and the ability to tune a system to achieve particle delivery to specific cell layers may be the difference between success and failure in recovering transgenic plants from a given tissues. Environmental variables include such parameters as temperature, photoperiod and humidity of donor plants, explants and bombarded tissues. These parameters have a direct effect on the physiology of tissues and this is also an important variable. Such factors will influence receptiveness of target tissue to foreign DNA delivery and also affect its susceptibility to damage and injury that may adversely affect the outcome of the transformation process. Some explants may require a 'healing' period after bombardment under special regimens of light, temperature and humidity. Biological factors include choice and nature of explant, pre- and post-bombardment culture conditions etc. In addition, explants derived from plants that are under stress, e.g. infected with bacteria or fungi, will provide inferior material for bombardment experiments. Interaction between introduced DNA and cytoplasmic or nuclear components need also be examined. Particle bombardment using ACCELL T M technology hardware and operating principles ACCELL T M technology utilizes an instrument (Fig. 1) to accelerate DNA coated gold beads to any desired velocity by varying the input voltage. Conceptually, it can be viewed as a shock wave generator. Early in the development of the device it became apparent that the driving force Fig. 1. ACCELLT M device developed by Agracetus for electric dischargeparticle acceleration. 230 for the projectiles was not the expansion of hot gases as in a c a n n o n or rifle. T h e shock wave p r o d u c e d by the initial electrical discharge app e a r s to be responsible for the particle acceleration. This realization led to new designs that no l o n g e r r e s e m b l e 'guns'. In the current design the accelerating force is g e n e r a t e d in a two c h a m b e r e n c l o s u r e s e p a r a t e d by a partition (Fig. 2). O n e side contains two steel arc points which provide the initial m o t i v e force. T h e other side acts as a reflection c h a m b e r . T h e expanding shock wave reflects back into the c h a m b e r as it hits the deflector and the bulk of the pressure wave is r e l e a s e d as the deflector is blown away. T h e s h o c k f r o n t is p r e v e n t e d f r o m directly interacting with the carrier sheet by an obstructing barrier. A f t e r o n e or m o r e reflections f r o m the floor and Fig. 2. The blast chamber consists of a PVC block milled to form a rectangular cavity divided into two chambers by a partial wall. In one of these chambers are two arc points (a) spaced equidistant from the sides and rear wall. The points are set 0.5 mm apart and bridged by a 10 ixl drop of water prior to each discharge. The spark chamber is covered by a wafer of PVC (b) which reflects the primary shock wave back into the chamber avoiding energy loss. The cavity is partially obstructed by a partition which separates the spark chamber from the reflection chamber (c). The partition serves to prevent the primary shock wave from interacting directly with the carrier sheet. As secondary waves are formed by reflection from the chamber walls, their combined fronts distribute their force evenly over the carrier sheet. This sheet which forms the roof of the reflection chamber, is accelerated upward until it encounters the retaining screen (d). The sheet, and 18 mm square of 0.5 mil metalized mylar (Dupont) is held by the screen (100 mesh stainless steel) as the gold beads on its surface proceed to the target tissue. The energy for the arc is provided by a 25 Kv 2 ixF capacitor charged from a 25 Kv DC variable power supply. The capacitor is discharged through the arc gap by activating a solenoid-actuated double-pole double-throw switch. Fig. 3. Diagram of the acceleration mechanism, illustrating spark chamber with arc points, film carrying gold particle with DNA, retaining screen and target tissue. walls, the c o m b i n e d wave fronts reach the overlying carrier sheet which is accelerated upwards. A n y particles on its surface will be passively accelerated as well. F o r this p u r p o s e , a lightweight sheet of metalized m y l a r ( D u p o n t 50 M M C ) is used as an intermediate carrier for the small beads. The sheet along with the beads is accelerated as it absorbs e n e r g y f r o m the s h o c k wave. It is then s t o p p e d by a retaining screen to allow the beads to p r o c e e d to the target alone. Since the shock wave carries no hot exhaust gases or debris it is possible tO place the target tissue relatively close to the gun w i t h o u t fear of incineration. T h e entire assembly m a y be partially e v a c u a t e d to r e d u c e drag and tissue d a m a g e , h o w e v e r , too high a v a c u u m (less than 200 millibars) will cause the tissue to lose m o i s t u r e rapidly with subsequent reduction in cell viability. A schematic of the acceleration m e c h a n i s m is shown in Fig. 3. Bombardment protocol D N A is typically l o a d e d o n t o 1 . 5 - 3 ~ m gold beads ( A l p h a Chemicals Inc.) at a rate of up to 40 Ixg D N A / m g of gold using CaC12 and spermidine (Klein et al. 1987) to precipitate the D N A o n t o the gold. T h e c o a t e d beads are gently centrifuged and r e s u s p e n d e d in 100% ethanol, then p i p e t t e d o n t o the carrier sheets ( 1 8 x 1 8 m m squares o f 1/2 mil metalized mylar; D u p o n t 5 0 M M C ) . A f t e r a brief period of settling, the 231 ethanol is drained away and the sheet dried. The 'gun' is loaded by placing a 10 Ixl drop of water between the points and covering the spark chamber with the reflecting cap. The carrier sheet is laid over the top of the reflection chamber and the retaining screen put in place. The target is prepared in a way that allows the desired area to be exposed as it is inverted above the retaining screen. The assembly is then evacuated to 600 millibars before the discharge is activated. Bombardment parameters As the gun is being refined and tested under the particular conditions required for a given system, it is important to be able to monitor its performance. Penetration of the gold beads into 1% w/v agar provides a direct measure of the effects of bombardment conditions on the purely physical, non-biological, behavior of the accelerated beads. Figure 4 illustrates the effect of the charging voltage on penetration into agar. Similar tests may also be performed directly on the tissue of choice. The progressively increasing penetration of the beads into soybean hypocotyl tissue as a function of voltage can be seen in Fig. 5A. It is also possible to evaluate the effectiveness of DNA delivery into the different cell layers (Fig. 5B) by using transient expression of the ¢3-glucuronidase (gus) gene (Jefferson et al. 1987). The number of cells expressing GUS in O,. Transient expression studies Transient expression studies should only be used as a guide to develop systems for the stable transformation of a given species. Routinely, many investigators have overstressed the importance and significance of transient expression data. In some cases exhaustive experiments were performed using transient expression data in an attempt to achieve complete protocol optimization for the recovery of stable transformants. This, however, may be unwise as optimization or maximization of transient activity does not necessarily result in optimal or any stable transformation. Therefore, studies involving numbers of transiently expressing cells and loci per unit mass or volume of recipient cells is in our opinion meaningless and in many cases irrelevant to the final outcome particularly when the objective is recovery of transgenic plants. We would strongly urge utilizing data from stable transformation experiments to draw conclusions pertaining to stable transformation. Stable transformation of agronomic crops - dicotyledonous species 600 A each cell layer of the soybean hypocotyl shows a more complicated relationship to voltage reflecting the more critical nature of the interaction between bead delivery and viability of the cells. Such studies combined with the tunable nature of the device are invaluable when designing transformation protocols using this approach. Transgenic soybean as a model 500 1 400 300 0 10 20 30 Voltage (Kv) Fig. 4. Penetration of 1.5-3.0 txm gold beads into 1% agar. A 1 m m cross section of the b o m b a r d e d agar was examined to d e t e r m i n e depth of penetration at each voltage. The first example of the versatility and usefulness of particle bombardment is exemplified by the development of a genotype-independent transformation protocol for soybean (McCabe et al. 1988; Christou et al. 1990). Starting with isolated immature embryonic axes we were able to develop a simple protocol that permitted recovery of clonal plants from every elite variety we attempted to transform (approximately 30 varieties to date covering all maturity groups). The overall transformation frequency can be as 232 % Expressing Cells B 20- % Cells with Beads Soybean Penetration vs. Voltage Soybean Penetration vs. Expression 181614- 60- 12- 501040- 8- 30- 6- 20- 4- 10- 2- ss ss 4 6 8 10 12 14 Voltage (KV) 4 6 8 10 12 14 Voltage (KV) Fig. 5. Soybean hypocotyls were prepared by pre-germinating sterilized seed in petri dishes containing MS salts with 1% agar for 24 h. Cotyledons were then dissected away and axes replated on OR medium (McCabe et al. 1988) for an additional 24 h. The axes were then oriented on their side with the flattened face of the hypocotyl to be bombarded; 1-3 Ixm gold beads (Alpha) were coated with DNA at a ratio of 0.1 Ixg mg 1 of gold containing the [3-glucuronidase gene (gus) by precipitation with CaC12 and spermidine. Carrier sheets were loaded with beads at 0.075 mg cm--'. The assembly was evacuated to 600 millibars prior to each blast. Following bombardment the hypocotyls were replated on OR medium and incubated for 1.5-4h then fixed in 5% formaldehyde in 25 mM KH2PO 4 + 1% Triton X 100 at room temperature for 5 min. Fixation was necessary to reduce diffusion of the GUS protein into adjacent cells. Following fixation tissues were incubated in substrate at 37°C overnight. The hypocotyls were then cut into 35 Ixm sections with a freezing microtome (Rheikert), cleared and examined under a microscope. Cells were scored for the presence or absence of a bead (A) as well as GUS activity (B). Only cells containing a bead visibly in the nucleus and showing precipitated dye were scored as cells expressing the gus gene. These criteria were imposed to reduce the chance of scoring false positives. high as 15% with germline transformation frequencies in the range of 0.05-0.5% based on the number of bombarded explants. The ~-glucuronidase gene (gus) from Escherichia coli proved to be a useful tool in these experiments. The meristematic regions were exposed and gold particles coated with plasmid DNA were introduced into the general area of the meristem as described elsewhere. Plant regeneration proceeded through organogenesis using high levels of cytokinin to induce multiple shoots from the general area of both the primary and axillary meristems (McCabe et al. 1988). On average, eight to ten shoots were recovered per explant. Regenerated shoots were harvested and transferred to the greenhouse after an appropriate acclimation period. Conversion of shoots to plants was greater than 95%. Expression of the gus gene was originally used to visualize transformed plant tissues. Due to the nature of the transformation process most of the plants recovered were chimeric; however, clonal plants 233 were also obtained at a significant frequency (Christou et al. 1989, 1990). These plants were found to express the gene in essentially all their tissues and usually passed the transgene to their progeny in a manner consistent with mendelian inheritance of a single dominant locus. Though germline transformation frequency appears to be somewhat low, it is relatively straightforward to identify transformed plants due to the ease of the histochemical GUS assay. A procedure for the early identification of germline transformants has been described recently (Christou & McCabe 1992). Consequently, production of reasonably large numbers of transformed plants is practical by this method which does not utilize selection to identify transgenic plants. In experiments in which we evaluated transformation frequencies using two genes, either linked on the same plasmid or unlinked on separate plasmids, we found that in the former case cotransformation frequencies between the screenable and the agronomic or non-selected genes exceeded 95%. In all cotransformed families we found that progeny plants expressing one gene also expressed the other indicating that the two genes were genetically linked even when they were introduced into the explant on separate plasmids (Christou & Swain 1990). Both chimeric and clonal plants gave rise to transformed progeny and most of the transgenic families segregated in a mendelian fashion in the R1 and R2 generations (Christou et al. 1990). Hundreds of independently-derived soybean plants transformed by this method have maintained the foreign genes for many generations. Elite soybean varieties expressing resistance to the herbicides Basta TM and Roundup TM, engineered through ACCELL TM technology are currently undergoing large scale field evaluation with projected commercialization dates well before the end of the decade. Additional experiments involving modification of protein and oil composition are currently in progress. Variety-independent gene transfer into cotton The technique originally developed to engineer cotton utilized Agrobacterium tumefaciens vectors and was applicable to only a few varieties (Umbeck et al. 1987; Firoozabady et al. 1987). Finer & McMullen (1990) reported recovery of transgenic cotton plants from the same cultivar utilizing bombardment of embryogenic suspension cultures. Most varieties of commercial interest proved difficult or impossible to regenerate into plants from the obligatory callus phase. Traits introduced into regenerable varieties could be bred into other lines but the process was lengthy and prone to somaclonal variation. Recently, McCabe & Martinell (1991) developed a procedure, based on ACCELL TM technology, to deliver foreign genes directly into the meristematic tissue of excised embryonic axes of cotton, that resulted in the recovery of transgenic plants in a variety-independent fashion. When bombarded explants had developed 2-3 leaves (2-3 weeks post bombardment) a segment of each leaf was sampled for GUS activity. Plants exhibiting activity were then mapped to identify nodes or axillary buds subtending the transformed leaves. These plants were transferred to the greenhouse and pruned to force growth of the appropriate bud. Once selective pruning produced a plant in which every leaf exhibited GUS activity the potential for germline transformation could be evaluated. Characterization of the transformants for this purpose relied on the observations of Christou & McCabe (1992). They had observed that in all cases in which any part of the vascular system of a soybean shoot produced from meristem bombardment expressed the reporter gene it usually was able to pass that gene to its progeny. Cross sections of either a leaf or petiole from the forced cotton shoots were therefore stained to identify the specific tissue types expressing GUS. R 1 seeds recovered from pollen-positive R 0 plants were germinated and grown in the greenhouse. Leaf punches were taken from each plant and analyzed for GUS activity to determine segregation patterns. Subsequently pollen staining for GUS allowed selection of homozygous individuals for the production of R 2 plants for further analysis. Southern blot analyses of transgenic families showed the introduced gene migrating as high molecular weight DNA when uncut and unit length when cut at restriction sites at each end of the gene. Segregation data were consistent with the expected 3:1 pattern for mendelian segregation of a single dominant 234 marker gene. Southern blot and enzyme analyses of R2 and R3 plants confirmed inheritance of foreign genes into successive generations. Stable transformation of agronomic cropsmonocotyledonous plants Monocotyledonous plants which include some of the world's most important food crops e.g. cereals such as wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), rice (Oryza sativa L.), maize, barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), etc. had until recently been extremely recalcitrant to genetic manipulation in vitro. Particle bombardment resulted in the recovery of transgenic plants and progeny for such important crops as maize (Gordon-Kamm et al. 1990; Fromm et al. 1990), wheat (Vasil et al. 1992), and rice (Christou et al. 1991, 1992). In an attempt to explore methods to overcome problems in cereal transformation we focussed on rice as a model to address fundamental problems which touch on many key areas of plant sciences (Potrykus 1990). Until recently, recovery of transgenic rice plants was only possible using direct D N A transfer methods such as electroporation (Toriyama et al. 1988; Zhang et al. 1988; Shimamoto et al. 1989; Tada et al. 1990) or PEG-mediated transformation (Hayashimoto et al. 1990; Datta et al. 1990) of protoplasts. Rice in vitro culture has a very strong genotype- and culture-dependent component. Even though genetic engineering of rice has been reported, only cultivars from japonica varieties can be transformed using protoplast-dependent methods; recently, transformation and subsequent regeneration of transgenic indica rice plants, from specific cultivars, was reported utilizing protoplasts (Datta et al. 1990, 1992). Indica rice varieties provide the staple food for more than two billion people worldwide, including Indochina and the Indian sub-continent. Eighty percent of cultivated rice worldwide is of the indica type (Swaminathan 1982; Wu et al. 1990). Twelve to fifteen-day old rice immature embryos were isolated from greenhouse grown plants and subjected to electric discharge particle-mediated transformation (Christou et al. 1991). The scutellar region of the embryo was bombarded under previously described conditions. Bombarded tissue was then plated on regeneration media supplemented with appropriate selective agents. Continuous selection of the proliferating tissue resulted in the appearance of transformed embryogenic callus. However, transformed embryogenic callus and somatic embryos also appeared in the absence of any selection pressure. Subsequent transfer of this embryogenic callus to appropriate media resulted in the development of plantlets and plants expressing marker genes in addition to antibiotic-, herbicide-, and insect-resistance genes. Southern blot analyses of R0 plants and their progeny demonstrated stable integration of exogenous genes into the rice genome. Molecular analysis of a number of independently-derived transgenic rice plants indicated that the D N A profile and integration patterns in rice were very similar to those of soybean and cotton, which we analyzed extensively in the past (Christou et al. 1989; McCabe & Martinell, in preparation). When progeny from transgenic rice plants carrying the bar gene were sprayed with the herbicide bialaphos they were shown to express total resistance to the herbicide at levels of 2000 ppm. Control plants died when sprayed with 500 ppm of the herbicide. Advantages of ACCELL T M gene transfer A number of features make electric discharge particle acceleration unique as compared to other bombardment procedures that utilize alternative acceleration principles: -Transformation of organized tissue. There is no need for the development of embryogenic suspension cultures and other complex tissue culture systems that under-utilize the potential of particle bombardment. This is illustrate by the published transformation systems for maize, wheat, cotton etc. which are restricted to one or two varieties that can be regenerated from tissue culture. -Variety-independent transformation into elite commercial varieties, negating the need for going through extensive backcrossing programs to introgress foreign genes into varieties that 235 are not amenable to alternative b o m b a r d m e n t procedures. Only A C C E L L T M technology has resulted in variety-independent and practical gene transfer procedures for such important crops as soybean, cotton and rice. -Minimal tissue culture operations with subsequent reduction or elimination of mutation or culture-induced variation. In the case of dicotyledonous species we have b e e n able to bypass the o b l i g a t o r y callus phase that often results in somaclonal variation and sterility in r e g e n e r a t e d transgenic plants. In addition by either utilizing de n o v o organogenesis or simple germination of b o m b a r d e d explants we bypass most of the problems that impose severe limitations on alternative acceleration mechanisms. - F a s t e r cycle times in breeding programs and field testing as a result of engineering elite cultivars, bypassing the need for extensive back crossing. - Precise control of particle penetration into cells that are c o m p e t e n t for both transformation and regeneration. This is the key feature of A C C E L L T M that m a k e s the technology suitable for variety-independent gene transfer. -Minimal d a m a g e to recipient tissue due to the ability to modulate the accelerating force effectively. As a result, regenerable tissue which would not survive alternative acceleration mechanisms can be targeted and transgenic plants can be recovered routinely. Remaining problems Until recently the key barrier in achieving effective transformation of agronomically important species was the D N A delivery method. Microprojectile b o m b a r d m e n t and A C C E L L T M technology in particular has had a tremendous impact on this limitation. The challenge now is shifting b a c k to the biology of the explant used in b o m b a r d m e n t experiments. It is apparent that the conversion frequency of transient to stable transformation events is low. This does not m e a n , however, that transgenic plants from all of the crops that have been engineered cannot be obtained at high enough frequencies to m a k e the process commercially useful and economical. More attention needs to be paid to the biology of explants prior to, and following b o m b a r d m e n t . We need to identify how m o r e cells can be induced to b e c o m e c o m p e t e n t for stable D N A uptake and regeneration. Optimization of biological interactions between physical p a r a m e t e r s and target tissue needs to be better studied and understood. N o t much is known about the fate of D N A from the time particles are introduced into plant cells. Recipient tissue variation and variability due to b o m b a r d m e n t conditions complicate the picture even further. Additional issues such as irregular particle size and uniformity as well as i m p r o v e m e n t s in hardware design need also be addressed. References Christou P, McCabe DE & Swain WF (1988) Stable transformation of soybean callus by DNA-coated gold particles. Plant Physiol. 87:671-674 Christou P, Swain WF, Yang N-S & McCabe DE (1989) Inheritance and expression of foreign genes in transgenic soybean plants. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 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