Abstract:
Eucalyptus is among the most widely planted taxa of forest trees worldwide. However, its spread
as an exotic or genetically engineered form can create ecological and social problems. To
mitigate gene flow via pollen and seeds, we mutated the Eucalyptus orthologue of LEAFY (LFY)
by transforming a Eucalyptus grandis 9 urophylla wild-type hybrid and two Flowering Locus T
(FT) overexpressing (and flowering) lines with CRISPR Cas9 targeting its LFY orthologue, ELFY.
We achieved high rates of elfy biallelic knockouts, often approaching 100% of transgene
insertion events. Frameshift mutations and deletions removing conserved amino acids caused
strong floral alterations, including indeterminacy in floral development and an absence of male
and female gametes. These mutants were otherwise visibly normal and did not differ statistically
from transgenic controls in juvenile vegetative growth rate or leaf morphology in greenhouse
trials. Genes upstream or near to ELFY in the floral development pathway were overexpressed,
whereas floral organ identity genes downstream of ELFY were severely depressed. We conclude
that disruption of ELFY function appears to be a useful tool for sexual containment, without
causing statistically significant or large adverse effects on juvenile vegetative growth or leaf
morphology.