| Literature DB >> 28974205 |
Dandan Li1,2, Yu Tang3, Jun Lin4,5,6, Weiwen Cai7,8.
Abstract
Filamentous fungi have been of great interest because of their excellent ability as cell factories to manufacture useful products for human beings. The development of genetic transformation techniques is a precondition that enables scientists to target and modify genes efficiently and may reveal the function of target genes. The method to deliver foreign nucleic acid into cells is the sticking point for fungal genome modification. Up to date, there are some general methods of genetic transformation for fungi, including protoplast-mediated transformation, Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, electroporation, biolistic method and shock-wave-mediated transformation. This article reviews basic protocols and principles of these transformation methods, as well as their advantages and disadvantages.Entities:
Keywords: Agrobacterium-mediated transformation; Biolistic method; Electroporation; Filamentous fungi; Protoplast-mediated transformation; Shock-wave-mediated transformation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28974205 PMCID: PMC5627406 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-017-0785-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Summary of protoplast-mediated transformation protocols for different fungal species
| Strain | Starting material | Number of protoplasts | Name of vectors | The concentration of DNA | Selective markers | Transformation efficiency (transformants/μg DNA) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mycelium | 5 × 107 to 5 × 108 | pSa143 containing the | 2–5 μg of transforming DNA |
| 600 transformants | [ |
|
| Mycelium | 5 × 107–108 | pRLMEX30 (5.5 kb) | 1–6 μg of transforming DNA |
| 1800–2500 transfomants | [ |
|
| Mycelium | 1 × 107 | pVK88 | 60 μg/mL |
| 5-30 transformants | [ |
|
| Mycelium | 2 × 106 | pILJ16 | 10 μg |
| 5–10 transformants | [ |
|
| Mycelium | 1.8 × 108 | pULJL43 (4.6 kb) | 15 μg |
|
| [ |
|
| Germinated conidia | 1 × 107 to 2.5 × 108 | pAN7-1 | 10 μg |
| 55 transformants per 1 × 107 protoplasts | [ |
Fig. 1Basic steps of the protoplast-mediated transformation
Summary of protoplast preparation parameters for some common fungal species
| Strain | Starting material | Enzyme | Enzymolysis conditions | Osmotic stabilizer | Protoplast yield (protoplasts/mL) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| NA | Lyophilized snail | Incubate at 31 °C for 3 h on a laboratory reciprocal shaker (78 strokes/min, amplitude 3 cm) | 0.7 M NaCl | 8.9 × 106 | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Lysing enzymes, chitinase griseus and β-glucuronidase | Incubate in a 100 mL glass bottle for 2 h at 37 °C and 130 rpm | 0.8 M sorbitol | NA | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Yatalase, Kitalase | Incubate 6 h at 30 °C with constant shaking (60–80 rpm) | 1 M sorbitol | NA | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Novozym 234 | Incubate 1.5 h at 30 °C | 0.6 M KCl | NA | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Lysing enzymes from | Incubate at 30 °C for 2 h with shaking at 80 rpm | 1 M sorbitol | 1–5 × 106 | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Driselase, caylase, cellulase, enzyme cocktail II from Merck company | Incubate at 30 °C for 20 or 180 min | 1.2 M sorbitol | 2 × 109 | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Lysing enzymes from | Incubate at 28–30 °C for 2 h | 1 M sorbitol | NA | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Novozym 234 | Incubate at 28 °C for approx. 1.5 h | 1 M and 1.2 M sorbitol | 5 × 107 to 5 × 108 | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Proteinase K | Incubate at 1 h at room temperature | 1 M sorbitol | 1 × 107 | [ |
|
| Mycelium | β-glucuronidase | Incubate at 37 °C for 1 h with occasional shaking | 0.7 M KCl | 1 × 106 | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Novozyme 234 and β-glucuronidase | Incubate at 30 °C for 1.5 h with shaking at 80 rpm | 0.6 M sorbitol and 1 M sucrose | Each 400 mL culture yielded 5–10 × 107 protoplasts | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Helicase, cellulase, lyticase | Incubate at 35 °C for 140 min with gentle shaking | 0.6 M sorbitol | 1 × 107 | [ |
|
| Mycelium | Glucanex, lysing enzyme from | Incubate at 28 °C for 4 h with orbital shaking (100 rpm) | 0.5 M KCl and 0.1 M MgSO4 | 1 × 109 | [ |
|
| Mycelium | 0.6% cellulase and 0.6% snailase | Incubate at 25–35 °C for 3–3.5 h | 0.6 M NaCl | 2.36 × 108 | [ |
Fig. 2The basic steps of the Agrobacterium–mediated transformation
Summary of Agrobacterium-mediated transformation protocols for different fungal species
| Fungus |
| Starting material | The number of fungal cells | Pre-culturing of | The conditions of co-culturing | Name of vector (size) | Selective marker | Transformation efficiency | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Conidiospores | 1 × 106 | Incubate at 28 °C 4–5 h with 0.2 M AS and 100 rpm to OD600 nm of 0.8 | Incubate the plates for 3 days at 22.5 °C | NA |
| 200–250 transformants per 106 conidiospores | [ |
|
|
| Conidia | 1 × 107 | Further incubation at 28 °C for 24 h to a ratio of 1:10 (conidia to bacteria) | Incubated at 37 °C for 3 days | pDHt/ |
| 100 transformants per 107 conidia | [ |
|
|
| Protoplasts and conidia | 1 × 107 | Further incubation for 6 h at 28 °C to OD600 nm of 0.15 | Incubation at 25 °C for 48 h | pBI-hph (15846 bp) |
| Start from protoplasts: 2000 to 9000 transformants per 107 protoplasts. Start from conidia: 200–500 transformants per 107 condia | [ |
|
|
| Spores | 1 × 105 spores per mL and | Incubate for 4 h at 20 °C to OD600 nm of 0.6 | Incubation at 15 °C for 6 days | pTiBo542 (NA) |
| 2000–9000 transformants per 107 sporangiospores | [ |
|
|
| Germinated conidia | 5 × 107 | Incubate for 6 h at 30 °C with 200 μM AS to OD 600 nm of 2.5 | Incubation at 24 °C for 3 days | pUR5750 (NA) |
| 500 to 7900 transformants per 108 conidia | [ |
Summary of waveforms used in electroporation of different species
| Strain | Waveform | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| Exponential decay waveform | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | [ |
|
| Square wave | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | [ |
Summary of electroporation-mediated transformation protocols for different fungal species
| Strain | Waveform | Instrument | Electroporation parameters | Raw material | Number of cell | Name and size of vectors | Amount of DNA | Selective markers | Transformation efficiency (per μg DNA) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| NA | Multiporator (Eppendorf) | 12 kV/cm | Protoplasts | 1 × 107 | pBS-hygro- | 5 μg |
| 10.2 transformants | [ |
|
| NA | Multiporator (Eppendorf) | 15 kV/cm | Germinated spores | 1 × 107 | pBS-hygro- | 5 μg |
| 8.8 transformants | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | Electro Gene Transfer Unit | 6 kV/cm and 3 ms time constant | Germinated spores | 1 × 107/0.4 mL | pXbal92 (5.7 kb) and pBXba2 (6.0 kb) | 1–10 μg |
| 1.2 transformants for integrative vector and 100 colonies for plasmid DNA. | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | Gene Pulser (Bio-Rad) Multiporatr (Eppendorf) | 12.5 kV/cm, 8.6 ms time constant and 25 μF | Germinated conidia | 8 × 106 | pCSN44(NA) | 1–5 μg |
| 1.8 × 103 transformants | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | Gene Pulser (Bio-Rad) Multiporatr (Eppendorf) | 11–12.5 kV/cm, 4.6–4.8 ms time constant and 25 μF | Germinated conidia | 2.5 × 106 | pBEN(NA) | 1–5 μg | BenomylR | 2.6 × 103 transformants | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | Gene Pulser (Bio-Rad) Multiporatr (Eppendorf) | 12.5 kV/cm, 4.8 ms time constant and 25 μF | Germinated conidia | 1.2 × 106 | pCSN44(NA) | 1-5 μg |
| 1–6 × 102 transformants | [ |
|
| Exponential decay waveform | Gene Pulser (Bio-Rad) Multiporatr (Eppendorf) | 12.5 kV/cm, 5 ms time constant and 25 μF | Germinated conidia | 3–6 × 106 | Bsqa(NA) | 1–5 μg |
| 5.7 × 103 transformants | [ |