Chitinases are hydrolytic enzymes that have been employed in biotechnology
in attempts to increase plants' resistance against fungal pathogens.
Genetically modified plants have given rise to concerns of the spreading of
transgenes into the environment through vertical or horizontal gene transfer
(HGT). In this study, chitinase-like sequences from silver birch (Betula pendula)
EST-libraries were identified and their phylogenetic relationships to other
chitinases were studied. Phylogenetic analyses were used to estimate the
frequency of historical gene transfer events of chitinase genes between
plants and other organisms, and the usefulness of phylogenetic analyses as a
source of information for the risk assessment of transgenic silver birch
carrying a sugar beet chitinase IV gene was evaluated. Thirteen partial
chitinase-like sequences, with an approximate length of 600 bp, were
obtained from the EST-libraries. The sequences belonged to five chitinase
classes. Some bacterial chitinases from Streptomyces and Burkholderia, as well as a chitinase from
an oomycete, Phytophthora infestans, grouped together with the class IV chitinases of plants,
supporting the hypothesis that some class IV chitinases in bacteria have
evolved from eukaryotic chitinases via horizontal gene transfer. According
to our analyses, HGT of a chitinase IV gene from eukaryotes to bacteria has
presumably occurred only once. Based on this, the likelihood for the HGT of
chitinase IV gene from transgenic birch to other organisms is extremely low.
However, as risk is a function of both the likelihood and consequences of an
event, the effects of rare HGT event(s) will finally determine the level of
the risk.