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Plant Physiol, April 2000, Vol. 122, pp. 1427-1438
Iron-Superoxide Dismutase Expression in Transgenic Alfalfa
Increases Winter Survival without a Detectable Increase in
Photosynthetic Oxidative Stress Tolerance1
Bryan D.
McKersie,2 *
Julia
Murnaghan,
Kim S.
Jones,3 and
Stephen R.
Bowley
Plant Biotechnology Division, Department of Plant Agriculture,
University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada N1G 2W1
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ABSTRACT |
To
determine whether overexpression of Fe-superoxide (SOD) dismutase would
increase superoxide-scavenging capacity and thereby improve the winter
survival of transgenic alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.)
plants, two genotypes were transformed with the vector pEXSOD10, which
contains a cDNA for Arabidopsis Fe-SOD with a chloroplast transit
peptide and cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter. A novel Fe-SOD was
detected by native PAGE in both greenhouse- and field-grown transgenic
plants, but activity varied among independent transgenic plants. The
increased Fe-SOD activity was associated with increased winter survival
over 2 years in field trials, but not with oxidative stress tolerance
as measured by resistance of leaves to methyl viologen, a superoxide
generator. Total shoot dry matter production over 2 harvest years was
not associated with Fe-SOD activity. There was no detectable difference
in the pattern of primary freezing injury, as shown by vital staining,
nor was there additional accumulation of carbohydrates in
field-acclimated roots of the transgenic alfalfa plants. We did not
detect any difference in growth of one transgenic plant with high
Fe-SOD activity compared with a non-transgenic control. Therefore, the
improvement in winter survival did not appear to be a consequence of
improved oxidative stress tolerance associated with photosynthesis, nor
was it a consequence of a change in primary freezing injury. We suggest
that Fe-SOD overexpression reduced secondary injury symptoms and
thereby enhanced recovery from stresses experienced during winter.
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INTRODUCTION |
Oxidative stress is a common disorder in plants during or
following exposure to adverse environmental conditions. Allen (1995) speculated that frequent, mild oxidative stresses occur even in a
normal field situation, and that these stresses inhibit photosynthesis and therefore yield. Allen also predicted that yield enhancement may be
achieved by the overexpression of antioxidant genes in transgenic
annual crops. During the winter, perennial plants are exposed to even
greater environmental extremes, including freezing, anoxia, and desiccation.
The enzyme superoxide dismutase (SOD; EC 1.15.1.1) is a metalloprotein
that catalyzes the initial step in the Asada-Halliwell pathway in
chloroplasts, the dismutation of superoxide to
H2O2 and molecular oxygen
(Scandalios, 1993 ; Bowler et al., 1994 ; Allen, 1995 ). The subsequent
reduction of H2O2 to water
through the ascorbate-glutathione cycle in the chloroplast uses
reducing equivalents from NADPH (Foyer and Halliwell, 1976 ; Foyer et
al., 1994b ). SOD enzymes are classified according to their metal
cofactor and their subcellular localization. The predominant forms are
a mitochondrial Mn-SOD, a cytosolic Cu/Zn-SOD, and a chloroplastic
Cu/Zn-SOD. In a number of plant species, chloroplasts also contain
Fe-SOD. The four forms of SOD differ in their biochemical properties
and inhibition by H2O2 and
cyanide (Scandalios, 1993 ; Bowler et al., 1994 ; Allen, 1995 ). The
native forms of SOD provide protection from activated oxygen during
periods of environmental stress (Salin, 1991 ; Bowler et al., 1992 ;
Scandalios, 1993 ; Smirnoff, 1993 ; Foyer et al., 1997 ). To test this
relationship further, different SOD transgenes have been expressed in
transgenic plants, but the results vary (Herouart et al., 1993 ;
Scandalios, 1993 ; Foyer et al., 1994a ; Allen, 1995 ). For example,
Pitcher et al. (1991) , Tepperman and Dunsmuir (1990) , and Payton et al.
(1997) found no improvements, whereas Sen Gupta et al. (1993a ,
1993b ), Bowler et al. (1991) , Van Camp et al. (1994 , 1996 ), Perl et al.
(1993) , and McKersie et al. (1993 , 1996 , 1999a ) found significant
improvements to oxidative or environmental stress tolerances. This
disparity has usually been attributed to the complexity of the
detoxification system, because changing one enzyme may not change the
capacity of the pathway as a whole.
We have previously reported that transgenic alfalfa (Medicago
sativa L.) plants expressing a Mn-SOD had increased vigor after freezing stress and increased winter survival under field conditions (McKersie et al., 1996 , 1997 , 1999a ). However, tolerance of freezing stress measured at the cellular level by electrolyte leakage or by
vital staining with tetrazolium was not affected by the presence of
transfer DNA (T-DNA) in these alfalfa plants (McKersie et al., 1999a ).
Van Camp et al. (1996) demonstrated that Fe-SOD and Mn-SOD have
different protective properties when targeted to the chloroplast in
transgenic plants. This may occur because their biochemical properties
differ or because their subcellular localization within the chloroplast
is influenced by their different affinities for membranes. In this
study, we investigated whether overexpression of Fe-SOD would mimic the
effects of Mn-SOD and improve the winter hardiness of transgenic
alfalfa plants. We observed that the level of increased winter survival
was correlated with the level of increased Fe-SOD activity in the
transgenic plants, but that this was apparently independent of any
effect of the Fe-SOD transgene on photosynthesis, growth, or oxidative
stress tolerance in leaves.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Transformation
Transformation of alfalfa (Medicago sativa
L.) petiole explants by an overnight culture of Agrobacterium
tumefaciens C58C1 pMP90 containing the pEXSOD10 binary vector (Van
Camp et al., 1996 ) was conducted as previously described (McKersie et
al., 1999a ). Petiole explants and agrobacterium were co-cultivated for
3 d in the dark on SH induction medium (Shetty and
McKersie, 1993 ) containing 288 mg L 1 Pro, 53 mg
L 1 thioproline, 4.35 g
L 1
K2SO4, and 100 µM acetosyringinone, then washed with
one-half-strength Murashige and Skoog medium (Murashige and Skoog,
1962 ). The explants were plated on SH induction medium lacking
acetosyringinone but with 500 mg L 1 claforan
and 50 mg L 1 kanamycin. Somatic embryos were
matured on BOi2Y development medium (Bingham et al., 1975 ) containing
50 g L 1 Suc but no growth regulators or antibiotics.
The putative transgenic plants were screened for the presence of T-DNA
using PCR primers to amplify a region within nos-nptII (McKersie et al., 1999a ). The sense primer was
5'-AGCTGTGCTCGACGTTGTCAC-3' and the antisense primer was
5'-GGTGGGCGAAGAACTCCAGCA-3'. The amplification was carried out on a PCR
system (GeneAmp 2400, Perkin-Elmer, Foster City, CA) as previously
described (McKersie et al., 1999a ). Only positive plants were
transplanted to growth medium (Turface, Plant Products, Mississauga,
Ontario, Canada) in a greenhouse at approximately 23°C/18°C
(day/night) and a minimum 16-h photoperiod. Mercury-halogen lamps
provided additional light. The plants were watered automatically two
times daily with a dilute solution of 15-15-30 fertilizer (Plant
Products, Brampton, Ontario, Canada).
DNA was isolated using the method described by Saghai-Maroof et al.
(1984) . Leaves (1 g) were ground in liquid nitrogen, and 27 mL of
extraction buffer (100 mM Tris, 700 mM NaCl, 50 mM EDTA, 1% [w/v] cetyl-trimethyl-ammonium
bromide [CTAB], and 140 mM -mercaptoethanol) added and
incubated at 65°C. After two separations with chloroform/octanol, the
aqueous solution was treated with RNase A before precipitation with
isopropanol. The DNA was washed with ethanol solutions, dried, and
suspended in Tris-EDTA buffer. DNA was digested using the restriction
enzyme HindIII, purified by alcohol precipitation, and
separated on a 0.8% (w/v) agarose gel overnight. The gel was blotted onto a positively charged nylon membrane (Boehringer Mannheim, Basel) as described by Ausubel et al. (1991) and UV-crosslinked. Southern-blot analysis was carried out using the non-radioactive digoxygenin (DIG) chemiluminescent system (Boehringer Mannheim) as
described by van Miltenburg (1995) . The DIG-labeled hybridization probes were synthesized using DIG-dUTP (Boehringer Mannheim) in a PCR
amplification using 5'-TCCCAGTGAAGAAGGTCAAC-3', located within the
Arabidopsis Fe-SOD sequence, and 5'-AATGGTAAGCAATGGGAAAG-3', located
within the chloroplast transit peptide sequence. The amplification used
purified plasmid DNA as the template, 1 µM of
each primer, and a 55°C annealing temperature, and the resulting PCR
fragment was 536 bp in length.
SOD Activity and Oxidative Stress Tolerance
To measure SOD activity, leaf samples were collected from
greenhouse-grown plants at the mid-vegetative stage of development (Kalu and Fick, 1983 ); the maturing stems were approximately 20 cm in
height with no buds or flowers. Whole leaves were ground with liquid
nitrogen in a mortar, and 0.4 mL of homogenizing buffer, 50 mM KH2PO4, pH
7.8, was added to extract the soluble proteins.
SOD activity was determined using the in situ staining technique
(Beauchamp and Fridovich, 1971 ). The protein samples were separated by
native PAGE on a separating gel of 13% (w/v) polyacrylamide in
a tank buffer containing 25 mM Tris (pH 8.3) and 64 mM L-Ile. The gels were stained for 30 min in the dark
using a 1:1 mixture of: (a) 0.06 mM riboflavin and 0.651%
(w/v) TEMED, and (b) 2.5 mM nitroblue tetrazolium
(NBT), both in 50 mM phosphate buffer at pH 7.8, and then
developed for 20 min under moderate light conditions. The gels were
digitally photographed using imaging software (Northern Exposure,
ImagExperts, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada), and an analysis program
(Quantity One, Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) was used to measure the intensity
of each band. The area of individual SOD isozymes was expressed
relative to a standard of Escherichia coli Fe-SOD (Sigma
Chemical, St. Louis) to calculate each enzyme's activity. One unit of
enzyme activity is the amount that will inhibit the rate of reduction
of cytochrome c by 50% in a coupled system with xanthine
and xanthine oxidase at pH 7.8 at 25°C in a 3-mL reaction volume
(McCord and Fridovich, 1969 ). The protein content was determined
(Bradford, 1976 ), and SOD activity for each individual isozyme was
expressed as units per milligram of protein.
The oxidative stress tolerance of the plants was assessed using the
method described previously (Bowler et al., 1991 ). Leaf slices, 0.5 cm
across the largest width of the leaflet, were incubated in aqueous
solutions of methyl viologen (Paraquat, Sigma Chemical), with
concentrations ranging from 0 to 16 µM, overnight in the dark at 21°C. The samples were exposed to light for 2 h (200 µmol m 2 s 1
photosynthetically active radiation) at 26°C, and were then allowed to develop in the dark for 20 h at 30°C. The methyl
viologen-dependent oxygen radical damage was estimated by chlorophyll
fluorescence determination of photochemical yield,
Fv/Fm
(Genty et al., 1989 ), using a portable chlorophyll fluorometer (Mini
Pam photosynthesis yield analyzer, Heinz Walz BmbH, Effeltrich, Germany).
SOD and ascorbate peroxidase (APX) activity were determined on the same
extracts from alfalfa leaves treated with methyl viologen. To quantify
APX activity, the extract (25 µL) and 150 µL of 0.03% (w/v)
H2O2 were added to 2 mL of
assay buffer, containing 0.5 mM ascorbate and 0.1 mM EDTA in phosphate buffer at pH 7.0 (Nakano and Asada,
1981 ). APX was determined by measuring the rate of oxidation of
ascorbate at 290 nm using an absorbance coefficient of 2.8 mM 1 cm 1.
One unit of APX was defined as 1 µmol of ascorbate oxidized per
minute at pH 7.0 and 25°C and is expressed per milligram of protein.
1996 Field Trial
The 1996 field evaluation of the transgenic plants was carried out
at the Elora Research Station (Elora, Ontario, Canada) following
protocols authorized by the Plant Products Division, Agriculture and
Agri-Food Canada (test 96-UOG2-ALF05-ON0-1-01, approved April 9, 1996). Replicate plants were grown from rooted stem cuttings in the
greenhouse and transplanted to the field in June, 1996. The soil at
Elora is a clayed brunisolic gray-brown luvisol-London. Soil test
analysis was done to determine the appropriate amount of fertilizer (P
and K) to apply. Elora has on average 130 frost-free days, and the
start of the critical fall harvest period for alfalfa is August 30. The
test was arranged in a randomized complete block design with 15 cuttings of each control (non-transgenic) and five cuttings of each
transgenic genotype as the experimental units and three replications
(blocks). Five cuttings were planted sequentially in a row with 0.5-m
spacing between plants and 1.5-m spacing between rows. Plants were
harvested once in the year of transplanting. Survival (the no. of
plants with green shoots) was recorded in the fall of the transplant
year, and in the spring and summer of the 2 subsequent years. The
herbage (shoot dry matter) was harvested from each surviving plant
individually. Plants that did not survive the winter were not included
in the analysis. Plants were defoliated to determine dry matter yields
in three harvests per year on June 28, July 28, and August 28, 1997, and on May 27, July 1, and August 11, 1998. Yields per plant were the
sum of the three harvests for each year.
SOD activity was measured in leaves harvested at the vegetative stage
of development from field-grown plants in the 1996 field trial when
they were approximately 20 cm in height. Three replications were taken
from three blocks in the field experiment on three sequential days in
July 1997. Leaves were randomly sampled from the five plants in each block.
1997 Field Trial
The 1997 field trial was also conducted at the Elora Research
Station following protocols authorized by Plant Products Division, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (test no.
97-UOG1-075-ALF04-224-ONO1-01, approved May 12, 1997). Replicated
plots were established on May 28, 1997 by transplanting rooted cuttings
of each transgenic and control genotype at an adjacent site on the
Elora Research Station. In the 1997 test, four replicated plots of 1- × 1.5-m rectangular plots were established by transplanting 100 rooted
propagules of each transgenic per plot. Each plot consisted of a
population of independent primary transgenic plants for each construct.
Plants were harvested twice in the year of transplanting on July 1 and September 2, 1997. On November 19, 1997, samples were dug from the
field, rinsed, separated into taproot, crown, and leaves, and
immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. The samples were ground and
analyzed for carbohydrates and protein. Other samples were analyzed for
SOD activity on native PAGE gels as described above. The plots were
sampled again for soluble carbohydrates on April 14, 1998.
On November 19, 1997 and on December 2, 1997, whole plants were dug
from the field, washed, shoots excised, and crowns with attached roots
were placed in moist filter paper and subjected to freezing
temperatures in a programmable freezer. The samples were frozen at
2°C overnight, and then cooled at 2°C per hour to 6°C,
8°C, 10°C, 12°C, or 14°C. The frozen samples were thawed for 1 d at 2°C and subsequently separated into crowns, taproots, and crown buds, bisected, and assessed by viability staining
with tetrazolium as previously described (Tanino and McKersie, 1985 ).
1998 Field Trial
Permits to conduct the 1998 field trails were obtained
from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (nos.
98-UOG1-075-ALF-02-224-ON01-01 for Elora and
98-UOG1-075-ALF-02-224-ON30-01 for New Liskeard). The trials
were established with two replications at Elora, Ontario, Canada, on
May 20, 1998 and with two replications at New Liskeard, Ontario, Canada, on June 3, 1998. The site at Elora was adjacent to the
previous 1996 and 1997 sites. The soil at New Liskeard is a clay loam
(lacustrine light brown gray). New Liskeard is a short-season area,
having only 99 frost-free days. The start of the critical fall harvest
period for alfalfa is August 15.
The plots were established with six rooted propagules of the same
transgenic plant per row, one row of each transgenic plant per plot and
24 plots per replication. Two replicate plots were dug on each sampling
date to measure root, crown, and shoot dry weight. The plants were
defoliated twice at Elora (July 6 and August 24, 1998) and twice at New
Liskeard (July 20 and August 16, 1998) prior to flowering. The growth
of the plants was followed through three growth cycles and in the
subsequent spring at each location. At Elora, cycle 1 was from May 20 to July 20, with samples taken on June 8, June 29, July 6, July 13, and
July 20; cycle 2 was from July 6 to August 17, with samples taken on
July 27, August 4, August 10, and August 17; cycle 3 began August 24, with samples taken August 31, September 14, September 28, October 13, and October 26. A subsequent spring sample was taken with four replications on May 4. At New Liskeard, cycle 1 was June 3 to July 21, with samples taken on June 22, July 6, July 13, and July 21; cycle 2 was from July 20 to August 17, with samples taken on July 27, August 4, August 10, and August 17; cycle 3 began August 16, with samples taken
on August 31, September 14, and September 28. A subsequent spring
sample was taken with two replications each on May 14 and 17. Statistical analysis was conducted as a split plot in a time-factorial
experiment with locations as main plots and entries as subplots (Steel
et al., 1997 ).
Protein and Carbohydrate Analysis
Total storage proteins were extracted (Avice et al., 1997 ) and
quantified colorimetrically (Bradford, 1976 ). Total soluble carbohydrates were extracted from leaf, stem, and root tissue of
cold-acclimated and non-acclimated alfalfa plants according to the
method of Chaplin (1986). Starch was extracted according to the method
of Rose et al. (1991) , digested with amyloglucosidase (Aspergillus niger; Sigma Chemical) and -amylase
(porcine; Sigma Chemical) prior to analysis, and analyzed as
Glc using a Glc diagnostics kit (Sigma Chemical). Soluble sugars (Glc,
Fru, Suc, and raffinose) were quantified by gas chromatography as
previously described (Jones et al., 1999 ) using phenyl
-D glucoside (Sigma Chemical) as an internal standard.
Statistical Analysis
Analysis of variance was determined using SAS for Windows, Proc
GLM (Version 6.11, SAS Institute, Cary, NC) and, due to missing values
in some experiments, Type III sums of squares and least squares means
were calculated. Significance was determined at the 5% level of probability.
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RESULTS |
Two clones of alfalfa, designated as N4-4-2 and V4-11-3, were
transformed using A. tumefaciens with a binary vector
containing cDNA for Fe-SOD from Arabidopsis with a chloroplast transit
peptide under control of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S
promoter (Van Camp et al., 1996 ). All putative transgenic plants
survived selection on medium containing kanamycin and were positive
according to a PCR test for the presence of the nos-nptII
transgene. Four of these plants from clone N4-4-2 were tested by
Southern-blot analysis for the presence of the Fe-SOD in the T-DNA. DNA
that was digested with HindIII, which has a single
restriction site in the binary vector, had either one or two bands on
the Southern blot, indicating that one or two copies of the T-DNA were
integrated into the plant DNA (Table I).
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Table I.
Fe-SOD activities of leaf extracts from four
independent transgenic plants of alfalfa clone N4-4-2 containing T-DNA
of pEXSOD10 grown in greenhouse and field conditions
Plant DNA was digested with HindIII that cuts only once
within the T-DNA borders of pEXSOD10. T-DNA insertions were determined
by Southern-blot analysis using a dig-labeled probe to the Arabidopsis
cDNA for Fe-SOD. Fe-SOD activities were determined on three separate
extracts (replications) from primary transgenic plants and are reported
relative to E. coli Fe-SOD on the same PAGE gel. Values for
the transgenic plants are the mean ± SE.
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Native PAGE analysis of a leaf extract from these transgenic plants
indicated the presence of a novel SOD enzyme (Fig.
1). Leaf extracts from non-transgenic
alfalfa plants contained three forms of SOD: a slow-moving Mn-SOD, a
cytosolic form of Cu/Zn-SOD, and a chloroplastic form of Cu/Zn-SOD
(McKersie et al., 1993 ). The transgenic plants had an additional Fe-SOD
intermediate in mobility between Mn-SOD and the cytosolic Cu/Zn-SOD.
The additional SOD enzyme was also detected in extracts from leaf,
crown, crown bud, and taproot of field-grown plants (data not shown).

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Figure 1.
Linescan of a native PAGE gel for SOD activity in
leaf extracts of transgenic alfalfa clone N4-4-2 expressing pExSOD10.
Note the presence of the novel Fe-SOD band with a mobility between
Mn-SOD and cytosol Cu/Zn-SOD in the N4-FeSOD plants, and its absence in
the control N4-4-2 plants.
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The activity of each of the SOD isoenzymes was quantified on native
PAGE gels by comparing the intensity of SOD activity in the leaf
extracts relative to a known standard. In leaf extracts from
greenhouse-grown plants, the four transgenic plants tested had
significantly different Fe-SOD activity, ranging from 51 to 393 units/mg protein (Table I). In contrast, leaf extracts of the control,
non-transgenic N4-4-2 clone had no detectable Fe-SOD activity.
In leaf extracts from cuttings of the same plants grown in a field
environment, Fe-SOD activity was similar quantitatively and in the
relative ranking of the plants (Spearman's rank correlation r = 0.9, P = 0.037). The plant with the
highest SOD activity in both greenhouse and field environments,
designated as N4-FeSOD-13, had two insertions of the T-DNA according to
Southern-blot analysis; the other three plants had one insertion (Table
I).
The activities of the Mn-SOD, cytosolic, and chloroplastic forms of
Cu/Zn-SOD did not differ among the four transgenic plants tested and,
therefore, the values shown in Table II
are averaged across the four transgenic plants listed in Table I.
Although there was no significant difference between control and
transgenic plants for Mn-SOD or either Cu/Zn-SOD in the greenhouse, the
field-grown transgenic plants had lower cytosolic and higher
chloroplastic Cu/Zn-SOD activity than the control plants. Presumably,
this is a consequence of an environmental regulation of the native
enzyme activities that has been modified by the introduced Fe-SOD
transgene, but this mechanism is not fully understood.
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Table II.
Mn- and Cu/Zn-SOD activities of leaf extracts from
transgenic plants of alfalfa clone N4-4-2 containing T-DNA of pEXSOD10
grown in greenhouse and field conditions
Each plant was sampled as three separate extracts from greenhouse or
field plants (blocks). Values for the transgenic plants are the
mean ± SE of four (greenhouse) or five (field)
independent transgenic plants that were not significantly different at
the 5% level of probability.
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The leaves of greenhouse-grown transgenic plants expressing the Fe-SOD
transgene did not have greater tolerance of the free-radical-generating herbicide methyl viologen (Fig. 2). The
photosynthetic efficiency (Fv/Fm)
of treated leaves of both control and transgenic plants declined in
parallel with the concentration of methyl viologen in the treatment
solution increased. In a similar test, the leakage of electrolytes was
measured but did not detect any difference between transgenic and
control plants when treated with a similar range of methyl viologen
concentrations (data not shown). Based on these tests, expression of
the Fe-SOD transgene apparently did not increase tolerance to oxidative
stress in photosynthetic tissues.

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Figure 2.
Photosynthetic efficiency of leaves from control
and transgenic alfalfa clone N4-4-2 expressing pExSOD10 following
exposure to oxidative stress produced by methyl viologen.
Photosynthetic efficiency was measured by chlorophyll fluorescence as
the Fv/Fm ratio
following treatment of leaves from control ( ) and transgenic ( )
plants with various concentrations of methyl viologen. The experiment
was repeated twice, with five replications per experiment. Values of
the transgenic plants are the least squares means of three independent
transgenic plants (designated as Fe-SOD-13, -25, and -30 from Table I)
that were not significantly different according to analysis of
variance. SE = 0.037 (n = 10 control)
and 0.021 (n = 30 transgenic).
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Activities of the three native forms of SOD and APX in the N4-4-2
control plant were compared with the enzyme activities in three
transgenic N4-pFeSOD plants after oxidative stress treatment with
methyl viologen. Methyl viologen treatment increased the activity of
these enzymes in both control and transgenic plants, but there was no
statistically significant difference in the response among plants, nor
was there a significant statistical interaction (Fig.
3A). Compared with the activity in
non-treated leaves, Mn-SOD, cytosolic Cu/Zn-SOD, and APX increased
almost 180% following treatment with 8 µM methyl
viologen, whereas chloroplastic Cu/Zn-SOD increased to 120%.

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Figure 3.
Relative activity of superoxide dismutase isozymes
and ascorbate peroxidase in leaves from control and transgenic alfalfa
clone N4-4-2 expressing pExSOD10 following exposure to oxidative stress
produced by methyl viologen. A, Enzyme activities are the mean of
control and three transgenic plants expressing pEXSOD10 (13, 25, and
30) expressed relative to the non-stress treatment (100%). With no
methyl viologen treatment the enzyme activities (in units
mg 1 protein ± SE) were: Mn-SOD ( ),
589 ± 156; cytosolic Cu/Zn-SOD ( ), 1,100 ± 170;
chloroplastic Cu/Zn-SOD ( ), 1,630 ± 62; and APX ( ),
4.8 ± 0.5. B, Fe-SOD activity of three transgenic plants
expressed relative to the non-stress treatment (100%). No Fe-SOD
activity was detected in the control plants. With no methyl viologen
treatment the enzyme activity (in units mg 1 protein ± SE) was 700 ± 150.
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In contrast, the Fe-SOD activity in the three transgenic plants
declined to almost no activity with the same methyl viologen treatment
(Fig. 3B). Fe-SOD was not detectable in the control plants. This
presumably reflects an increased degradation of the Fe-SOD enzyme by
this oxidative stress. Since the response of the CaMV35S promoter to
this stress treatment is unknown, it is also possible that the loss of
activity was due to inhibition of transcription, or translation of the transgene.
All putative primary transgenic plants that were PCR positive for the
nos-nptII transgene were propagated by cuttings to create replicated samples and transplanted into the field in the spring of
1996. The plants were defoliated during the growing season prior to
flowering and entered the fall acclimation period in the vegetative
stage, as typically occurs in production fields. In the fall of 1996 and again in the spring of 1997, counts were made of all green plants.
These counts were repeated at first harvest in the summer of 1997 and
again in the spring and summer of 1998. The winter of 1996/97 was
particularly harsh at this location, and survival of the control
plants, N4-4-2 and V4-11-3, was less than typically seen. In contrast,
the winter of 1997/1998 was quite mild, and there was no further
reduction in the stand counts of clone N4-4-2; however, there was
further reduction in both control and transgenic V4-11-3. The average
winter survival of the alfalfa plants containing T-DNA of pEXSOD10 was
significantly greater than the non-transgenic control plants for both
clones (Table III).
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Table III.
Winter survival (percentage) in spaced plantings
in a field trial at Elora, Ontario, of transgenic plants of alfalfa
clones N4-4-2 and V4-11-3 containing T-DNA from the vector pEXSOD10
The experiment was established in spring 1996, with three blocks each
containing three controls and 32 (N4-4-2) and seven (V4-11-3)
independent transgenic plants randomly arranged within each block.
Values are the least squares means of all transgenic plants ± SE. Survival was scored visually as the appearance of green
shoots in spring and summer. n is the number of observations
(replications × no. of independent transgenic plants minus
missing plots) in each mean.
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Herbage (total shoot dry matter) production was measured individually
for all surviving plants. Plants that did not survive the winter were
not included in this analysis; consequently, fewer observations
(n) were made in Table IV than
in Table III. The data in Table IV measure an individual plant's vigor
independent of winter survival. The average yields in the 2 years were
very similar. The two clones N4-4-2 and V4-11-3 differed in yield but,
on average, the presence of the T-DNA in either clone did not increase
total shoot dry matter production.
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Table IV.
Total shoot dry matter yields in a field trial at
Elora, Ontario, of spaced transgenic plants of alfalfa clones N4-4-2
and V4-11-3 containing T-DNA from the vector pEXSOD10
The experiment was established in spring 1996, with three blocks each
containing three controls and 32 (N4-4-2) and seven (V4-11-3)
independent transgenic plants randomly arranged within each block.
Values are the least squares means ± SE for all
independent transgenic plants surviving the winter. Total shoot dry
matter yields are the sum of three harvests in each year. n
is the number of observations in each mean (replications × no. of
independent transgenic plants minus missing plots and minus plots not
surviving the winter).
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There was considerable variability observed among individual transgenic
plants for both yield and winter survival. To illustrate that
variability, Figure 4 compares the 1997 and 1998 herbage yields of all plants in the field trial. The ranking
of an individual transgenic plant in 1998 was very similar to its
ranking in 1997, indicating reproducible relative yields in the 2 years. Individual transgenic plants had both higher and lower yields
than the control clones, N4-4-2 and V4-11-3, and in the extreme cases,
these differences were statistically significant.

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Figure 4.
Relationship between herbage dry matter production
in 1997 and 1998 of control and independent transgenic alfalfa clones
N4-4-2 and V4-11-3 containing pExSOD10. Control plants are shown as
white symbols and transgenic plants as black symbols for clones N4-4-2
(circles) and V4-11-3 (triangles). The total herbage dry matter from
three harvests was determined for each independent transgenic plant in
the field trial at Elora Ontario. The positive relationship indicates
that herbage production was consistent in the 2 years for individual
transgenic plants. Plants that did not survive the winter
were not included in the analysis and therefore these data are a
measure of individual plant vigor. SE = 10.3 (1997) and
10.9 (1998).
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A slightly different relationship was observed with winter survival
(Fig. 5). Higher yields tended to be
associated with higher survival, even though yield is reported as dry
matter production from surviving plants only. In other words, to
calculate yield per plant, the yield per plot was divided by the number
of surviving plants, not by the number originally planted in the plot.
This observation was not unexpected, because winter injury is often sublethal. In alfalfa, sublethal injury may reduce the number of crown
buds that establish new shoots or the vigor of the new shoot growth.
Most transgenic plants from both clones had higher survival than the
corresponding non-transgenic controls. Therefore, the relationship
between yield compared with survival was skewed toward increased
survival. Yield was normally distributed around the non-transgenic
control, whereas survival was shifted higher (compare the white and
black symbols in Fig. 5).

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Figure 5.
Relationship between winter survival after two
winters and herbage dry matter production in 1998 of control and
independent transgenic alfalfa clones N4-4-2 and V4-11-3 expressing
pExSOD10. Control plants are shown as white symbols and transgenic
plants as black symbols for clones N4-4-2 (circles) and V4-11-3
(triangles). Winter survival was determined by stand counts in spring
1998, 2 years after transplanting. The total herbage dry matter from
three harvests was determined for each independent transgenic plant in
the field trial at Elora Ontario. Plants that did not survive the
winter were not included in the herbage yield analysis. The
relationship indicates that the Fe-SOD transgene had a greater impact
on winter survival than on herbage yield. SE = 19.1 (survival) and 10.9 (yield).
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The higher relative winter survival of the transgenic plants was
associated with higher activity of the Fe-SOD transgene in the four
transgenic plants shown in Table I (Fig.
6). If the non-transgenic control was
included in the regression analysis, the relationship was exponential
(r2 = 0.80), but if only the
transgenic plants were included the relationship was linear
(r2 = 0.48). In contrast, the
variation in herbage yield was not associated with differences in
Fe-SOD activity.

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Figure 6.
Relationship between winter survival, herbage dry
matter production, and Fe-SOD activity among control and transgenic
alfalfa expressing pExSOD1. SOD activity was determined from Table I.
Winter survival ( ) and total herbage dry matter in 1997 ( ) and in
1998 ( ) were determined from Figures 4 and 5.
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In a second field trial, a random selection of primary transgenic and
control alfalfa plants was propagated by cuttings, transplanted to the
field in the spring, and sampled in November 1997, before the plants
had experienced a severe freezing or winter stress. The root systems of
these transgenic plants were larger than in the control, non-transgenic
N4-4-2 (1.93 g compared to 1.31 g, respectively), but on a dry
weight basis, the roots and crowns of transgenic plants contained the
same amount of Glc, Fru, raffinose, starch, and protein as the control
(data not shown). Samples were taken from the same field plots in
spring 1998, and, again, the soluble carbohydrate analysis did not
detect any difference between control and transgenic plants (data not shown).
The crowns and roots of field-acclimated plants were sampled from the
1997 field trial in November and again in December, and then subjected
to freezing temperatures. Viability was determined by vital staining
with tetrazolium. At 14°C, the bud axis, inner scales, and vascular
cylinder of the taproots were unable to reduce tetrazolium, but the
endodermis of the root, the vascular system of the crown, and the
cortex of the crown were viable and stained red. No differences in this
pattern of freezing injury were found between the non-transgenic and
any of transgenic plants (data not shown).
To determine if the increased Fe-SOD activity in the
transgenic plants improved photosynthesis, as measured by accumulation of dry matter in a field environment, a third field trial was established in 1998 in which one primary transgenic alfalfa plant with
T-DNA from pEXSOD10, N4-FeSOD-13 (Table I), and the control N4-4-2 were propagated by cuttings and transplanted to establish the
1998 field trial at two locations in Ontario, Canada. The plots were
sampled for shoot and for root and crown biomass at regular intervals
during the growing season of 1998. In the year of transplanting (i.e.
before exposure to any winter stress) the shoot dry weight of the
control and transgenic plants were not significantly different at any
growth stage at either location (Table
V). Similarly, in the spring of 1999, after one winter, there was no difference in the growth of new shoots
from the overwintering crown buds at either location. The crown and
root dry weights of the alfalfa plants were greater at New Liskeard
than at Elora (data not shown), but, again, there was no significant
difference between control and transgenic plants at any of the sampling
times (Table V).
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Table V.
Dry weight (g/plant) of transgenic alfalfa
N4-FeSOD-13 and non-transgenic N4-4-2 grown in field plots at two
locations
Plants were defoliated at 1- or 2-week intervals during each growth
cycle, and values are the least squares means of shoot dry weight
during that growth cycle at both locations ± SE of
the mean; n is the number of observations. The values
between control and transgenic plants were not significantly different
at the 5% level of probability at any growth cycle at either location.
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DISCUSSION |
Two alfalfa clones were transformed using A. tumefaciens with T-DNA from the binary vector pEXSOD10 (Van Camp
et al., 1996 ) containing a Fe-SOD transgene with a chloroplast transit
peptide and the constitutive CaMV35S promoter. We observed a novel form of SOD by native PAGE in both greenhouse- and field-grown transgenic plants, but expression of the SOD transgene varied among independent transgenic plants. The increased Fe-SOD activity was associated with
variability in the winter survival of the transgenic plants but,
surprisingly, not in oxidative stress tolerance as measured by response
of leaves to methyl viologen, a superoxide generator. In previous
studies, incorporation of the same T-DNA protected both the plasmalemma
and thylakoids of tobacco against superoxide generated by illumination
in the presence of methyl viologen (Van Camp et al., 1996 ). We
attempted to reproduce the treatment and measurement conditions
described by Van Camp et al. (1996) as closely as possible, so these
conflicting results may be due to differences between species or to the
relatively small number of transgenic plants tested in both studies.
The observation that increased Fe-SOD activity in the transgenic plants
in both alfalfa clones was positively related to the improvement in
winter survival supports our original hypothesis that perennial and
winter annual plants experience oxidative stress during winter, and
that antioxidant defense systems contribute to winter hardiness. The
mechanism of this protection is unknown. Winter hardiness is a
composite of tolerances to freezing, anoxia, desiccation, and disease
stresses, although freezing is usually considered to be the predominant
stress in most environments. Freezing injury occurs in two phases.
Primary freezing injury is caused by cellular dehydration that promotes
lipid phase transitions and membrane damage (Thomashow, 1999 );
subsequently, secondary injuries occur to other physiological processes
that culminate in cell and tissue death. Also, primary freezing injury
measured by vital staining is not uniform within a heterogeneous tissue such as an acclimated crown, but instead occurs only in specific cell
types (Tanino and McKersie, 1985 ; McKersie et al., 1999 ). Our
tetrazolium tests did not detect any difference in freezing injury
between control and transgenic plants immediately after a freezing
stress imposed by a programmable freezer, and this suggests that there
is not a difference in the primary freezing injury between control and
Fe-SOD transgenic plants. Instead, the present data suggest that in the
transgenic plants expressing a novel SOD, secondary injury is
reduced in other words, the recovery from the primary freezing injury
is enhanced.
An alternative explanation for our field observations is that increased
Fe-SOD activity in the alfalfa leaves enhanced photosynthesis under
mild stress conditions, as was originally proposed by Allen (1995) .
This may have enabled the transgenic plants to allocate more sugars to
the root compared with the control plants, and therefore further
increase root carbohydrate levels during cold acclimation. Since
soluble carbohydrate levels in the roots of alfalfa have been
correlated with the level of freezing tolerance across different
cultivars and across stages of acclimation (Castonguay et al., 1995 ,
1997 ), this would predict increased winter survival in the transgenic
plants. Our results do not support this mechanism of action for SOD in
these transgenic plants.
First, the carbohydrate analysis did not detect any
additional accumulation of carbohydrates in the field-acclimated roots of the transgenic alfalfa plants. Second, although
statistically significant and consistent differences in herbage
yield were found among the transgenic plants in the 2 production years
of the 1996 field trial, the differences were not directly related to
increased Fe-SOD activity. The growth analysis experiment showed very
convincingly that one transgenic plant that had high Fe-SOD expression,
N4-FeSOD-13 (Table I), did not have increased dry matter production
(Table V). Third, our transgenic plants were not more tolerant of
oxidative stress to photosynthesis, as determined using the standard
test of methyl viologen tolerance measured by chlorophyll fluorescence. Fourth, the activities of the free-radical-scavenging enzymes were
induced to a similar extent following treatment with methyl viologen in
both control and transgenic plants, suggesting that plants with and
without the Fe-SOD transgene received similar oxidative stress from
methyl viologen. Finally, Fe-SOD activity was inactivated by the
oxidative stress imposed by methyl viologen, and therefore this
transgene may provide only very limited protection to oxidative stress
in leaves.
The SOD enzyme not only consumes superoxide and thereby provides
tolerance to oxidative stress, but also produces
H2O2. It is tempting to
speculate that an increased steady-state level of
H2O2 or an increased flux
through the H2O2 pool
enhanced an acclimation process that enabled the plants to tolerate or
repair freezing injury more effectively and as a result improved winter survival. H2O2 has
potential toxicity in plants, but it may also have a number of
regulatory roles. Recent reports suggest that H2O2 mediates some
responses to pathogens (Chen et al., 1993 ), produces a transient
Ca2+ surge, which is a known signaling component
(Price et al., 1994 ), and initiates the production of other antioxidant
enzymes during acclimation (Prasad, 1997 ).
H2O2 is metabolized by a
number of peroxidases using reducing equivalents to form water. When
plant cells are treated with elicitors,
H2O2 rises, ATP is
depleted, and the NADH/NAD ratio transiently drops (Robertson et al.,
1995 ). A similar experiment noted that in the long term (hours rather than minutes), the redox potential (NADPH/NADP) did not change but
genes in the pentose-phosphate pathway were activated, which suggests a
greater supply of NADPH (Fahrendorf et al., 1995 ). Cellular redox is an
important contributing factor in the acclimation process. For example,
plants grown at low temperatures have a prostrate growth habit, which
can also be induced at high light intensities (Huner et al.,
1996 ). In both environments, the plants have excess amounts of NAD(P)H.
Therefore, it has been proposed that plants respond to changes in the
redox state of photosynthetic electron transport, and this redox
sensing mechanism in the chloroplast may be an important component for
sensing the plant's environment.
Several other genes have recently been reported to enhance tolerance of
various environmental stresses when overexpressed in transgenic plants.
One of these is the codA gene encoding choline oxidase,
which produces Gly betaine and provides protection to high light and
other stresses (Alia et al., 1999 ). However, like Fe-SOD, choline
oxidase produces H2O2.
Although H2O2 did not
accumulate to high levels, an increased flux through the
H2O2 pool may have altered
redox. Although speculative, perhaps transgenes such as SOD and
codA act by a common indirect mechanism through changes in
redox. The observation that transgenic alfalfa plants expressing either
Mn-SOD or Fe-SOD have less tolerance to pathogens causing verticillium
wilt and bacterial wilt (McKersie et al., 1999b ) supports our
assumption that the expression of the SOD transgenes may alter
H2O2 flux and therefore
cell signaling processes.
The alfalfa system that we have used provides several advantages as a
model to study the effects of transgenes on winter hardiness. It is
easily transformed by A. tumefaciens; it is perennial and acclimates in the autumn as part of its life cycle; it can be vegetatively propagated to maintain and to replicate individual transgenic plants or cross-pollinated to produce seed; a single plant
can be maintained in a vegetative state by defoliation, and
therefore repeated measurements can be made on the same plant; and,
finally, it can be grown in a field environment and subjected to
complex winter stress conditions. Nonetheless, it is not a perfect
model because cultivated alfalfa is a cross-pollinating autotetraploid
species. It therefore has limitations for genetic studies,
most notably that it cannot be self-pollinated to establish pure lines. Recognizing this limitation, we chose to study the effects
of the Fe-SOD transgene in primary transgenic plants because a large
number of independent transgenic plants could be compared.
We used two types of controls: a non-transgenic control that did not
pass through tissue culture, and transgenic plants that exhibited
variation in transgene expression. Although somaclonal variation may
have occurred in some transgenic plants due to the tissue culture
process, we do not believe that this contributed to our observations.
Somaclonal variation is caused by random mutations and is not normally
observed in a tetraploid species in the first generation after tissue
culture, because most of the induced mutations are recessive. We did
not consider a control plant that was regenerated from cell culture to
be an effective control, even if it displayed somaclonal variation,
because the comparison would simply be one randomly generated mutation
to another. Therefore, the best comparison for the determination of
transgene effects are between F1 progeny with and
without the transgene, but because of alfalfa's autotetraploid
genetics, this comparison requires the generation of populations of
plants, not individual pure lines. These comparisons are now in
progress for the N4-FeSOD-13 plant, but comparison of populations from
all 39 independent transformation events was not feasible.
We examined a large number (39) of independent primary transgenic plant
created in two genetic backgrounds. Although somaclonal variation or
similar random mutation may explain a single novel event, this
explanation is inconsistent with the range of variability observed
among these transgenic plants, particularly because all of the
transgenic plants shown in Figure 5 had similar or improved winter
survival compared with the control. Alternatively, tissue culture may
have caused epigenetic effects, virus elimination, or imbalances in
growth regulators, but if these factors contributed to improved winter
survival, they were maintained for 3 years after the transformation
event in plants that were repeatedly defoliated.
We propose that increased Fe-SOD activity in transgenic plants
increased winter survival in alfalfa. We also propose that this may
have occurred by two non-mutually exclusive mechanisms. Fe-SOD may have
acted directly by increasing the scavenging capacity for superoxide
produced following primary freezing injury in the root and/or
indirectly by increasing the flux through the
H2O2 pool, thereby
modifying redox and cell signaling processes. This model predicts that
SOD has its effect directly in the cells of the root, not in
photosynthesis in the shoot, and this is consistent with our
experimental observations on methyl viologen tolerance. Transformations
with T-DNA containing root- and shoot-specific promoters controlling
SOD expression are now in progress to test this proposal further.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
The authors gratefully acknowledge Dr. Dirk Inzé,
Universiteit Gent, Belgium, for providing the binary vector pEXSOD10,
Cecilio Gregorio for conducting the alfalfa transformations, Lori
Wright for maintaining the transgenic plants in the greenhouse, and
Donna Hancock, Matt Bowman, and Ning Chen for conducting the transgenic field trials.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received September 17, 1999; accepted January 11, 2000.
1
Financial support for this research was provided
by a research grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council of Canada and by the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture Food and Rural Affairs.
2
Present Address: BASF Plant Science, 26 Davis Drive, Research Triangle Park, NC 27509.
3
Present Address: Department of Chemical
Engineering, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3E5.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail mckersb{at}basf.com; fax
919-547-2423.
 |
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Ann. Bot.,
February 1, 2007;
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275 - 284.
[Abstract]
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R. Sunkar, A. Kapoor, and J.-K. Zhu
Posttranscriptional Induction of Two Cu/Zn Superoxide Dismutase Genes in Arabidopsis Is Mediated by Downregulation of miR398 and Important for Oxidative Stress Tolerance
PLANT CELL,
August 1, 2006;
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[Abstract]
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R. G. Alscher, N. Erturk, and L. S. Heath
Role of superoxide dismutases (SODs) in controlling oxidative stress in plants
J. Exp. Bot.,
May 15, 2002;
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[Abstract]
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K. Samis, S. Bowley, and B. McKersie
Pyramiding Mn-superoxide dismutase transgenes to improve persistence and biomass production in alfalfa
J. Exp. Bot.,
May 15, 2002;
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[Abstract]
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D. Abarca, M. Roldan, M. Martin, and B. Sabater
Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Cvi shows an increased tolerance to photo-oxidative stress and contains a new chloroplastic copper/zinc superoxide dismutase isoenzyme
J. Exp. Bot.,
July 1, 2001;
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[Abstract]
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