| Literature DB >> 30530569 |
Liang Wang1,2, Lijing Yang3,2, Xin Wen3,2, Zhuoya Chen3, Qiaoying Liang3, Jialing Li3, Wen Wang3.
Abstract
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, the unicellular green algae, is the model organism for studies in various physiological processes and for bioindustrial applications. To explore the molecular mechanisms underlying physiological processes or to establish engineered cell lines, the exogenous DNA needs to be integrated into the genome for the insertional mutagenesis or transgene expression. However, the amount of selected marker DNA is not seriously considered in the existing electroporation methods for mutants library construction. Here, we reported a rapid-and-high-efficiency transformation technique for cell-walled strains using square-wave electroporation system. The final yield with this electroporation method was 2-6 × 103 transformants per μg exogenous DNA for cell-walled strains in a strain-dependent manner. In general, this electroporation technique was the easy and applicable way to build a mutant library for screening phenotypes of interest.Entities:
Keywords: Chlamydomonas reinhardtii; electroporation; microalgae; square-wave; transformation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30530569 PMCID: PMC6328877 DOI: 10.1042/BSR20181210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosci Rep ISSN: 0144-8463 Impact factor: 3.840
Figure 1Optimization of transformation efficiency using square-wave electroporator
C. reinhardtii strain 21gr cells were electroporated with 100 ng aphVIII DNA fragments and 250 μl cell suspension with the cell density of 2 × 108 cells ml−1 in a 0.4 cm electroporation cuvette. (A) Effects of voltage and pulse number on transformation efficiency. The number of transformants was plotted at 250, 300, 350, 400, 450, 500 V with different pulse number as indicated. In all transformations pulse length and pulse interval were kept constant at 12 and 100 ms. (B) Effects of pulse length and pulse number on transformation efficiency at voltage of 500 V. The number of transformants was plotted at pulse numbers of 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 with different pulse length as indicated (a–f). The numbers of transformants were shown as mean ± SEM in three independent experiments.
Figure 2Transformation effects of C. reinhardtii strain 21gr
(A) Colonies from glass beads method (top, left), decay-wave electroporation (top, middle), and square-wave electroporation (top, right) on one representative TAP agar plate containing 10 μg ml−1 paromomycin. The corresponding transformants numbers were plotted as mean ± SEM in three independent experiments (bottom). (B) Transformants confirmed by colony PCR. Genomic DNAs of nine transformants were randomly selected and confirmed by the expected band (264 bp) with primer F1 (5′-GATTCCCGTACCTCGTGTTG-3′) and R1 (5′-TCGTCCAGATCCTCCAAGTC-3′). M, Trans2K Plus DNA Marker (TransGen Biotech, China). +, pJMG plasmid (carrying aphVIII fragment) as positive control. −, wild-type 21gr genomic DNA as negative control.
Transformation efficiency of various C. reinhardtii strains
| Strain | Electric conditions | Number of transformants |
|---|---|---|
| 21gr (CC-1690) | 500 V, 4 ms, 6 pulses | 368 ± 102 |
| 500 V, 4 ms, 7 pulses | 239 ± 31 | |
| 6145C (CC-1691) | 500 V, 4 ms, 6 pulses | 256 ± 136 |
| 500 V, 4 ms, 7 pulses | 320 ± 161 | |
| CC-124 | 500 V, 4 ms, 6 pulses | 387 ± 151 |
| 500 V, 4 ms, 7 pulses | 624 ± 251 | |
| CC-125 | 500 V, 4 ms, 6 pulses | 176 ± 80 |
| 500 V, 4 ms, 7 pulses | 127 ± 76 |
100 ng aphVIII DNA fragments and 5 × 107 cells were used for each trial; pulse interval was 100 ms.
Mean ± SEM (n=3).
Optimal electroporation conditions for C. reinhardtii cells
| Sample size | 250 μl in 0.4 cm electroporation cuvette |
| Cell number | 5 × 107 cells per cuvette |
| Exogenous DNA | 100 ng per cuvette (400 ng ml−1) |
| Transformation medium | TAP + 60 mM sorbitol |
| Electric conditions | |
| Voltage | 500 V |
| Pulse length | 4 ms |
| Pulse number | 6–7 pulses |
| Pulse interval | 100 ms |