Isolation of methotrexate-resistant cell lines in Petunia hybrida upon stepwise selection procedure

Plant Mol Biol. 1984 Sep;3(5):303-11. doi: 10.1007/BF00017784.

Abstract

Cell suspensions of Petunia hybrida were subjected to a selection procedure in which the concentration of the selective agent, methotrexate (MTX), was gradually elevated. In mammalian cells, this procedure frequently results in MTX-resistant mutants due to amplification of the gene coding for dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), the target protein of MTX.Five suspension lines were isolated, with degrees of resistance ranging from 10 to 500 μM MTX (in wild type the LD99.9 is 0.2 μM). MTX(R) phenotypes were unstable, as manifested by the loss of resistance upon prolonged growth in the absence of drug. All of the mutants also exhibited high values of MTX-binding protein (60- to 400-fold higher than that of the wild type), which declined to intermediate values upon MTX withdrawal. Finally, cellular extracts from all of the mutants also showed high specific staining of DHFR-activity in gels.The results suggest that the resistance of MTX in these plant cell-lines is mediated by the elevation of the amounts of DHFR, probably as a consequence of gene amplification.