Agrobacterium LBA

Ramessur, Anusha Devi, Bothwell, John H., Maggs, Christine A., Gan, Sook Yee & Phang, Siew Moi, 2018, Agrobacterium-mediated gene delivery and transient expression in the red macroalga Chondrus crispus, Botanica Marina (Warsaw, Poland) 61 (5), pp. 499-510 : 502-503

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1515/bot-2018-0028

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11494493

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F146E-FFCE-A12F-5075-96C46B70DF8F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Agrobacterium LBA
status

 

Agrobacterium LBA View in CoL 4404 cells successfully attached to Chondrus cells

Under the SEM, short, rod-shaped bacterial cells about 0.8 × 2 µm were seen attached in large numbers (an estimated average of one bacterial cell per µm 2) to the Chondrus thallus surface at the wound sites. Whole colonies were observed in a fibrillar mesh ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ).

Protocol for eliminating Agrobacterium using cefotaxime

The results of testing cefotaxime concentrations of 500 and 800 mg l−1 confirmed that this cefotaxime-supplemented wash protocol ensured that residual Agrobacterium and other culturable bacteria were eliminated on the thalli within 6 days ( Table 1 View Table 1 ).

Agrobacterium View in CoL successfully delivered pCAMBIA 1301 into Chondrus thalli

The methodology for transformation developed using pCAMBIA 1301 followed by the established wash protocol included controls to detect any false positives occurring from indigenous activity of beta-glucoronidase in Chondrus (unwounded and untransformed thalli, Figure 3C View Figure 3 ), indigenous activity from LBA4404 bacterial cells (pin-pricked thalli co-cultivated with untransformed Agrobacterium LBA 4404 bacteria, Figure 3B View Figure 3 ), physiological response of algal cells to wounding (pin-pricked thalli cultivated without bacteria, Figure 3A View Figure 3 ) and vector components (pin-pricked thalli co-cultivated with Agrobacterium LBA 4404 bearing a construct where the GUS gene is absent; pRI 910 binary vector, Figure 3D View Figure 3 ). None of these controls were stained. However, thalli transformed with pCAMBIA 1301 were stained blue ( Figure 3E View Figure 3 ).

Manipulating transformation conditions can enhance transformation efficiency

As shown in Figure 4 View Figure 4 , among the pin-pricked thalli, a significant increase in transformation efficiency (higher percentage of thallus segments stained blue) was observed when seawater was used in preference to Induction Medium (Mann-Whitney test, p = 0.029) in the presence of acetosyringone. However, no transformation was detected in the unwounded thallus segments or those wounded by bombardment when co-cultivation was conducted using seawater. In addition, without the presence of acetosyringone, transformation occurred at a significantly lower efficiency of less than 10% (Mann-Whitney, p = 0.004).

Successful expression obtained with the Chondrus -specific expression cassette

Using the Agrobacterium transformation protocol developed using pCAMBIA 1301, the constructed pRI 910 (Ac- GUS) was delivered into thallus cells using seawater as the co-cultivation medium and with the same controls as for pCAMBIA 1301. Blue colouration was apparent at the sites of tear, cut or wounding on Agrobacterium -mediated transformed thalli when compared to controls ( Figure 5 View Figure 5 ). Transverse sections through the tissue revealed blue localization of the GUS precipitate within the peripheral cortical cells and central medullary filaments. In general, a darker staining intensity was observed with pRI 910 (Ac- GUS). Furthermore, a higher transformation efficiency of 85% was obtained with this Chondrus -specific construct as opposed to 52% with pCAMBIA 1301.

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