4.7 Article

Efficient, reproducible Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of sorghum using heat treatment of immature embryos

Journal

PLANT CELL REPORTS
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 429-444

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00299-008-0655-1

Keywords

Agrobacterium; Heat treatment; Phosphomannose isomerase; Sorghum; Transformation

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Funding

  1. TUBITAK (The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey)

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A number of parameters related to Agrobacterium-mediated infection were tested to optimize transformation frequencies of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.). A plasmid with a selectable marker, phosphomannose isomerase, and an sgfp reporter gene was used. First, storing immature spikes at 4A degrees C before use decreased frequency of GFP-expressing calli, for example, in sorghum variety P898012 from 22.5% at 0 day to 6.4% at 5 days. Next, heating immature embryos (IEs) at various temperatures for 3 min prior to Agrobacterium infection increased frequencies of GFP-expressing calli, of mannose-selected calli and of transformed calli. The optimal 43A degrees C heat treatment increased transformation frequencies from 2.6% with no heat to 7.6%. Using different heating times at 43A degrees C prior to infection showed 3 min was optimal. Centrifuging IEs with no heat or heating at various temperatures decreased frequencies of all tissue responses; however, both heat and centrifugation increased de-differentiation of tissue. If IEs were cooled at 25A degrees C versus on ice after heating and prior to infection, numbers with GFP-expressing cells increased from 34.2 to 49.1%. The most optimal treatment, 43A degrees C for 3 min, cooling at 25A degrees C and no centrifugation, yielded 49.1% GFP-expressing calli and 8.3% stable transformation frequency. Transformation frequencies greater than 7% were routinely observed using similar treatments over 5 months of testing. This reproducible frequency, calculated as numbers of independent IEs producing regenerable transgenic tissues, confirmed by PCR, western and DNA hybridization analysis, divided by total numbers of IEs infected, is several-fold higher than published frequencies.

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