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Activation of Latent Transgenes in Arabidopsis Using a Hybrid Transcription Factor
Dave Guyer1,a, Ann Tuttle1,a, Sabrina Rousea, Sandra Volratha, Marie Johnsona, Sharon Pottera, Jörn Görlach2,a, Steve Goffa, Lyle Crossland3,a, and Eric Wardaa Novartis Agricultural Biotechnology Research, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709
Corresponding author: Eric Ward, Novartis Agricultural Biotechnology Research, 3054 Cornwallis Road, P.O. Box 12257, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, eric.ward{at}cp.novartis.com (E-mail).
Communicating editor: D. PREUSS
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
A hybrid transcription factor comprising a fusion of the DNA-binding domain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae GAL4 and the transcription activation domain of maize C1 was expressed in stably transformed Arabidopsis. Additional transgenic lines were created containing test genes controlled by a synthetic promoter consisting of concatemeric copies of the cis-acting site recognized by GAL4 (UASG) fused to a minimal promoter. The GAL4/C1 effector line was crossed to two lines containing a synthetic promoter/GUS fusion. Both histochemical staining and GUS activity assays indicate strong activation of GUS expression was achieved only after crossing. The GAL4/C1 effector line was also crossed to 15 lines containing a synthetic promoter/antisense adenylosuccinate synthetase gene. Severely retarded growth, and in some cases lethality, was observed in 40% of the F1 lines. This system of activation by crossing is generally useful for activating expression of test transgenes.
THE tools of plant biotechnology allow introduction of foreign genes into many species and regulation of their expression in developmental time and space. However, tight, inducible control of the expression of introduced genes has been difficult to achieve in whole plants (for review, see ![]()
![]()
Many positive transcriptional regulatory factors are modular, consisting of a DNA-binding domain and an activation domain that interacts with components of the transcriptional machinery assembling at the promoter (![]()
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Although analysis of transgenes introduced transiently into host cells can be useful to make preliminary determinations of gene function, stable transformation is a more broadly applicable system for studying plant gene expression. A heterologous hybrid transcription factor has previously been shown to function in transgenic tobacco and Arabidopsis (![]()
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Recombinant plasmids:
pSGZL1 was constructed by ligating the GAL4-C1 EcoRI fragment from pGALC1 (![]()
![]()
![]()
The 10 UASG sites and the minimal CaMV 35S promoter (-59 to +1) were excised from pGALLuc2 (![]()
pCIB921 contains a dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr) plant selectable marker gene inserted in the BamHI site of pCIB710 (![]()
![]()
Plasmid pBS SK+ (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) was linearized with SacI, treated with mung bean nuclease to remove the SacI site, and religated with T4 ligase to make pJG201. The UASG/CaMV 35S minimal promoter/GUS gene/CaMV terminator cassette was removed from pAT71 with KpnI and cloned into the KpnI site of pJG201 to make pJG304. pJG304 was partially digested with restriction endonuclease Asp718 to isolate a full-length linear fragment. This fragment was ligated with a molar excess of the oligonucleotide 5' GTA CCT CGA GTC TAG ACT CGA G 3'. Restriction analysis was used to identify a clone with this linker, inserted 5' to the site, and this plasmid was designated pJG304
XhoI.
A fragment of the AdSS cDNA clone described previously (![]()
XhoI was digested with SacI and NcoI to excise the GUS gene coding sequence. The AdSS PCR fragment was digested with SacI and NcoI and ligated into pJG304
XhoI to make pJG304AntiAdSS.
Vector pGPTV (![]()
pJG304AntiAdSS was cut with XhoI to excise the cassette containing the UASG/35S minimal promoter/antisense AdSS/CaMV terminator fusion. This cassette was ligated into XhoI-digested pJG261, such that transcription was divergent from that of the bar selectable marker, producing pJG261AntiAdSS.
Transgenic plants:
pJG261AntiAdSS was electro-transformed into Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain GV3101 (pMP90; ![]()
![]()
Arabidopsis root explants (ecotype Nossen) were transformed with pAT53 and pAT73 as described (![]()
Fifteen transgenic plants containing the UASG/minimal CaMV 35S promoter/antisense AdSS construct were transplanted to soil and grown to maturity in the greenhouse. Flowers borne on the primary transformants were crossed with pollen from the homozygous GAL4/C1 transactivator line pAT53-103. F1 seeds were plated on germination medium containing 50 mg/liter kanamycin.
ß-glucuronidase (GUS) assays:
Histochemical and fluorometric GUS assays were performed on Arabidopsis leaves as previously described (![]()
Nucleic acid analysis:
RNA was isolated by phenol/chloroform extraction followed by LiCl precipitation as described (![]()
![]()
32P-dCTP by the random priming method using a PrimeTime kit (International Biotechnologies, Inc., New Haven, CT). Hybridization conditions were 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS); 0.5 M NaPO4, pH 7.0; 1 mM EDTA; and 1% bovine albumin at 65°. After hybridization overnight, the filters were washed with 1% SDS, 50 mM NaPO4, 1 mM EDTA at 65° (![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
An ideal regulatory system for controlling transgene expression in plants would have no background expression in the absence of the activator gene and high expression in the presence of the activator gene. To determine if a GAL4/C1 hybrid activator and a GAL4-dependent promoter can meet these requirements in stable transformants, we constructed appropriate genes for testing the system in Arabidopsis. A hybrid transcription factor gene was constructed from components of the GAL4 and C1 genes previously shown to contain the DNA-binding and transcriptional activation functions, respectively (Figure 1A). The N-terminal 147 amino acids of the encoded protein derived from GAL4, and the C-terminal 101 amino acids are derived from the carboxy-terminal amino acids 173-273 of C1. A similar combination had previously been shown to function in transient assays (![]()
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Transgenic Arabidopsis plant lines containing the hybrid transcription factor gene (effector lines) were created using Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. Primary transformants (T1 generation) were screened for ability to activate expression from the synthetic UASG/TATA promoter by transiently transforming them with a luciferase reporter construct. Approximately half of the T1 transformants tested showed luciferase activity after microprojectile bombardment. RNA gel blot analysis confirmed that these transformants expressed the GAL4/C1 gene (Figure 2A). These lines were further tested in the T2 generation for segregation of kanamycin resistance (the selectable marker gene carried on the T-DNA) as a single locus after selfing. Presence of a single T-DNA insert was confirmed by genomic DNA gel blot analysis in lines that showed 3:1 segregation (data not shown). These lines were further analyzed for expression of the GAL4/C1 gene by RNA gel blot analysis (Figure 2B). A single effector line, designated pAT53-103, was chosen for further experiments, and several T2 plants were selfed to obtain T3 progeny which were screened for homozygosity of the T-DNA insert.
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In addition, transgenic lines containing the UASG/TATA/GUS gene were selected on methotrexate and screened for homozygosity. Two lines, designated pAT-73-309 and pAT73-346, were analyzed for GUS activity (Figure 3), and found to have very low amounts, not significantly different from assay background (Table 1). F1 plants containing both the hybrid transactivator gene and the activatable reporter gene were generated by cross-pollination and selected on kanamycin. In contrast to plants containing the reporter gene alone, the F1 plants produced high levels of GUS activity (Figure 3; Table 1).
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We wished to investigate whether this system of activation by crossing could be used to eliminate gene function. As a test gene, we used adenylosuccinate synthetase (AdSS), one of two steps in de novo purine biosynthesis that converts IMP to AMP. AdSS has recently been implicated as the target of the potently herbicidal natural product hydantocidin (![]()
![]()
![]()
Fifteen transgenic plants containing a UASG/TATA/antisense AdSS construct (Figure 1C) were generated by Agrobacterium transformation. Flowers borne on the primary transformants were crossed with pollen from the homozygous effector line pAT53-103. F1 seeds were plated on kanamycin to select for the outcrossed progeny. These primary transformants are hemizygous for the introduced T-DNA (containing the antisense gene), which in most cases will segregate as a single Mendelian trait (Figure 4). Thus, in the F1 the antisense gene should segregate 1:1 against a background that always contains the transactivator in the hemizygous state (except in rare contaminants from selfing, which are selected against by germination on kanamycin). In six lines, approximately 50% of the F1 seedlings produced by crossing with the effector line were severely retarded in growth (Figure 5), in some cases failing to germinate completely. Five other lines gave rise to F1 progeny that survived through true leaf expansion, but showed various growth anomalies after transfer to soil. A final four lines showed little or no abnormal phenotype in the F1.
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To confirm that the severe growth retardation and lethality seen was due to presence of the antisense transgene, polymerase chain reactions were carried out using primers designed to amplify a region between the 5' end of the AdSS cDNA and the UASG/TATA promoter. Figure 6 shows that a one-to-one correlation was observed between abnormal seedlings and the antisense gene. To examine the variation in phenotype among different antisense lines, we carried out RNA gel blot hybridizations on F1 plants derived from different antisense lines. Figure 7 shows that little AdSS RNA was detected in a line with a severe phenotype. (The most severe seedling lethal lines had to be omitted from the analysis because so little tissue was available for RNA extraction.)
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
We used a scheme based on crossing to achieve inducible gene activation, relying on an effector line to activate expression of a latent transgene under the control of a synthetic, activatable promoter. Traits whose expression can be controlled with this system include both novel, nonplant genes (e.g., GUS), and antisense genes to knock out expression of endogenous genes (e.g., AdSS). Presumably, any gene of interest can be controlled in this way. This system is especially useful for allowing expression of traits that might otherwise be unrecoverable as constitutively driven transgenes. For instance, foreign genes with potentially lethal effect, or antisense genes or dominant negative mutations designed to abolish function of essential genes, while of great interest in basic studies of plant biology, present inherent experimental problems. Decreased transformation frequencies are often cited as evidence of lethality associated with a particular constitutively driven transgene, but negative results of this type are laden with alternative trivial explanations. A system of the type described here allows stable maintenance and propagation of a test transgene separate from its expression. This ability to separate transgene insertion from expression is crucial for firm conclusions about essentiality of gene function to be drawn.
If the silent transgene can exert a dominant phenotype, it can exist in either a hemi- or homozygous state in plants to be crossed to the effector for activation. However, hemizygous material presents the advantage of providing an internal control for the cross-pollination; namely, the female gametes not inheriting the T-DNA containing the test gene give rise to normal seeds and seedlings, while the progeny from the same silique that contain the test transgene will display the phenotype resulting from transgene expression.
Variation in severity of phenotype can be achieved by examining the phenotypes of multiple independent activatable lines crossed to a single activator. By relying on position effect to provide varying levels of expressibility from the different transgenic loci, it is possible to obtain a phenocopy of an allelic series for a specific trait. Here, we have shown that this diversity of expression levels from an antisense gene designed to knock out an essential metabolic function can result in plant lines with varying severity of phenotype. Experiments carried out with additional constructs resulting in lethality show that severity of phenotype generally correlates with level of expression from the transgene. Interestingly, this result implies that position effect influences transgenes driven not only by natural promoters recognized by endogenous trans-acting factors, but also synthetic promoters recognized by nonplant factors.
Further refinements in expression for particular traits could be achieved by controlling the expression of the hybrid activator gene with appropriate promoters, for example promoters regulated in developmental time or space. Depending on the stringency of control of the promoter in question, assessing the function of a gene of interest in specific cell types, tissues, or organs or at specific times in development should be possible. Such an approach has been widely used in Drosophila, usually by inserting the GAL4 effector construct at random to obtain fusions to various genomic enhancers directing expression in different cell and tissue types (![]()
Further levels of modulation of expression should be afforded by choosing an activation domain of appropriate strength for a specific application. Recently, plant transcriptional activation domains of net positive or negative charge were identified in a yeast functional screen (![]()
In cases where the test transgene is not necessarily deleterious to plant growth and development, this "transactivation by crossing" system may still provide advantages over expression under direct control by a natural promoter. Provided that the hybrid factor is expressed well in the target species, it could provide amplification compared to direct expression under the control of the promoter used to drive the hybrid factor. Although the work described here is confined to Arabidopsis, the transactivation per se is not limited to one species. Using appropriate promoters, and possibly altering primary structure of the gene to increase its expression in the target species, the system described here should function in any species, including commercially important crops.
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
1 These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
2 Present address: Paradigm Genetics, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709. ![]()
3 Present address: Monsanto Corp., St. Louis, MO 63176. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank J. LEVIN and D. PATTON for critically reading the manuscript, C. KONCZ for providing strain GV3101 (pMP90), M. MINET for the Arabidopsis cDNA expression library, D. BECKER for vector pGPTV, J. WATKINS and L. TAN for preparation of media, and M. BLAIR and D. MCNAMARA for assistance with plant care.
Manuscript received December 30, 1997; Accepted for publication March 24, 1998.
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