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Lecture 12 Analysis of transgenic plants

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1 Lecture 12 Analysis of transgenic plants
Neal Stewart and Mat Halter

2 Discussion questions Is my plant transgenic?
1. What are the established methods to determine if a plant is transgenic and whether the transgene(s) is expressed? 2. In a Southern or northern blot, through what type of chemical bond does the complementary probe bind to nucleic acid? 3. Nucleic acids and proteins are separated according to size in agarose and sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoreisis (SDS-PAGE) gels, respectively. Why do both types of macromolecules migrate toward the anode in an electrical current? 4. What is gene expression, and how can you measure it? 5. Explain why phenotypic data provide evidence of transformation but not proof of a transformation event. 6. What factors are most important when designing a Southern blot experiment to test for transgenic status? Is my plant transgenic?

3 Visual Selection (OFP)
Fig 12.1 LB RB P Visual Selection T P Antibiotic Selection T P Gene of Interest T Visual Selection (OFP) Antibiotic Selection (Hygromycin) Molecular methods for transgene insertion, copy number, and expression as well as Mendelian segregation of transgene in progeny Fig Overview of transgenic plant analysis. Several lines of evidence can be used together to assess whether the plants are truly transgenic and that the transgene of interest is expressed.

4 Fluorescent Proteins

5 Visual selection using FPs

6 Antibiotic Selection When a mixture of transformed and untransformed callus is placed on antibiotic selection media, only the transformed callus carrying the antibiotic selection cassette is able to survive and grow. In most cases, the untransformed callus dies, making it “easy” to select for callus carrying the T-DNA.

7 Sometimes “escapes” occur– for kanamycin resistance markers tissue is red—very stressed

8 Is my plant transgenic? Survives selection with antibiotics or herbicide—but remember that there can be escapes. Need more proof besides surviving selection. Reporter genes—better. But there must be a reporter gene in the vector. What about false positives? All around easy test—PCR. But what if Agrobacterium survives in low amounts in the T0 plants? Could give a false positive band. PCR is ok for biolistics. Why? Can do PCR on T1 plants or look at segregation of the transgene.

9 GFP+Bt segregation Using GFP screening to “see” Bt when the transgenes are linked. Nat Biotechnol 17:1125

10 Stable integration of transgene
Transgene is permanently integrated into the genome of the host plant. Transmitted to progeny (Tn plants) in Mendelian fashion Need convincing proof of stable integration Multiple assays are possible—but most researchers are best convinced by Southern blot data. Why all the mystique and skepticism?

11 Good reasons for doubt New methods don’t always work, but wishful thinking takes over (see Chapter 11 section—the Rush to Publish) Resilient Agrobacterium can linger Others?

12 Molecular characterization of transgenic plants
PCR- Simplest and fastest method. Prone to false positives. Southern Blot- Confirms insertion of the T-DNA into the genomic DNA of the target organism, as well as provides insertion copy number. Northern Blot- Confirms the presence of RNA transcript accumulation from the transgene of interest. Western Blot- Confirms presence of the PROTEIN produced from the inserted transgene of interest. qRT-PCR- Provides a relative expression level for the gene of interest—transcript—like Northern blot.

13 PCR and DNA Gel Electrophoresis
PCR- Polymerase chain reaction, uses DNA primers to amplify a target sequence of DNA, producing billions of copies of identical DNA. Gene cloning Molecular analysis (Confirmation of the presence of a particular fragment of DNA in a pool of DNA)

14 PCR analysis by gel electrophoresis = do PCR and run DNA on a gel
- + - - - -

15 Gel electrophoresis The migration of DNA through an agarose matrix using the application of an electric field. Agarose, when solidified in a gelatin form, produces a thick netting that allows small particles to move through it quickly, while larger particles move more slowly. By moving particles of different size through the agarose gel, they can be separated, with the small particles moving quickly away from the slower moving large particles. This method is used to separate DNA fragments by size.

16 PCR analysis by gel electrophoresis
- Ladder Sample 1500 bp 1000 bp 750 bp 500 bp +

17 PCR and False Positives
Genomic DNA Transgenic plant produced from Agrobacterium-mediated transformation In T0 plants, Agrobacterium left over from the initial transformation is still present in all tissues. Contamination of the genomic DNA with the initial transformation vector that is still present in the agrobacterium can produce a PCR band.

18 Southern Blot Southern blotting confirms the presence of the gene of interest in the genomic DNA of the target plant and avoids the pitfalls of potential false positives. Steps Genomic DNA isolation Restriction enzyme digestion of genomic DNA Running digested DNA on agarose gel to separate fragmented DNA by size. Transfer of separated DNA to nylon membrane Hybridization with radioactive DNA probe

19 Restriction digest and gel electrophoresis

20 Restriction Digestion of Genomic DNA
Restriction digestion of genomic DNA produces a streak on an agarose gel rather than a single band. Why?

21 Example: EcoRI What is the probability of a sequence of DNA in a plant genome having the sequence of bases corresponding to an EcoRI cut site? Each site can be 4 possible bases (A, T, C, or G), and the EcoRI enzyme requires 6 sites (GAATTC) The probability of finding a random site in a genome that happens to have the sequence GAATTC can be calculated: 1⁄4 x 1⁄4 x 1⁄4 x 1⁄4 x 1⁄4 x 1⁄4 = 1⁄4096 Probability states that there will be an EcoRI cut site once every 4096 bases, purely by chance.

22 EcoRI example, cont. The Arabidopsis thaliana genome is roughly 157,000,000 base pairs in size. 157,000,000⁄4096 = 38,330 Though this value is only based on probability, and therefore may not be the TRUE number of EcoRI cut sites in this genome, it can still accurately be assumed that there are A LOT of cut sites. If restriction digested with EcoRI, the Arabidopsis genome would be cut into tens of thousands of pieces, all of unique size. This is why when you run a sample of digested genomic DNA, you see a streak, rather than a band. The streak shows all sizes of DNA produced by the random assortment of cut sites within the genome.

23 Essentially, every known restriction enzyme will have cut sites in a plant genome.
How can enzyme selection be used to detect copies of an inserted transgene? Digested Genomic EcoRI Site DNA Probe LB RB Single cutting enzymes can be designed into the T-DNA before transformation that will enable proper digestion of the genome as well as a single cut within the T-DNA.

24 Figure 12.4 12.4 Thirteen samples of plant genomic DNA is completely digested by a restriction endonuclease and subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis to separate the DNA fragments according to size. The DNA is stained. Flanking these samples are ‘apparently’ empty lanes and flanking these lanes are DNA size markers. One or more of the apparently empty lanes contains cut plasmid DNA that can be used as a control in the Southern blot analysis. The DNA will be transferred to a nylon membrane that can be probed by a labeled DNA molecule of interest.

25 - + Southern Blotting Isolated genomic DNA from transgenic plant
Gel electrophoresis - Restriction enzyme digest +

26 Transfer separated DNA from agarose gel to nylon membrane
Southern Blotting Transfer separated DNA from agarose gel to nylon membrane Agarose Gel Nylon Membrane

27

28 Southern Blotting Hybridizing the DNA probe
The DNA probe is designed to be complimentary to your gene of interest. It is synthesized using radioactive phosphorus, which emits a detectable signal. The complimentary probe will bind (by hydrogen bonding) only to your gene of interest because of the high sequence specificity.

29 Southern Blotting Final blot
Lane 1- Ladder Lane 2- Negative Control Lanes 3-8- Experimental Events Bands at different places from event to event indicate insertion at different places in the genome. The number of bands in each well indicates how many insertions there were in each event.

30 Why is a single cut within the T-DNA necessary?
EcoRI Site EcoRI Site LB RB LB RB RB If there is no EcoRI site within the T-DNA, after digestion with EcoRI these two insertion sites will be indistinguishable from one another after electrophoresis and probing. Cutting within the T-DNA is necessary to distinguish each and every insertion event. This is VERY important.

31 Restriction enzyme selection for Southern blotting

32 P T P T P T BamHI EcoRI EcoRI BamHI EcoRI LB RB Visual Selection
Antibiotic Selection T P Gene of Interest T Probe Figure A schematic showing the T-DNA construct (top) and rationale behind the choices and setup of the experiment whose results are shown in Figure In this vector, the BamHI and EcoRI restriction sites are shown, as well as the location of the probe DNA (top). When the T-DNA gets integrated into a plant genomic locus on a chromosome (bottom), the scissors represent actual cutting sites and some of the DNA fragments generated. Only the fragment represented by the dashed line will be hybridized by the probe in the Southern hybridization. BamHI

33 Size (kb) M WT P 10 6 4 3 2 1.5 Figure 12.6.Shown is part of a Southern blot experiment (superfluous lanes were removed for simplification). BamHI-digested genomic DNA was loaded in each of the plant lanes—WT (non-transgenic wild-type) and 1-6 (each putative independent transgenic T0 plants). M represents a DNA marker and P represents the plasmid control containing the gene of interest DNA used as a probe; the arrow points to the faint band. It appears as if lanes 1-6 represent 5 independent transgenic plant events.

34 Northern Blot Confirms the presence of mRNA transcripts transcribed from the gene of interest in the target organism. Extremely similar to the Southern blot, but detects RNA instead of DNA. Steps: Isolation of RNA Running RNA on agarose gel to separate by size Transfer separated RNA from gel to membrane Hybridize a radioactive DNA probe to the RNA on the membrane Sound familiar?

35 Northern Blot No digestion with RE is necessary… why is this?
RNA loading controls are necessary to ensure an equal amount of RNA is loaded in each well.

36 Western blot Also to measure gene expression—at the protein level.
Extract proteins Separate proteins on a vertical gel Transfer to a membrane using an electrotransfer system Probe with antibodies. Stain for antibodies

37 Western blots and ELISAs often use amplification of signal via antibodies

38 Western blot example Figure 12.11 What is missing in this experiment?

39 For all blots (and all assays for that matter)
Use appropriate controls, such as a non-transgenic plant (negative) and a positive control typically plasmid for Southerns and specific for westerns. Use an appropriate standard or a range of standards. Set up the experiment intelligently

40 ELISA—Enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay

41 Real-life example Can we engineer plants with a plant gene as a kanamycin resistance selectable marker? An ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transporter from Arabidopsis Used to produce transgenic tobacco Compared against nptII gene Both regulated by 35S promoters Mentewab and Stewart, 2005, Nature Biotechnology 23:

42 How ABC WBC19 might work

43 Are the plants transgenic for the ABC transporter?
Digested with SacI and KpnI and probed with the ABC transporter DNA

44 Segregation analysis of event 30 b. Northern blot analysis c
Segregation analysis of event 30 b. Northern blot analysis c. Root growth (trait) Event number All T1 generation What can we infer about transgene expression of events 28 and 30?

45 RT-PCR Isolate RNA from tissues of interest
Eliminate all DNA from a sample Make cDNA from mRNA—what is the result? Perform PCR on sample using transgene-specific primers The figure is from an advertisement from a company—they are making the case that their RT-PCR kit is better. What is the basis of their case?

46 Real-time PCR or Quantitative PCR
Real-time PCR uses fluorescence as an output for DNA amplification in real-time. The amount of starting template DNA (or cDNA for RNA measurement (real-time RT-PCR) is correlated with the Ct number. More DNA = lower Ct; Ct is the cycle number when a threshold amount of DNA is produced during the PCR experiment.

47 Advantages of qRT-PCR over RT-PCR?

48 A B C Fig. 12.3 Figure 12.3 The dynamics of qPCR and analysis (A) Theoretical plot of PCR cycle number vs PCR product showing the phases of DNA amplification. (B) Another view of the phases, but where PRC product is expressed in logarithmic terms. (C) The same scheme as Panel B, but with actual data of 4 samples are shown. The amount of target template decreases in the samples going from left to right as shown by respectively increasing cycle threshold (Ct) numbers. Ct is defined as the cycle at the boundary between exponential and linear phases. This figure is reprinted with permission from Yuan et al, (2006). the output of a serial dilution experiment from an ABI 7000 real-time PCR instrument.

49

50 Summary Is my plant transgenic? Is my plant expressing the transgene?
Survives selection Reporter gene expression Progeny analysis PCR Southern blot analysis Is my plant expressing the transgene? Northern blot analysis Western blot analysis ELISA RT-PCR Real-time RT PCR If you could choose just 3 of the above analyses, which ones would you choose and why?


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