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Plant Physiol, July 2000, Vol. 123, pp. 895-904 Female Reproductive Tissues Are the Primary Target of Agrobacterium-Mediated Transformation by the Arabidopsis Floral-Dip Method1Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
The floral-dip method for Agrobacterium-mediated
transformation of Arabidopsis allows efficient plant transformation
without need for tissue culture. To facilitate use with other plant
species, we investigated the mechanisms that underlie this method. In
manual outcrossing experiments, application of Agrobacterium
tumefaciens to pollen donor plants did not produce any
transformed progeny, whereas application of
Agrobacterium to pollen recipient plants yielded
transformants at a rate of 0.48%. Agrobacterium strains with T-DNA carrying gusA (encoding
Plant transformation is a key
methodology that has fostered diverse forms of scientific inquiry and
technology development (Birch, 1997 Germ-line transformation is the common feature that allows avoidance of
tissue culture and regeneration in the vacuum infiltration, seed
transformation, in planta transformation, and floral-dip methods
(Feldmann and Marks, 1987 Despite the above, the cell type that is transformed and the timing of
transformation have remained unknown. The success of the floral-dip
method, in which flowering plants are simply dipped into a solution of
Agrobacterium, suggested that the cellular targets are
present on the exterior of the plant. Transformants are often derived
at high frequency (as high as 4% of all T1 seed; Clough and Bent, 1998 Although the benefits of vacuum infiltration and/or floral-dip
transformation methods are evident, efforts to apply these methods to
other plant species have generally been unsuccessful. However, reports
of success with Brassica campestris subsp.
Chinensis and Medicago truncatula suggest that
the method is not uniquely restricted to Arabidopsis (Liu et al., 1998
Crosses between Plants Inoculated with Agrobacterium and Noninoculated Plants As a first step toward identifying the primary sites of productive transformation in the floral-dip procedure, we sought to apply Agrobacterium to only the male or female germ line. Standard floral-dip transformation procedures were used for plant growth and inoculation (see "Materials and Methods"); plants were inoculated by dipping only (no vacuum infiltration). Candidate T1 transformant seed lots were then generated by performing crosses in which only the male parent (pollen donor) or female parent (pollen recipient) had been inoculated. Individual siliques from these crosses were harvested separately and seeds were plated on selective media to identify transformed lines. To accumulate a meaningful volume of data, we performed more than twelve separate sets of inoculation/crossing experiments that generated over 29,000 progeny seed from crosses (Fig. 1). Out of more than 14,300 seeds screened from 405 successful crosses in which the pollen donor plant was inoculated with Agrobacterium, we recovered zero transformants. In contrast, 71 transformants were recovered from 40 separate crosses out of a total of roughly 14,800 seeds from 498 successful crosses in which the pollen recipient plant had been treated with Agrobacterium. These results suggest that productive transformation events occur on female floral structures, and that they do not occur during early stages of anther or pollen/microspore development prior to pollen release.
Arabidopsis plants form an indeterminate inflorescence that typically carries flowers of a wide range of developmental ages. In the experiment reported above and in Figure 1, crosses were made as individual flowers reached anthesis 1 to 13 d after plants had been dipped in Agrobacterium. This produced a data set in which the developmental stage at the time of Agrobacterium inoculation could be inferred for the parental flower of each transformant. Again, a striking discontinuity was observed in the data set (Fig. 1). Productive transformation events occurred in flowers that were developmentally young at the time of Agrobacterium treatment (6-11 d away from anthesis; equivalent to 5-10 d after inoculation in Fig. 1). Flowers that were 5, 4, 3, or 2 d away from anthesis at the time of inoculation failed to produce transformants, and very few transformants were obtained from flowers that had been inoculated 6 d prior to anthesis. Correlation of these results with the time line for development of Arabidopsis flowers is pursued in the "Discussion." Although 21 of the crosses reported above produced a single transformant, 19 crosses produced more than one transformant, with up to seven transformants obtained from a single silique. In the above crosses, different genetically marked plant lines were
used as pollen donor and recipient. All putative transformants carried
the genetic marker of the pollen donor, indicating successful crossing. In all cases examined by PCR or by hybridization of genomic DNA blots (reported below; Clough and Bent,
1998 As a positive control in the above crossing experiments, transformation rates were determined for seed derived from self-fertilization of the same Agrobacterium-inoculated plants that were used as pollen donor or pollen recipient. The overall transformation rate for seeds from self-fertilization was 1.0%, ranging from 0.06% to 2.6% among experiments. For the six experiments where both Ler-0 plants and Col background plants were included, we found that the average transformation rate for Col plants was 47 times higher than that of Ler-0 plants. The discrepancy between this result and the similar transformation rate of Col and Ler pollen recipients in crossing experiments (preceding paragraph) suggests that the low rate of Ler transformation may be due to self-pollination/fertilization deficiencies in Agrobacterium-inoculated Ler plants. Consistent with this hypothesis, we observed very poor pollen quality on Agrobacterium-inoculated Ler plants when attempting to use these plants for crossing experiments. It also bears mention that high levels of Silwet L-77 (OSi Specialties,
Danbury, CT; 0.05%-0.1%) caused notable flower mortality in some
experiments (Clough and Bent, 1998 Delivery by Agrobacterium of gusA Reporter Gene Constructs The success of transformation following mere dipping of flowers into Agrobacterium had suggested that the targets of transformation are exposed on the plant surface. The crossing experiments reported above and in Figure 1 indicated that productive transformation events occur on the pollen-recipient flower and not on developing anthers, but did not distinguish between transformation of female germ-line tissues as opposed to transformation of pollen after it germinates on the stigmatic surface. To explore further the target site(s) and the possible timing of the transformation, we sought to detect expression of an Agrobacterium-delivered gusA transgene as early as possible after transformation. When plants were inoculated with Agrobacterium carrying a 35S-gusA/intron fusion in the T-DNA, no GUS staining was observed in flowers collected 4 to 14 d after inoculation. However, in control experiments using six independent lines stably transformed with a 35S-gusA construct, staining seldom occurred in the pistil (stigma, style, or ovary) and was never observed in the stamens (anther or filament). Staining in these control flowers was commonly observed in sepals, petals, and peduncle, and was occasionally observed in the side walls of the ovary. In one flower, we observed very faint blue staining in ovules but not in other parts of the ovary. These results confirmed and extended the work of others, indicating that the 35S promoter directs very little gene expression in stamen, pistil, or gametophyte tissues. Although the 35S-gusA/intron construct could not be used to detect transformation of pollen or pistil cells, this work indicated that transformation of other developing flower parts was rare following Agrobacterium floral dip. LAT52-gusA To monitor transformation events in reproductive tissues,
experiments were performed that utilized LAT52-gusA,
ACT11-gusA, and ACT11-gusA-intron
promoter-reporter gene fusions. LAT52 is a promoter specifically
expressed in pollen (Twell et al., 1990 ACT11-gusA and ACT11-gusA-Intron Parallel experiments utilized a gusA reporter gene
driven by the ACT11 promoter (Huang et al., 1997 Use of the ACT11-gusA construct to track plant transformation events was confounded by the fact that this was not a gusA/intron construct. In particular, we observed strong GUS expression in pure cultures of Agrobacterium that carried the ACT11-gusA construct. Although this led to construction and use of a gusA/intron construct (below), the bacterial GUS expression from the ACT11-gusA construct with no intron was exploited to track the presence of Agrobacterium in floral tissues. When previously non-transformed plants were treated by floral dip with Agrobacterium carrying the ACT11-gusA construct (no intron), limited staining was occasionally observed in very young flowers. In flowers that were 1 d away from anthesis (i.e. ready for crossing), we observed staining only 5 or more d after inoculation. Note that these positively stained flowers were still unpollinated. Examination of the more strongly stained flowers revealed that in some ovaries, or sometimes in just one locule of the ovary, GUS expression was very strong in the entire cavity (Fig. 2A). This result suggested an overwhelming presence of GUS-expressing bacteria. In other cases, GUS staining was limited to one or several spots in the ovary (Fig. 2, B and D), suggesting staining of transformed plant tissues. The possibility remains that this discrete and localized staining resulted from expression of ACT11-gusA (no intron) from within colonizing bacteria. However, this localized staining was only observed at sites for which plants cells are known to drive ACT11 expression, including entire ovules (and the funiculus in many cases), or at a location near the micropyle of the ovule, and not at other locations within the flower (Fig. 2D). Regardless of bacterial or plant source of expression, flowers of this type provided clear evidence that Agrobacterium was penetrating to the ovary of Arabidopsis flowers.
Another striking but perhaps not surprising observation was the discontinuity of the transformation rate between separate flowers. Overall, plant transformation rates by the floral-dip method are often roughly 1%, but most flowers remain completely non-transformed, whereas others are transformed at a high rate. In experiments with the ACT11-gusA construct or the ACT11-gusA-intron construct, most flowers were not stained and some were stained at a small number of ovules, but in some flowers, one-quarter or more of the ovules displayed GUS staining (Fig. 2, B and C). Note that, due to the possibility of gusA expression from either stable integration events or transiently delivered T-DNAs, the rate of GUS staining overestimates the rate of productive transformation events in these and all other GUS-staining experiments. To monitor ACT11-gusA expression from plant cells and not from bacteria, the binary vector pCD1301-ACT11 was constructed in which the ACT11 promoter drives expression of a gusA-intron gene. Using this construct in our floral-dip inoculations of previously non-transformed plants, we detected floral GUS expression as isolated foci of blue staining within the ovaries (Fig. 2C). Although this staining was localized to developing ovules, the patterns of GUS staining were variable. In some cases, staining of entire ovules was observed, whereas in other cases, staining was very localized within the ovule to the site of the embryo sac near the micropyle (Fig. 2E). Ovules that were completely stained and ovules that stained only at the site of the embryo could be found within the same locule. Sampling and GUS staining of a given inflorescence yielded a set of flowers that were all the same number of days beyond inoculation, but at a variety of developmental stages. With the ACT11-gusA-intron construct, staining was first evident in unpollinated flowers collected at least 5 d after inoculation. GUS expression was only found in the ovaries of pollinated flowers collected at least 6 d after inoculation. No GUS staining was observed in flowers collected 4 or fewer d after inoculation. This time line for transformation was consistent with the results of the crossing experiments reported above and in Figure 1. Ten days after inoculation, the activity of the transgene could still be found in both pollinated and unpollinated flowers; this staining may have been due to some extent to residual GUS enzyme and not to new gusA gene expression. Twelve days after inoculation, we found some GUS staining only in pollinated flowers, and no staining of flowers was found 14 d after inoculation. After floral-dip inoculation with Agrobacterium strains carrying either of the ACT11-gusA constructs, we did not observe any GUS expression in anthers, in pollen on the stigmatic surface, in germinated pollen tubes, or on any other parts of the flowers except the ovules. These results, together with those from work with the other gusA constructs discussed above and from the crossing experiments, showed that ovules are the primary target for productive transformation in the floral-dip method. Independence of Separate Transformants As a third means of addressing the site and timing of productive
transformation, we examined the independence of T-DNA insertion events
in transformed progeny derived from the same silique. Previous work had
shown that T-DNA insertion events derived from the same plant are
generally independent (Bechtold et al., 1993
Enhanced Transformation Rate in crc Floral Mutant That Retains an Open Gynoecium If transformation via the floral-dip method is limited by access
of Agrobacterium to the interior of the gynoecium, one might predict that plant lines that retain an open gynoecium for a longer period during floral development would be transformable at an elevated
rate. At the suggestion of Dr. John Bowman and colleagues (University
of California, Davis), we performed transformation experiments
with the CRABS-CLAW (crc) mutant of Arabidopsis and the
near-isogenic parental line Ler-0. Flowers of the crc-1
mutant line form a gynoecium in which carpel fusion is incomplete at the apex (Bowman, 1994
The primary goal of this study was to identify the sites of
productive transformation in the floral-dip procedure for
Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Arabidopsis.
In large-scale crossing experiments using plants for which only
the maternal or paternal donor had been inoculated with
Agrobacterium, transformed progeny were obtained only when
the female (pollen-recipient) plant had been inoculated. Experiments
that monitored delivery by Agrobacterium of T-DNA carrying a
Our work identified a range of probable target cell types for
productive Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. In some
cases, staining of entire ovules was observed, whereas in other cases, staining was very localized within the ovule to the site of the embryo
sac near the micropyle. It is possible that multiple developmental stages serve as productive targets, ranging from the ovule primordia that will give rise to the megasporocyte, through any stage of megagametophyte development, to the recently fertilized embryo. Although we saw no staining of pollen before or after germination and
growth through the pistil, our data also do not rule out transformation of the generative cell nucleus of pollen just prior to fertilization. Bechtold et al. (2000) While our work was in progress, Ye et al. (1999) We observed a reduction of transformation events and a reduced
occurrence of GUS-positive flowers 12 to 14 d after plants were
inoculated with Agrobacterium. This observation suggests that Agrobacterium persists for a limited period at levels
high enough to achieve reasonable rates of transformation in newly forming flower buds, and it is consistent with our earlier finding that
the number of transformants obtained on a plant could be increased by a
second floral-dip application of Agrobacterium roughly 1 week after the first application (Clough and Bent, 1998 The identification of ovules and/or megagametophytes as the primary
target for transformation brings up the question of how Agrobacterium gains access to the interior of the ovary. The
success of transformation after gentle dipping of inflorescences into Agrobacterium solution had suggested that the transformed
tissues were exposed at or near the surface of the plant. Developing
anthers present one such target, as do germinating pollen grains
present on the stigmatic surface. However, in extensive studies we did not obtain evidence for pollen transformation. The possibility remains
that germinated pollen tubes occasionally carry
Agrobacterium from the stigma down the style to mature
ovules, but our crossing experiments did not produce transformants in
flowers pollinated during the first 4 d after inoculation. Pollen
transformation or pollen-tube mediated delivery of
Agrobacterium to the embryo sac also do not account for the
uniformly GUS-stained ovules that were frequently observed in
non-pollinated flowers in our study and in the work of Ye et al.
(1999) In considering access of Agrobacterium to the ovary
interior, it is relevant to correlate our findings with previous
observations of Arabidopsis floral development (Bowman, 1994 GUS staining experiments and studies with the crc-1 mutant provided additional support for the above model regarding access to the interior of the gynoecium. Experiments that monitored GUS expression by Agrobacterium only revealed staining in locules of flowers that had been inoculated 6 or more d prior to anthesis. ACT11-gusA-intron staining of ovules was not detected unless flowers reached anthesis at least 5 d after inoculation. Some ovules were not uniformly stained, rather they exhibited GUS staining only at the site of the megasporocyte that forms 2 or 3 d prior to anthesis. Agrobacterium applied to flowers at or near the time that these megasprocytes were developing might conceivably have generated transformants, but we only obtained transformants from flowers that had been inoculated with Agrobacterium 5 or more d prior to anthesis. These results carry significant implications for attempts to transform other plant species by Agrobacterium floral dip or related methods. Delivery of Agrobacterium to the interior of the gynoecium and transformation of developing ovules are apparently key benchmarks for successful transformation by these methods.
Plant Growth Arabidopsis plants used for crosses and inoculations with
Agrobacterium tumefaciens were grown in moist potting
mix (Sunshine mix no. 1, Sun Gro Horticulture, Bellevue, WA) in a 24-h
light growth chamber at 22°C (five plants per 25-cm2
pot). The ecotypes and genetic markers used were Col-0, Col
gl1/gl1 (glabrous; Herman and Marks, 1989 Inoculation with Agrobacterium, Crossing, and Selection About one-half of the plants for each genotype were dipped in
Agrobacterium when most secondary bolts were 1 to 10 cm
tall and carried multiple young floral buds (typically 5-8 d after clipping); the remaining plants were left uninoculated. Plants were
inoculated with A. tumefaciens strain GV3101 (pMP90)
carrying pBIN-mgfp5-ER (Koncz and Schell, 1986 Crosses were performed by standard methods using genetically marked lines. Flowers roughly 1 d from anthesis were chosen as pollen recipients and all anthers were removed prior to outcrossing. The temperature sensitive male-sterility of the ap3-1 line is nearly but not completely penetrant at 22°C, so ap3-1 flowers were checked for the presence of anthers prior to use as pollen recipient. Siliques (seed pods) from crosses were collected individually in microfuge tubes 2 to 3 weeks after pollination. Seeds were surface-sterilized by liquid or vapor-phase methods. For liquid sterilization, seeds were first treated for 30 to 60 s with isopropanol, then with a 50% bleach:0.05% Tween 20 solution (v/v) for 5 min, and then rinsed three times with sterile water. Vapor-phase sterilization was used as a more efficient alternative when dealing with multiple tubes containing a small amount of seed. Open microfuge tubes marked with pencil rather than pen were placed in an approximately 8-L bell jar (under a fume hood) containing a beaker with 100 mL of household bleach (5.25% (w/v) sodium hypochlorite); 3.3 mL of glacial hydrochloric acid was then carefully added to the bleach and the jar was quickly sealed. Seed remained in contact with chlorine gas for several hours (4 h-overnight). After sterilization, the open tubes were placed for a least 20 min in a sterile hood to disperse trace chlorine gas, and tubes were then closed for storage or seeds were plated out for selection. To select for transformed plants, liquid-sterilized seeds were resuspended into approximately 150 µL of 0.1% (w/v) agarose and plated on kanamycin selection plates. For gas-sterilized seed, 150 µL of 0.1% (w/v) agarose containing 50 µL/L (0.005% w/v) Silwet L-77 was added into the tube, the seed was allowed to imbibe for 15 to 45 min and it was then resuspended and plated. Selection plates contained one-half-strength Murashige-Skoog medium (M-5519, Sigma Chemical, St. Louis), 0.8% (w/v) agar, and 50 µg/mL of kanamycin. Typically, all of the seeds from twelve siliques were placed on a 100 × 25-mm plate. Plates were dried briefly to remove excess moisture, the number of seeds for each silique was recorded, plates were shifted to 4°C for 2 d, and they were then moved to a growth chamber at 24°C with 24 h of light. After roughly 10 d at 24°C, transformants were transplanted into soil and placed in a 9-h daylength growth chamber. Leaves were collected from those plants for DNA analysis and plants were then moved to a 24-h daylength growth chamber to set T2 seed. In all cases, transformation rates were expressed as (no. of kanamycin-resistant plants/total no. of seeds plated) × 100. As a positive control for transformation efficiency in each experiment, seeds from self-pollinated flowers were collected from Agrobacterium-treated plants used in the experiment. These seeds were plated on selective medium at a density of 3,000 seeds per 150- × 15-mm plates. Male-sterile ap3-1 plants were excluded from this analysis. Southern Blots and Inverse PCR Leaf tissue for genomic DNA was collected from the
T1 plant and from T2 progeny. Junction
fragments containing T-DNA from pBIN-mgfp5-ER and flanking genomic DNA
were detected by probing blots of BamHI-digested
Arabidopsis genomic DNA with a nptII gene probe, using
standard methods (Ausubel et al., 1997 Agrobacterium-Delivery of GUS Reporters That Are Expressed in Reproductive Tissues Plants used in this experiment were either grown from seed in a
growth chamber (at 22°C with 24 h of light) or grown in the greenhouse (at 24°C during the day and at 20°C during the night, with an 18-h daylength) and moved before flowering to 24 h of light in the laboratory. Inoculations took place at the same
developmental stage and followed the procedure described above. We used
Agrobacterium strain GV3101 (pMP90) carrying one of the
following binary vectors: pAL145 (carrying a LAT52
promoter pCD1301-ACT11 was constructed by replacing the 35S promoter region of the binary vector pCAMBIA1301 (http://www.cambia.org.au/) with the ACT11 promoter region of pBI-ACT11. The ACT11 promoter region (2.5 kb) was amplified by the PCR using TaqPrecision Plus polymerase (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) and the following primers: 5'-ACACAGGAAACAGCTATGACC-3' and 5'-CTG-CCATGGGAACCATTCCGGTTCCATTGT-3'. PCR products were digested with PstI and NcoI, ligated into the vector pPO28 (a modified pUC18 with a NcoI site in its polylinker, courtesy of P. Oger, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) previously digested by the same enzymes, and confirmed by DNA sequencing. The ACT11 fragment was then recut by PstI and NcoI and inserted into pCAMBIA1301 cut by the same enzymes to create pCD1301-ACT11. Two independently derived versions of pCD1301-ACT11 produced similar results. To monitor the expression of gusA genes, flowers or
floral clusters were collected after inoculation and incubated in the dark at room temperature in a 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl
We thank Nicole Bechtold, Georges Pelletier, Guan-ning Ye, and Maud Hinchee for sharing results prior to publication, John Bowman and colleagues for suggesting use of the CRABS-CLAW mutant, and the North Central Soybean Research Program for their vision to support this Arabidopsis research.
Received December 21, 1999; accepted March 16, 2000. 1 This research was supported by the North Central Soybean Research Program.
2 Present Address: Department of Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706.
* Corresponding author; e-mail afb{at}plantpath.wisc.edu; fax 608-263-2626.
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