The presence of recombinant DNA in soil cultivated with white poplars
(Populus alba L.) expressing either the bar transgene for herbicide tolerance or the StSy transgene
for resveratrol production, respectively, was investigated in a greenhouse
over a 20-month period. The bar trial included the transgenic lines 5P56 and
6EA22P56 and the untransformed line, while the StSy trial was established with
the transgenic lines 5EAC1 and 12EAC1 and with the untransformed line. All
the transgenic poplars harbored the nptII marker gene. Plantlets were cultivated
in pots, and soil samples were mixed in order to obtain composite pools
which were used for molecular analyses. The 35SCaMV-bar (1504 bp), 35SCaMV-StSy (1403
bp) and NosP-nptII (1188 bp) sequences were detected in total DNA extracted from
soil samples taken at different times after planting, using PCR/Southern
blot hybridization. Microcosm experiments, carried out to assess the effects
of temperature and DNA purity on transgene persistence, revealed only a
partial correlation between the intensity of hybridization signals and the
parameters tested.