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Sorting Look-Alike Soybeans

Geneticist Noa Diwan transfers selected alfalfa DNA clones as part of the
process of making genetic markers.
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A few years ago, breeders at Northrup King Co. produced a new soybean ideal
for making tofu.
Called S16-60, the new variety had about 40 percent protein when
driedperfect for producing the fermented curd popular in vegetarian
salads and cooked foods.
In field trials, S16-60 also yielded about 5 percent more soybeans than
similar varieties bred for planting in the colder, northern Corn Belt states
such as Minnesota, Wisconsin, South Dakota, and Michigan, says John Thorne. He
is soybean research director for Northrup King in Washington, Iowa.
Before the company marketed S16-60 seed, however, Thorne wanted to protect
the new variety from being copied by competing seed companies. To do that, he
needed a plant variety protection certificatesimilar to a patent for
plants. So in 1994, he filed an application for one.
Thorne's application was sent to Jeffrey L. Strachan, a U.S. Department of
Agriculture plant examiner who reviews such applications for soybeans and other
plants. As part of his review, Strachan ran a routine check on his computer
database to compare S16-60 with the 745 protected soybean varieties that had
already received certificates, and with 1,500 others in the public domain.
The computer check compares the size, shape, and color of seeds, leaves, and
flowers, as well as disease resistance and other traits. By comparing these and
other characteristics, Strachan could determine if S16-60 was unique and
deserved a certificate.
Strachans check revealed, however, that S16-60 was virtually identical
to another Northrup King soybean called B117, which had received a certificate
in the 1980s and was a parent of S16-60. The discovery of a similar
variety was bad news for Thorne.
Because the two soybeans appeared so alike, the burden fell on Thorne to
show specific differences between S16-60 and B117. In past years, this would
have required extensive field plantings to collect and report additional field
data to bolster his case.
"Those field tests are tedious and time consuming and subject to the
vagaries of the weather," Thorne said. "They would probably have
delayed the application for a year."
Enter Perry B. Cregan, a U.S. Department of Agriculture scientist at
Beltsville, Maryland. Since 1991, Cregan, a plant geneticist with USDA's
Agricultural Research Service, has been developing genetic maps for soybeans.
Such maps are invaluable to plant breeders for creating new varieties of crops
with specific traits such as disease resistance and oil and protein quality
factors.
A byproduct of this research is that the same markers that help shape a
genetic map can be used to create a genetic "fingerprint" for each
variety.
Even two plants that look identical can be differentiated by their genetic
fingerprints.
Strachan, who works for USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service in Beltsville,
had been working with Cregan on a cooperative project to develop a genetic
fingerprinting system that can be transferred to private industry. After
Strachan searched his database for groups of similar soybeans, Cregan obtained
seed of 36 similar varieties from seed companies and state universities.
Included among those seeds were S16-60 and B117.
Cregan then developed a unique fingerprint for each variety using genetic
markers called simple sequence repeats (SSR's). These markers are repeating
patterns of the four basic units of the genetic code that make up DNA, or
deoxyribonucleic acid.
The four units, or nucleotides, are known by the initials A, G, C, and
Tfor adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine. An example of an SSR might
be the sequence AT repeated 10, 15, or up to 40 or 50 times.
Cregan compared the SSR fingerprints from S16-60 and B117 and discovered
that even though the two varieties share many similar traits, they are
distinct.
"Since B117 is one of the parents of S16-60, it is not surprising that
the two appear to be so similar," Cregan says. "But their DNA, or
genetic code, did show several differences."
Soybean S16-60 is only one recent example of how genetic fingerprinting
techniques are helping scientists sort out look-alike plants. Strachan says he
expects to issue a certificate for the Northrup King soybeanand that the
technology will help him in similar cases in the future.
"This is one of the most innovative leaps in technology, in terms of
applied research, that we've seen in the area of plant variety
identification," Strachan says. "I'm seeing more and more
applications where companies are submitting genetic profiles. By doing this,
they're helping to move their applications through. And they're helping me
construct a better database.

Plant geneticist Perry Cregan compares partial DNA fingerprints of 24 soybean
varieties.
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Strachan estimates that about 20 companies have submitted genetic profiles
for roughly 100 different varieties. The companies are either developing the
profiles in-house or contracting the job to outside biotech companies.
Cregan has completed about 100 genetic profiles for soybeans and is working
on fingerprinting other crops such as alfalfa and wheat. He's also
collaborating with scientists working with avocados and mangos. Strachan says
the new technology will help identify varieties of alfalfa, corn, and small
grains.
The technology is emerging just as certificates are becoming more popular as
a way for companies to protect their breeding work. Certificates are issued
under the Plant Variety Protection Act of 1970 (PVPA). Under the original act,
a certificate was good for 18 years; 1994 amendments enable protection for 20
years.
If a company has a certificate on a variety, other companies must get
permission to sell that variety. The company that receives the certificate
agrees to disclose to the public basic information about its variety, such as a
description of the plant and its breeding history. For each plant that receives
a certificate, 2,500 seeds are sent to the ARS National Seed Storage
Laboratory, a genetic repository in Fort Collins, Colorado, where they will be
preserved.
Since PVPA was enacted, the AMS Plant Variety Protection Office at the
National Agricultural Library has received 4,908 applications and issued 3,600
certificates for more than 100 plant species. These include soybeans (745),
corn (352), wheat (354), beans (303), peas (254), and cotton (221). As of
January 1996, more than 750 applications were pending with Strachan and other
examiners at the office.
Strachan also notes that companies are using the new technology to resolve
disputes in court. A company that thinks its rights have been violated can file
a civil suit against anyone it believes has infringed on the certificate.
"This technology will become a very useful tool in such cases," said
Strachan.
Overall, Cregan's fingerprinting research is part of a larger collaborative
soybean mapping effort with scientists at the Universities of Nebraska and
Utah, USDA-ARS at Iowa State University, and a biotech company called
BioGenetics Services, Inc., of Brookings, South Dakota. The USDA Plant Genome
Program, National Research Initiative Competitive Grants Program, and United
Soybean Board have assisted with funding.
Cregan says Research Genetics of Huntsville, Alabama; BioGenetics Services;
and Linkage Genetics, based in Salt Lake City, Utah, may be interested in
commercializing the technology.
"We hope to develop a set of more than 600 soybean SSR DNA
markers," Cregan says. "These can be used for many
purposesincluding developing a genetic map for soybeans. This would help
breeders find genes related to disease resistance, oil and protein content, and
other valuable traits." -- By Sean Adams, ARS.
Perry B.
Cregan is at the USDA ARS Soybean and Alfalfa Research Laboratory,
Beltsville, MD 20705-2350; phone (301) 504-5723.
"Sorting Look-Alike Soybeans" was published in the
August 1996
issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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