| Literature DB >> 28681159 |
Muruganantham Mookkan1, Kimberly Nelson-Vasilchik2, Joel Hague2, Zhanyuan J Zhang3, Albert P Kausch4.
Abstract
KEY MESSAGE: Discriminatory co-expression of maize BBM and WUS transcriptional factor genes promoted somatic embryogenesis and efficient Agrobacterium -mediated transformation of recalcitrant maize inbred B73 and sorghum P898012 genotypes without use of a selectable marker gene. The use of morphogenic regulators to overcome barriers in plant transformation is a revolutionary breakthrough for basic plant science and crop applications. Current standard plant transformation systems are bottlenecks for genetic, genomic, and crop improvement studies. We investigated the differential use of co-expression of maize transcription factors BABY BOOM and WUSCHEL2 coupled with a desiccation inducible CRE/lox excision system to enable regeneration of stable transgenic recalcitrant maize inbred B73 and sorghum P898012 without a chemical selectable marker. The PHP78891 expression cassette contains CRE driven by the drought inducible maize RAB17M promoter with lox P sites which bracket the CRE, WUS, and BBM genes. A constitutive maize UBI M promoter directs a ZsGreen GFP expression cassette as a reporter outside of the excision sites and provides transient, transgenic, and developmental analysis. This was coupled with evidence for molecular integration and analysis of stable integration and desiccation inducible CRE-mediated excision. Agrobacterium-mediated transgenic introduction of this vector showed transient expression of GFP and induced somatic embryogenesis in maize B73 and sorghum P898012 explants. Subjection to desiccation stress in tissue culture enabled the excision of CRE, WUS, and BBM, leaving the UBI M::GFP cassette and allowing subsequent plant regeneration and GFP expression analysis. Stable GFP expression was observed in the early and late somatic embryos, young shoots, vegetative plant organs, and pollen. Transgene integration and expression of GFP positive T0 plants were also analyzed using PCR and Southern blots. Progeny segregation analysis of primary events confirmed correlation between functional GFP expression and presence of the GFP transgene in T1 plants generated from self pollinations, indicating good transgene inheritance. This study confirms and extends the use of morphogenic regulators to overcome transformation barriers.Entities:
Keywords: BABY BOOM; Maize; Morphogenic regulators; Sorghum; WUSCHEL2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28681159 PMCID: PMC5565672 DOI: 10.1007/s00299-017-2169-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell Rep ISSN: 0721-7714 Impact factor: 4.570
Fig. 1PHP78891 vector. PHP78891 vector comprises four expression cassettes: (1) a RAB17M: CRE; (2) a NOS At:WUS2; (3) UBI M:BBM; and (4) UBI M: GFP. The CRE:WUS2:BBM cassette is bracketed by lox P sites. One lox P site is flanked by Agrobacterium T-DNA right border (RB) and the other flanks the UBI M: GFP cassette within Agrobacterium T-DNA left border (LB)
Medium compositions for maize B73 experiments
| Medium name and number | Medium name | Media components |
|---|---|---|
| Zm-1 | Inoculation | N6 salts 4.0 g/L (Chu et al. |
| Zm-2 | Co-cultivation | N6 salts 4.0 g/L, sucrose 30 g/L, |
| Zm-3 | Resting | N6 salts 4.0 g/L, sucrose 30 g/L, |
| Zm-4 | Somatic embryo development | MS salts (Murashige and Skoog |
| Zm-5 | Desiccation | 2 Sterile, dry Whatman #70 mm filter paper sealed with parafilm |
| Zm-6 | Regeneration | MS salts 4.3 g/L, sucrose 40 g/L, pH 5.8, agar 8 g/L, MS vitamins (1000×) 5 mL/L, Myo-inositol 100-mg/L, *cefotaxime 250 mg/L * prepared fresh and added after autoclave |
| Zm-7 | Rooting | MS salts 4.3 g/L, sucrose 30 g/L, pH 5.8, agar 8 g/L, IBA 0.5 mg/L, MS vitamins (1000×) 5 mL/L, Myo-inositol 100 mg/L, *cefotaxime 250-mg/L* prepared fresh and added after autoclave |
Medium compositions for sorghum P898012 experiments
| Medium name and number | Medium name | Media components |
|---|---|---|
| Sb-1 | Inoculation | MS salts 2.15 g/L, sucrose 68.5 g/L, glucose 36.0 g/L, 2, 4-D 1.5 mg/L, casamino acids 1 g/L, B5 vitamins (1000×) 1 ml, pH 5.2 and acetosyringone 1 ml from 100 mM concentration |
| Sb-2 | Co-cultivation | MS salts 2.15 g/L, sucrose 20 g/L, glucose 10 g/L, |
| Sb-3 | Resting | MS salts 4.33 g/L, sucrose 30 g/L, 2,4-D 2.0 mg/L, MES 500 mg/L, ascorbic acid 10 mg/L, asparagine 150 mg/L, coconut water 100 mL/L, B5 vitamins (1000×) 1 mL/L, pH 5.8, phytagel 2.5 g/L, PVPP 10 g/L, *carbenicillin 200 mg/L, *timentin 150-mg/L* prepared fresh and added after autoclave |
| S4 | Callus induction | MS salts 4.33 g/L, sucrose 30 g/L, MES 500 mg/L, 2,4-D 1.5 mg/L, B5 vitamins (1000×) 1 mL/L, pH 5.8, phytagel 2.5 g/L, PVPP 10 g/L, *carbenicillin 200 mg/L, *timentin 150-mg/L* prepared fresh and added after autoclave |
| Sb-5 | Desiccation | 2 Sterile, dry Whatman #70 mm filter paper sealed with parafilm |
| Sb-6 | Embryo Proliferation | MS salts 4.33 g/L, sucrose 30 g/L, MES 500 mg/L, 2,4-D 1.5 mg/L, kinetin 0.5 mg/L, B5 vitamins (1000×) 1 mL/L, pH 5.8, phytagel 2.5 g/L, PVPP 10 g/L, *carbenicillin 200 mg/L, *timentin 150 mg/L* prepared fresh and added after autoclave |
| Sb-7 | Regeneration | MS salts 4.33 g/L, sucrose 60 g/L, MES 500 mg/L, |
| Sb-8 | Rooting | MS salts 2.15 g/L, sucrose 30 g/L, NAA 0.25 mg/L, IBA 0.25 mg/L, MS vitamin (1000×) 1 mL/L, pH 5.8, phytagel 2.5 g/L, *carbenicillin 200 mg/L, *timentin 150-mg/L* prepared fresh and added after autoclave |
Fig. 2Transient expression of GFP in maize B73 using PHP78891. a AGL1/empty vector control brightfield image and b GFP fluorescence image (negative control). c AGL1/PHP78891 brightfield image and d GFP fluorescence image showing adaxial surface of the scutellum. e AGL1/PHP78891-SBV containing the super-binary vector brightfield image and f AGL1/PHP78891-SBV showing GFP foci on the surface of the scutellum cells. Micrographs taken 3 days post-inoculation
Transient GFP expression in maize B73 after 3 days of co-cultivation and embryogenic calli recovery with Agrobacterium AGL1, AGL1 with PHP78891, or AGL1 with PHP78891 and super-binary vector (All the GFP transient foci are developed into embryogenic callus or embryoids)
| Experiment |
| No. of immature embryos infected | GFP transient expression | % of transient expression | No. of embryogenic calli | % of embryogenic calli |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AGL1 | 75 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 2 | AGL1 | 70 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 3 | AGL1 | 80 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 1 | AGL1 PHP78891 | 60 | 41 | 68.3 | 41 | 68.3 |
| 2 | AGL1 PHP78891 | 50 | 36 | 72 | 36 | 72 |
| 3 | AGL1 PHP78891 | 65 | 43 | 66.1 | 43 | 66.1 |
| 1 | AGL1 PHP78891-SBV | 55 | 53 | 96.3 | 53 | 96.3 |
| 2 | AGL1 PHP78891-SBV | 60 | 59 | 98.3 | 59 | 98.3 |
| 3 | AGL1 PHP78891-SBV | 80 | 78 | 97.5 | 78 | 97.5 |
Fig. 4Transient and stable sorghum P898012 Transformation using PHP78891. a Transient expression EHA 101 PHP78891 3-day post-inoculation (GFP image); b Early stage somatic embryos (arrows) 13-day post-inoculation (GFP image). EHA 101 PHP78891 derived events after desiccation shows heterogeneous callus. c Brightfield and GFP image shows GFP positive embryogenic cluster within GFP negative organized callus. d Homogeneous GFP expressing embryogenic callus before desiccation (brightfield image); f corresponding GFP image showing heterogeneous callus after desiccation; g Heterogenous GFP expression in callus during plant regeneration (brightfield image); h corresponding GFP image
Transformation frequency in maize B73 using AGL1 with PHP78891-SBV
| Experiment | No. of immature embryos infected | Embryogenic calli | No. of calli surviving desiccation | No. of GFP positive calli | No. of GFP positive events that regenerated | Transformation frequency (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 55 | 53 | 32 | 29 | 8 | 14.5 |
| 2 | 60 | 59 | 29 | 25 | 9 | 15 |
| 3 | 80 | 78 | 70 | 63 | 12 | 15 |
Frequency of GFP expression of PHP78891 without selection using Agrobacterium EHA101 in sorghum P898012
| Experiment |
| No. of immature embryos infected | GFP positive embryogenic calli | % GFP expression |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | EHA101 PJLU13 | 11 | 0 | 0 |
| 2 | EHA 101 PYU 2593 | 55 | 0 | 0 |
| 3 | EHA 101 PYU 2593 | 46 | 0 | 0 |
| 4 | EHA101 PHP78891 | 11 | 6 | 54.54 |
| 5 | EHA101 PHP78891 | 180 | 28 | 15.56 |
| 6 | EHA101 PHP78891 | 128 | 30 | 23.44 |
| 7 | EHA101 PHP78891 | 52 | 10 | 19.23 |
Fig. 3Expression of PHP78891 in T0 transgenics of maize B73. Maize B73 AGL1 PHP78891 calli after 3-day desiccation stress calli; comparable a (Brightfield image) and b (GFP image), AGL1 PHP78891-SBV after 3-day desiccation shows higher GFP sector expression frequencies; c (brightfield image) and d (GFP image), homogeneously GFP expressing shoot in regeneration after 3 days desiccation; e (Brightfield image) and f (GFP image), GFP positive roots (right) and wild type (left); g (Brightfield image) and h (GFP image), tassel from PHP7889-SBV event after anthesis with GFP positive anthers; i (Brightfield image) and j (GFP image), isolated pollen showing 1:1 segregation for GFP; k (Brightfield image) and l (GFP image), silk from regenerated plant; m (Brightfield image) and n (GFP image), kernels from regenerated plant; o (Brightfield image) and p (GFP image), kernels from regenerated plant
Fig. 5PCR amplification of ZsGreen and CRE fragments from maize B73 events. Lanes 1, 300 ng NE Biolabs PCR Marker; lane 2, positive control, amplification of ZsGreen (upper band, expected size 594 bp) and Mo CRE (lower band, expected size 227 bp; lane 3, B73 wild-type negative control; lanes 4–8, transformed plants, M-1-1, M-1-2, M-1-5, M-1-6, and M-1-8
Fig. 6Southern blot of PHP78891 transformed maize B73 events using a DIG-labeled probe. a EcoRV restriction digest probed for GFP as shown in Fig. 1. b BamHI restriction digest probed for GFP, as shown in Fig. 1. c Stripped BamHI restriction digest shown in b, re-probed for CRE. Lanes 1, DIG-labeled molecular weight ladder III (Roche Diagnostics Corporation, IN, USA); lane 2, nontransformed maize B73; lanes 3–8, PHP78891-transformed B73 events, i.e., M-1-6, M-1-8, MM-2-9, MM-4-1b, MM-4-1F, and MM-5-0, respectively
Frequency of stable embryogenic callus recovery without selection using Agrobacterium EHA101 in sorghum P898012
| Experiment |
| No. of immature embryos infected | No. of desiccated embryogenic calli | No. of GFP positive events that regenerated | Transformation frequency (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | PJLU13 | 11 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 |
| 2 | PYU 2593 | 55 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 |
| 3 | PYU 2593 | 46 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 |
| 4 | PHP78891 | 11 | 6 | 1 | 9.1 |
| 5 | PHP78891 | 180 | 28 | 5 | 2.8 |
| 6 | PHP78891 | 128 | 30 | 11 | 8.6 |
| 7 | PHP78891 | 52 | 10 | 6 | 11.5 |
Fig. 7PCR of inheritance and segregation of the GFP transgene in T1 plants generated from self pollinations. Shown are PCR analysis of 14 T1 plants from the MM-4-1F line. Lane 1, molecular weight markers; lane 2, control reaction for GFP marker; lane 3, wild-type nontransformed control; lanes 4–17, T1 plants testing positive for the transgene in lanes 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, and 17; and, negative in lanes 9, 12, 15, and 16
Fig. 8Inheritance and segregation of the functional GFP transgene in T1 plants generated from self pollinations. Wild-type control a is negative for GFP expression. Roots from T1 plants from the MM-4-1F line b–o are shown in paired brightfield and GFP micrographs corresponding to the PCR results. The T1 plants in b–o correlate directly with lanes 3–17 in Fig. 7
Correlation between functional GFP expression and presence of the GFP transgene in T1 plants generated from self pollinations
| T0 parent line | T1 plant ID | GFP expression | PCR analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | A | Negative | Negative |
| B | Positive | Positive | |
| C | Positive | Positive | |
| D | Positive | Positive | |
| E | Positive | Positive | |
| F | Positive | Positive | |
| MM-4-1F | G | Negative | Negative |
| H | Positive | Positive | |
| I | Positive | Positive | |
| J | Negative | Negative | |
| K | Positive | Positive | |
| L | Positive | Positive | |
| M | Negative | Negative | |
| N | Negative | Negative | |
| O | Positive | Positive |