Biological projectiles (phage, yeast, bacteria) for genetic transformation of plants |
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Authors: | Julie R. Kikkert Gerard A. Humiston Mihir K. Roy John C. Sanford |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Horticultural Sciences, Cornell University, New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, 14456 Geneva, New York;(2) Present address: Sanford Scientific, 877 Marshall Road, Waterloo, New York, 13165;(3) Present address: Garst Seeds, Box 500, 50244 Slater, Iowa |
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Abstract: | Summary Bacteriophage lambda particles, yeast cells, and bacterial cells were tested as projectiles to deliver marker/reporter genes into plant cells via the biolistic process. When phage particles were complexed to tungsten or gold particles and used to bombard tobacco cells, fewer than 15 cell clusters per plate transiently expressed β-glucuronidase (GUS). Cells of wildtype Saccharomyces cerevisiae were too large to be effective projectiles, but use of a reduced-size mutant resulted in a small number of transformants. Escherichia coli cells complexed with tungsten were the most effective projectile for plant transformation. Various methods to prepare E. coli were tested to reduce particle size, improve binding of bacteria to metal particles, and/or minimize particle clumping. In maize, the number of transformants was highest when bacteria/tungsten particles were air-dried onto macrocarriers from an aqueous solution. When maize cells were bombarded with bacteria/tungsten projectiles, rates of transient gene expression (2000 per plate) and stable transformation (50 per plate) were only two- to threefold lower than when purified DNA was used. Transformation of tobacco with E. coli projectiles was improved when the bacteria were treated with a series of ethanol and ether washes, then dried into a powder. Nevertheless, tobacco transformation was still 24- (transient) and 200-fold (stable) less than when purified DNA was used. Biological projectiles can be effective for plant transformation and are advantageous because once a DNA construct is made and put into the appropriate microorganism, the need to isolate and purify DNA for the biolistic process is eliminated, which saves time and lessens DNA shear. Such projectiles may be especially well suited where high molecular weight DNA constructs are needed. |
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Keywords: | biolistic microprojectile bombardment particle bombardment bacteriophage lambda Saccharomyces cerevisiae Escherichia coli |
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