| Literature DB >> 23543108 |
Bo Zhang1, Allison D Oakes, Andrew E Newhouse, Kathleen M Baier, Charles A Maynard, William A Powell.
Abstract
American chestnut (Castanea dentata) was transformed with a wheat oxalate oxidase (oxo) gene in an effort to degrade the oxalic acid (OA) secreted by the fungus Cryphonectria parasitica, thus decreasing its virulence. Expression of OxO was examined under two promoters: a strong constitutive promoter, CaMV 35S, and a predominantly vascular promoter, VspB. Oxo gene transcription was quantified by RT-qPCR. Relative expression of OxO varied approximately 200 fold among events produced with the 35S-OxO. The lowest 35S-OxO event expressed approximately 3,000 fold higher than the highest VspB-OxO event. This was potentially due to the tissue-specific nature of the VspB-controlled expression, the strength of the CaMV 35S constitutive promoter, or position effects. Leaf assays measuring necrotic lesion length were conducted to better understand the relationship between OxO expression level and the blight fungus in planta. A threshold response was observed between the OxO expression level and the C. parasitica lesion length. Five events of the 35S-OxO line showed significantly reduced lesion length compared to the blight-susceptible American chestnut. More importantly, the lesion length in these five events was reduced to the same level as the blight-resistant Chinese chestnut, C. mollissima. This is the first report on enhanced pathogen resistance in transgenic American chestnut.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23543108 PMCID: PMC3781299 DOI: 10.1007/s11248-013-9708-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transgenic Res ISSN: 0962-8819 Impact factor: 2.788
Fig. 3a Necrotic lesion length measurements from small leaf assays on mature leaves. Non-transgenic (NT) controls were the, American chestnut (AC, Ellis1,) for the blight susceptible standard and Chinese chestnut (CC, Qing3) for the blight resistant standard. Transgenic American chestnut controls (T-controls) without the OxO gene were AZ-4G2 and 6, (containing only the pGFP and; AZ-4KG4 and 7, containing the pWVK147 empty vector and pGFP. The pTACF3 transgenic events (containing the OxO with the vascular promoter) were AZ-4XG1, 2, 3, and 4. The p35S-OxO transgenic events (containing the constitutively expressed OxO) were AZ-4SX1, 16, 17, 18, 28, 37, 38, and 311. The order on the graph was arranged from he most necrosis to the least necrosis within each group. All plants were developed through tissue culture and grown in growth chambers. For each line/event, six to thirteen small mature leaves from different plants were used in the assay and lesion length along the midvein on the upper side of each leaf was measured in mm. Bars indicate standard error of the mean. AC and CC were used as non-transgenic controls and the standards; everything else was compared to them. A single asterisk (*) means no significant difference from the blight-susceptible American chestnut; two asterisks (**) mean no significant difference from the blight-resistant Chinese chestnut. ANOVA and a series of t tests were performed to determine significant difference (P < 0.005). (AC American chestnut, CC Chinese chestnut, NT non-transgenic, T transgenic) b Representative small leaf assay results. T top or adaxial side of the leaf; B bottom or abaxial side of the leaf with the C. parasitica inoculum SG2. Strain SG2 is of medium virulence and is tested to give significantly different lesion length between the Chinese and American chestnuts (Andrew Newhouse, unpublished); CC Chinese chestnut, AC American chestnut, GFP the pGFP line, E the empty vector pWVK147 line (pWVK147 has the exact same vector backbone as the VspB-OxO and the 35S-OxO lines, but without the promoter-gene cassette), VspB the pTACF3 (VspB-OxO) line, 35S the p35S-OxO line. a AZ-4SX37 (top adaxial side); b AZ-4SX37 (bottom abaxial side), c CC (Qing3), d AC (Ellis1), e AZ-4G6, f AZ-4KG7, g AZ-4XG1, h AZ-4XG4, i AZ-SX18, j AZ-4SX38, k AZ-4SX16, l AZ-4SX28. Arrow indicates threshold OxO expression level (Fig. 1) linked to significant reduction in necrosis
Fig. 1Relative expression levels of the oxo gene in tissue culture shoots using RT-qPCR. Non-transgenic (NT) American chestnut controls were the clonal line, Ellis 1, in both graphs. a Seventeen transgenic events made with the vector p35S-OxO (containing a constitutive promoter); b four transgenic events made with the vector pTACF3 (containing a vascular promoter). GAPDH was used as the reference gene. Data represent the mean of three technical replicates. Bars indicate standard error of the mean [note in (a) they are present but too small to see]. Arrow indicates threshold OxO expression level linked to significant reduction in necrosis (Fig. 3)
Fig. 2A comparison of OxO expression level in tissue culture shoots (TC shoots, black column) and stems (gray column) of young potted plants in the greenhouse of the transgenic line p35S-OxO (events AZ-4SX16, 17, 28, and 37). RT-qPCR with GAPDH as the reference gene was used to determine the expression of OxO. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. Asterisks indicate significant differences within an event (Single asterisk (*) for event AZ-4SX17; two asterisks for, event AZ-4SX28; P < 0.001) based on t tests. No asterisks means no significant difference within an event (events AZ-4SX37 and AZ-4SX16)
Fig. 4Oxalate oxidase (OxO) leaf disk assays. a Ellis 1 non-transgenic control, b AZ-4SX38, c AZ-4SX28, d AZ-4SX1, e AZ-4SX311, f AZ-4SX18. Left leaf disks no OA, right leaf disks added OA. Dark staining indicates a positive OxO reaction. Bars = 5 mm