| Literature DB >> 35211127 |
Nuoya Xu1,2,3, Minjeong Kang2,3,4, Jacob D Zobrist2,4,5, Kan Wang2,4, Shui-Zhang Fei1,2.
Abstract
Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) is an excellent feedstock for biofuel production. While genetic transformation is routinely done in lowland switchgrass, upland cultivars remain recalcitrant to genetic transformation. Here we report the establishment of an efficient and reproducible transformation protocol for two upland cultivars, 'Summer' and 'Blackwell', by ectopic overexpression of morphogenic genes, Baby boom (Bbm) and Wuschel2 (Wus2). Two auxotrophic Agrobacterium strains, LBA4404Thy- and EHA105Thy-, each harboring the same construct containing ZmBbm, ZmWus2, and a green fluorescence protein (GFP) gene, ZsGreen1, were used to infect immature leaf segments derived from in vitro grown seedlings. The Agrobacterium strains also contain a transformation helper plasmid that carry additional copies of Agrobacterium virulence genes. GFP-expressing calli were identified and selected for regeneration. The highest transformation efficiency of 6% was obtained for the tetraploid cultivar Summer when LBA4404Thy- was used for infection, which is twice of that for the octoploid cultivar Blackwell. LBA4404Thy- consistently outperformed EHA105Thy- on transformation frequency across the two cultivars. Fifteen randomly selected putative transgenic plants of Summer and Blackwell, representing independent callus events, were confirmed as transgenic by the presence of the transgene, ZmAls, and the absence of AtuFtsZ, a chromosomal gene specific to the Agrobacterium strain LBA4404 using polymerase chain reaction. Transgene integration and expression was further confirmed by the detection of GFP in roots, and the resistance to herbicide injury to leaves of selected putative transgenic plants. The ZmBbm and ZmWus2 genes were successfully removed from 40 to 33.3% of the transgenic plants of Summer and Blackwell, respectively, via the Cre-Lox recombination system upon heat treatment of GFP-expressing embryogenic calli. Our successful transformation of recalcitrant upland switchgrass provides a method for gene function analysis and germplasm enhancement via biotechnology.Entities:
Keywords: Agrobacterium-mediated; Baby boom; Cre-Lox; Panicum virgatum; Wuschel2; auxotrophic; immature leaf segments; seedling-derived
Year: 2022 PMID: 35211127 PMCID: PMC8861204 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.781565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
FIGURE 1Schematic illustration of the construct PHP93937 used for all transformation experiments. (A) T-DNA region of PHP93739. RB, T-DNA right border; loxP, CRE recombinase target site; ZmHsppro: cre, maize heat shock protein 17.7 promoter (Zm-Hsp17.7) + cre gene + potato proteinase inhibitor II (pinII); Nospro: Zm-Wus2, Agrobacterium nopaline synthase promoter (Nos) + maize Wuschel2 gene (Zm-Wus2) + maize In2-1 terminator; ZmUbipro: Zm-Bbm, maize ubiquitin promoter/intron (ZmUbi) + maize Baby boom gene (Zm-Bbm) + maize ubiquitin terminator (Zm-Ubi); SbUbipro: ZsGreen1, sorghym ubiquitin promoter/intron (SbUbi) + green fluorescent protein ZsGreen1 gene + rice ubiquitin terminator (OsUbi); SiAlspro: Zm-Als, Setaria italica acetolactase synthase (SiAls) promoter + maize Als (Zm-Als) gene + sorghum ubiquitin terminator (Sb-Ubi); LB, T-DNA left border. (B) T-DNA region in transgenic plant after the heat-treatment to remove the morphogenic genes and cre gene.
Composition and preparation of media used in the experiments (modified based on Li et al., 2015).
| Medium | Composition and preparation |
| YP | 10 g/L NaCl, 5 g/L yeast extract, 10 g/L peptone, 15 g/L Bacto™ agar, pH 7.0; autoclave; cool down to 55°C; add 50 mg/L thymidine, 50 mg/L spectinomycin, 50 mg/L gentamicin, all filter-sterilized. |
| Resuspension Medium (RM) | 10 mL/L MS major salts stock |
| Co-cultivation Medium (CCM) | 10 mL/L MS major salts stock |
| Callus Induction Medium (CIM) | MS basal medium with 30 g/L maltose, pH 5.8, 6 g/L Phytagel™, autoclave; cool down to 55°C; add 4 mg/L 2,4-D, 0.8 mg/L BAP, 2 mg/L L-proline, 150 mg/L timentin, 100 μM acetosyringone (optional), all filter-sterilized. |
| Shoot Induction Medium (SIM) | MS basal medium with 30 g/L maltose, 3 g/L Phytagel™ pH 5.8; autoclave; cool down to 55°C; add filter-sterilized BAP at 0.5 mg/L. |
| Seed Germination/Rooting Medium (SG/RTM) | MS basal medium with 30 g/L maltose, pH 5.8, 3 g/L Phytagel™, autoclave; cool down to 55°C. |
FIGURE 2Regeneration of transgenic plants of the upland switchgrass cultivar Summer. (A) 7-day old seedlings from which basal stems (within the bracket) containing whorls of leaves including leaf sheaths and blades were excised for Agrobacterium infection. (B) Transient expression of GFP on immature leaf segments 7 days post-inoculation. (C) Non-embryogenic callus formed on explants treated with RM medium only (no-infection control). (D) Embryogenic callus formed on explants infected with Agrobacterium. (E) GFP expression on the same callus as shown in panel D. (F) Overlay of images (D,E). (G) Regeneration of healthy shoots 3 weeks following the heat-shock treatment. (H) An embryogenic callus producing entirely albino shoots. (I) An embryogenic callus producing a mixture of green shoots and an albino shoot. (J) Soil-grown transgenic plants 2 months after being established in the greenhouse.
Summary of transformation experiments using two Agrobacterium strains.
| Cultivar | Total # leaf segments infected | % explants formed callus | % GFP(+) EC | # shoots/GFP(+) EC | % GFP(+) EC produced albino | Overall transformation frequency (%) | |
| Summer | No infection | 150 | 15.3 ± 6.1 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| LBA4404THY- | 500 | 14.4 ± 5.6 | 7.6 ± 3.6 | 5.3 ± 1.9 | 17.5 ± 19.5 | 6.0 ± 3.9 | |
| EHA105THY- | 500 | 7.8 ± 1.9 | 1.4 ± 0.9 | 3.8 ± 1.6 | 43.3 ± 36.5 | 0.8 ± 0.8 | |
| Blackwell | No infection | 150 | 15.3 ± 7.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| LBA4404THY- | 500 | 11.6 ± 3.5 | 4.8 ± 2.2 | 1.0 ± 1.2 | 20.0 ± 44.7 | 3.0 ± 1.2 | |
| EHA105THY- | 500 | 5.4 ± 2.5 | 1.0 ± 1.2 | 1.2 ± 1.6 | 0.0 | 0.6 ± 0.9 |
FIGURE 3Characterization of putative transgenic plants. PCR reactions were performed for 15 putative transgenic plants of Summer (S1–S15) and Blackwell (B1–B15), respectively, for the presence of the herbicide resistance gene ZmAls (891 bp, top panel) and cre gene (452 bp, lower panel). ML, 1-kb molecular ladder; P, plasmid DNA as positive control; WT-S, Summer wild type; WT-B, Blackwell wild type. Boxed numbers denote desired transgenic plants with the cre gene excised.
FIGURE 4Detection of transgene expression and the presence of remnant Agrobacterium cells in putative transgenic plants. (A) RT-PCR results for the ZsGreen1 gene with a target fragment size of 393 bp (top panel) in five putative transgenic plants of the upland switchgrass cultivars ‘Summer’ (S1–S5) and ‘Blackwell’ (B1–B5). The PvActin gene with a target fragment of 100 bp (bottom panel) was used as an internal control. P, plasmid DNA of PHP93739 as positive control; RT-, reverse transcriptase minus as negative control. (B) PCR results for the LBA4404 chromosomal gene, AtuFtsZ, in the same sets of plants as in panel A. P, the target fragment of 369 bp for the AtuFtsZ gene amplified with chromosomal DNA from LBA4404 as the template. Faint bands in panel B are primer dimers. ML, 1 kb molecular ladder; NTC, No template control; WT-S, Summer wild type plant; WT-B, Blackwell wild type plant. DNA samples for S1–S5 and B1–B5 were identical to S1–S5 and B1–B5 used in Figure 3.
FIGURE 5Phenotypic characterization of transgenic plants. (A–C) Observation of GFP signals with an Olympus florescent stereomicroscope in roots of 10-week-old transgenic plant, S8 of ‘Summer’ (Transgenic) and the wild type (WT) of similar age under either bright field (A), GFP (B), or merged (C). (D–F) Observation of GFP signals with a Zeiss upright microscope in both WT and transgenic roots under either bright field (A), GFP (B) or merged (C). The white dashed line in each image separates the wild type root (upper left) from the transgenic root (lower right). (G) Leaf response to herbicide injury. Herbicide Alligare Mojave 70 EG (active ingredient imazapyr at 7.78%) was applied twice at a concentration of 0.9 g/mL with a 5-day interval to newly expanded leaves of the wild type and putative transgenic plants of Summer and Blackwell. Image was taken at the 7th day after the first painting.
FIGURE 6The effect of the optical density (OD650) of Agrobacterium culture (LBA4404Thy-) on transient transformation frequencies. X-axis, three ranges of OD; Y-axis, percent of immature leaf segments emitting GFP signals. Vertical bars associated with each data point is the standard deviation representing three experiments. Detection of GFP was carried out using a Zeiss fluorescence microscope 5–7 days after Agrobacterium infection.