
Most Agrobacterium-mediated transformation procedures described in the literature have proven to be inefficient for transformation of Andean potato cultivars. We describe here a more successful method for transformation of two of these cultivars, Diacol Capiro (DC) and Parda Pastusa (PP). Leaf explants were transformed using vector pBI121 carrying the β-glucuronidase and kanamycin resistance genes. Calli and shoot formation occurred after 5–8 weeks on a selection medium containing 3 mg/l zeatin and 1 mg/l indole acetic acid. The shoot regeneration frequency was 28% and 34% for DC and PP, respectively. Of the kanamycin-resistant plantlets obtained, 51% of those of DC and 13% of those of PP were confirmed to be transformants by histochemical assays, polymerase chain reaction analyses and Southern blotting techniques.
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