4.4 Article

Poison ivy hairy root cultures enable a stable transformation system suitable for detailed investigation of urushiol metabolism

Journal

PLANT DIRECT
Volume 4, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/pld3.243

Keywords

Agrobacterium rhizogenes; anacardic acid; hairy roots; Toxicodendron radicans; transformation; urushiol

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Funding

  1. Virginia Tech Global Change Center Undergraduate Award
  2. Virginia Tech Translational Plant Interdisciplinary Graduate Education Program
  3. Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences
  4. Virginia Tech Foundation LLC
  5. Virginia Tech Biological Sciences Department Start-Up Funds

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Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) is best known for causing exasperating allergenic delayed-contact dermatitis symptoms that last for weeks on persons who have contacted the plant. Urushiols are alkylcatechols produced by poison ivy responsible for causing this dermatitis. While urushiol chemical structures are well known, the metabolic intermediates and genes responsible for their biosynthesis have not been experimentally validated. A molecular genetic characterization of urushiol biosynthesis in poison ivy will require stable genetic transformation and subsequent regeneration of organs that retain the capacity synthesize urushiol. To this end,Agrobacterium rhizogeneswas used to generate hormone-independent poison ivy hairy root cultures. Optimal conditions for hairy root formation were skotomorphic poison ivy hypocotyls prick-inoculated withA. rhizogenes, and preferential propagation of cultures with an atypical clumpy hairy root growth habit. The origin of the poison ivy accession used forA. rhizogenesprick-inoculation did not affect the initial formation of calli/hairy root primordia, but rather significantly influenced the establishment of long-term hormone-independent hairy root growth.A. rhizogenesharboring a recombinant T-DNA binary plasmid with an intron-containing Firefly Luciferase gene produced stable transgenic hairy root lines expressing luciferase activity at high frequency. Poison ivy hairy root lines produced significantly lower steady-state urushiol levels relative to wild-type roots, but higher urushiol levels than a poison ivy undifferentiated callus line with undetectable urushiol levels, suggesting that urushiol biosynthesis requires intact poison ivy organs. The lower urushiol levels in poison ivy hairy root lines facilitated the first identification of anacardic acid metabolites initially in hairy roots, and subsequently in wild-type roots as well. This study establishes a transformation hairy root regeneration protocol for poison ivy that can serve as a platform for future reverse-genetic studies of urushiol biosynthesis in poison ivy hairy roots.

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