Abstract:
Transient transformation approaches show promise for rapidly assessing specific genes
and gene constructs in live tissue. This is especially true in the case of plant leaf tissues,
which are hard to culture and provide easy targets for transformation techniques. In the
case of maize leaves, the use of biolistic approaches circumvent the problems of
Agrobacterium host range.
To achieve reliable expression, transient biolistic transformation of maize leaf tissues
(taken from within the non-emergent leaf whorl of 8-week-old maize plants) was optimised
using a Taguchi design-of-experiments approach and Generalised Linear Modelling.
Bombardments were carried out on plants from the B73 inbred line using the PDS-
1000/He biolistic device. Input conditions (burst disc pressure, microparticle loading, DNA
loading and sample selection within the non-emergent leaf whorl) were varied across three levels over the course of nine trials.
Bombardments were carried out using a BioRad PDS-1000/He gene gun, M17 tungsten
microparticles and a pAHC25 reporter gene plasmid; the reporter gene construct
consisting of a ubiquitin promoter, intron, beta glucuronidase coding region and NOS
terminator. Samples were assessed for beta glucuronidase expression by histological
staining in 5-Bromo-4-chloro-1H-indol-3-yl β-D-glucopyranosiduronic acid (X-Gluc)
solution. This resulted in visible blue 'spots' (each corresponding to a transformed cell)
which were then counted under a dissecting microscope.
Additional, qualitative results were generated by sectioning bombarded leaf samples and
wet-mounting the sections for observation under a stereo-microscope. An improved
sectioning techniques, hand cryo-sectioning, was developed to surmount some of the challenges posed by the thin, friable samples. For the final experiment an additional factor;
sample distance along the leaf axis from the ligule (the leaf sheath extension which in nonemergent
leaves is coincident with the leaf base) was included due to publication of similar
research by another group.
The results established new optimal conditions for maize leaf bombardments and
confirmed that ligule distance is an important input factor for achieving high transient
transgene expression. Optimal conditions for maize leaf bombardment were determined to
be: high burst disc pressures (1350PSI), particle loadings above 2mg of tungsten
microparticles per bombardment, DNA loadings of 5ug per bombardment (2.38x10-6 umol
of pAHC25, or 4.8x1011 copies), leaf sample selection from the central leaf whorl out to the
3rd or 4th non-emergent leaves and a distance from the leaf ligule of 0-3cm. In addition, a
simple empirical model for microparticle penetration (the newtonian penetration
approximation, giving an estimated penetration of 20-40um for the conditions tested) was
assessed and found to be well-correlated with the results seen in maize leaf
bombardments when attempting to estimate impact depth.
Additional modelling concerning the area ratio of the nucleus versus the rest of the cell
was performed, with the result that even when accounting for morphological differences in
cell/nuclear ratio between cells closer to the leaf base and those further away, there was still a significant difference in transformation efficiency.