| Literature DB >> 29977889 |
P P M Heenatigala1,2, Jingjing Yang1, Anthony Bishopp3, Zuoliang Sun1, Gaojie Li1, Sunjeet Kumar1, Shiqi Hu1, Zhigang Wu1, Wei Lin1, Lunguang Yao4, Pengfei Duan4, Hongwei Hou1.
Abstract
Members of the Wolffia genus are fascinating plants for many biologists as they are the smallest flowering plants on Earth and exhibit a reduced body plan that is of great interest to developmental biologists. There has also been recent interest in the use of these species for bioenergy or biorefining. Molecular and developmental studies have been limited in Wolffia species due to the high genome complexity and uncertainties regarding the stable genetic transformation. In this manuscript we present new protocols for both stable and transient genetic transformation for Wolffia globosa using Agrobacterium tumefaciens. For the transient transformation, we used Wolffia fronds whereas we used clusters for the stable transformation. As proof of concept we transformed two synthetic promoter constructs driving expression of the GUS marker gene, that have previously been used to monitor auxin and cytokinin output in a variety of species. Using these approaches we obtained a Transformation Efficiency (TE) of 0.14% for the stable transformation and 21.8% for the transient transformation. The efficiency of these two methods of transformation are sufficient to allow future studies to investigate gene function. This is the first report for successful stable transformation of W. globosa.Entities:
Keywords: Wolffia globosa; auxin; cytokinin; duckweed; stable transformation; transient transformation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29977889 PMCID: PMC6022245 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2018.00227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1Schematic representation of T-DNA region of the expression vector TCS::GUS/ pKGWFS7.0 (A) and DR5::GUS/ pKGWFS7.0 (B), attR & attR2 - Recombination sites for the Gateway LR reaction.
Composition of the media used in transient transformation.
| Frond Culture Medium | SH + 2% Sucrose + 0.6% Agar |
| Agro LB medium | Tryptone 10 g l−1 + Yeast extract 5 g l−1 +NaCl 10 g l−1 + Spectinomycin 100 mg l−1 + Rifampicin 20 mg l−1, (pH - 7) |
| Infection Medium | Sucrose 50 g l−1 + Mgcl2(1 M) 10 ml l−1 + AS 10 μM l−1 |
| Growth Medium | Liquid SH + 1% Sorbitol + 5% Sucrose + AS 10 μM l−1 |
| Selection Medium | Liquid SH + 2% Sucrose + Cefotoxime 300 mg l−1 + G418 40 mg l−1 |
| Frond Induction Medium | SH + 2% Sucrose + 0.6% Agar + Cefotoxime 150 mg l−1 +G418 40 mg l−1 |
Figure 2Wolffia plant materials used for transient and stable transformation. (A) Wolffia explants used for transient transformation, (B) Wolffia clusters used for stable transformation trials, (C) Woiffia calli used for stable transformation trials, (D) Cross section of calli showing cell distribution bars, 50 μm (A,C) 500 μm (B,D).
Composition of the media used in stable transformation.
| YEB medium | Yeast extract 6 g l−1 +Tryptone 5 g l−1 + Sucrose 5 g l−1 + MgSO4.7H2O 0.5 g l−1 + Rifampicin 20 mg l−1+ Spectinomycin 100 mg l−1 (pH-7) |
| Co-cultivation Medium | Liquid SH +2% Sucrose +2 mg l−1 2, 4-D + 2 mg l−1 6 BA |
| Resting Medium | SH + 2% Sucrose +2 mg l−1 2, 4-D + 2 mg l−1 6 BA+ Cefotaxime 300 mg l−1 |
| Selection Medium | SH + 2% Sucrose + 0.6% Agar + Cefotaxime 300 mg l−1+ G418 40 mg l−1 |
| Frond Induction Medium | SH + 2% Sucrose + 0.6% Agar + Cefotaxime 150 mg l−1 |
Figure 3Histochemical GUS assay of putative transient transgenic W. globosa explants. (A) DR5::GUS transgenic Wolffia, (B) TCS::GUS transgenic Wolffia, (C) Percentage of GUS positive plants observed during transient transformation, with different Agrobacteria strains. Experiments were performed in biological triplicate. Standard deviations are indicated and letters above the bars denote significant difference between the data. Scale bars are 500 μm.
Figure 4Histochemical GUS assay of transgenic W. globosa via Agrobacterium-mediated stable transformation after the 4 weeks of selection. (A) TCS::GUS transformed W. globosa transgenic fronds (B) TCS::GUS transformed W. globosa transgenic frond showing GUS expression in both mother and daughter frond. (C,D) GUS positive daughter frond comes out from the single side pouch of the stably transformed mother frond. (E,F) Cross sections of transgenic W. globosa via Agrobacterium-mediated stable transformation after histochemical GUS assay. TCS::GUS transformed W. globosa transgenic frond showing GUS staining in both mother and daughter frond. MF, Mother Frond; DF, Daughter Frond; Scale bars (A–D) - 250 μm, (E,F) - 50 μm.
Figure 5Confirmation of the e Wolffia transformed with TCS::GUS using PCR & RT- PCR analysis. (A) Amplification of TCS element from Wolffia transformants. (B) Amplification of GUS gene from Wolffia tarnsformants. For both gels a 2,000 bp ladder is used and the sizes of the corresponding bands are indicated. Lanes 1 and 2 contain two independent TCS::GUS transgenic plants and lane 3 (marked –ve) containes genomic DNA from a wild plant (C) RT-PCR for the GUS enzyme in Wolffia transformants. An Actin gene was used as internal control. Lanes 1 and 2: putative Wolffia transformants, WT, wild-type plant.