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Plant Physiology 134:18-27 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists Gene Trapping with Firefly Luciferase in Arabidopsis. Tagging of Stress-Responsive Genes1,[w]Institute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Center, Temesvári krt. 62, 6726-Szeged, Hungary (M.C.A., L.Z., I.K., A.C., L.M.S.); and Max-Planck-Institut für Züchtungsforschung, Carl-von-Linné-Weg 10, D-50829-Köln, Germany (C.K.)
To monitor the expression of T-DNA-tagged plant genes in vivo, a collection of 20,261 transgenic lines of Arabidopsis (Columbia-0) were generated with the promoter trap vector pTluc, which carries a promoterless firefly luc (luciferase) reporter gene linked to the right T-DNA border. By detection of bioluminescence in 3-week-old seedlings, 753 lines were identified showing constitutive, organ-specific, and stress-responsive luciferase expression patterns. To facilitate the identification of well-defined luciferase expression patterns, a pooled seed stock was established. Several lines showed sugar, salt, and abscisic acid (ABA)-inducible luciferase activity. Segregation analysis of 215 promoter trap lines indicated that about 50% of plants contained single insertions, whereas 40% carried two and 10% carried three or more T-DNA tags. Sequencing the T-DNA insert junctions isolated from 17 luciferase-expressing lines identified T-DNA tags in 5'- and 3'-transcribed domains and translational gene fusions generated by T-DNA insertions in exons and introns of Arabidopsis genes. Tissue specific expression of eight wild-type Arabidopsis genes was confirmed to be similar to the luminescence patterns observed in the corresponding luciferase-tagged lines. Here, we describe the characterization of a transcriptional luc reporter gene fusion with the WBC-type ABC transporter gene At1g17840. Expression of wild-type and luciferase-tagged At1g17840 alleles revealed similar induction by salt, glucose, and ABA treatments and gibberellin-mediated down-regulation of ABA-induced expression. These results illustrate that luciferase gene traps are well suited for monitoring the expression of stress-responsive Arabidopsis genes in vivo.
Based on the availability of complete genome sequence (Arabidopsis Genome Initiative, 2000
The applicability of plant gene fusion technologies was first demonstrated in tobacco and Arabidopsis using a promoterless kanamycin phosphotransferase gene [aph(3') II; Teeri et al., 1986
Here, we describe a T-DNA-based luc promoter trapping approach, which was used to generate a collection of 20,261 Arabidopsis insertion mutant lines. This collection was characterized by screening for luc gene fusions that show distinct expression patterns in living plants. A representative sample of active luc gene fusions was characterized by recovering the boundaries of pTluc T-DNA and identification of tagged genes driving the expression of the luc reporter gene. To illustrate the use of luc gene fusion system in the identification of specific stress-regulated genes, we have isolated several luc gene fusions that show specific induction by stress stimuli. A luc reporter-tagged stress-responsive ABC transporter gene, At1g17840, is described as a case study. ABC transporters, carrying conserved ATP-binding and trans-membrane domains, transfer molecules across the membrane against a concentration gradient, gaining energy through ATP hydrolysis (Higgins, 1992
Screening for in Situ Luciferase Gene Fusions and Characterization of pTluc-Tagged Arabidopsis Collection Using Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation, 20,261 promoter trap Arabidopsis lines were generated, carrying the T-DNA of the pTLuc gene fusion vector (Fig. 1). All hygromycin-resistant T1 seedlings were screened for luciferase expression using bioluminescence imaging (Fig. 2). After recording and analysis of organ-specific luciferase expression patterns (Fig. 3), 17,000 seedlings were transferred to Murashige and Skoog Arabidopsis medium containing either 400 mM Glc or 250 mM NaCl and tested again for luciferase activity. This screen identified 38 plants displaying Glc or salt induced and 32 plants showing decreased luciferase expression. Altogether, luciferase expression was detected in 753 seedlings representing 3.7% of the whole collection.
After harvesting T2 progeny from all individual plants, seed stocks were prepared by pooling equal amount of seed from 100 individual T2 families. The screening conditions were optimized by germinating 10-mg aliquots of seed stocks at a density of about 500 seedlings per Petri dish and monitoring the frequency of seedlings displaying similar luminescence patterns in each pool (Fig. 2). To characterize the collection, the segregation of hygromycin resistance marker and luciferase expression pattern was determined in 215 promoter trap lines (see supplemental data, available in the online version of this article at http://www.plantphysiol.org). The hygromycin resistance marker showed 3:1 segregation ratio in 108 lines, whereas 15:1 segregation in 85 lines suggested the presence of two independent T-DNA inserts. The remaining 22 lines displayed a segregation of three or more independent inserts. In lines that carried single inserts, the luciferase expression always cosegregated with the hygromycin resistance marker (data not shown). Hygromycin-resistant T2 progeny of the selected 215 lines was recurrently subjected to image analysis. Luciferase expression patters detected in the original T1 lines were reproducibly observed in the hygromycin-resistant progeny (Table I; for details, see supplemental data). In 22 lines, luminescence was observed in all organs, whereas in 64 lines, a similar pattern was found without detectable expression in the roots. Luciferase activity was predominant in shoot apical region of 73 lines, sometimes accompanied by faint luminescence in hypocotyls or petioles. Luminescence was strongest in stem tissues of 21 lines, in leaves of 32 lines, and in hypocotyls of three lines. Responses to high sugar (400 mM Glc), salt (250 mM NaCl), or cold (4°C) were tested by transferring plants to germination media supplemented with Glc or salt or by incubating plants at 4°C for 6 to 8 h. Stress-responsive luciferase activity could be confirmed in 24 lines, showing enhanced (15 lines) or reduced (nine lines) luminescence in response to one or several treatments. Examples for such analysis are shown in Figure 3, and features of analyzed lines are depicted in the supplemental data.
To analyze the molecular structure of luc gene fusions, we have isolated the right T-DNA insert boundaries from 17 T2 families, which displayed diverse organ-specific luciferase expression patterns, using inverse PCR and Thermally Interlaced (TAIL)PCR. Sequencing the T-DNA insert junctions localized 5' upstream of the luc reporter gene allowed a precise localization of all insertions in the Arabidopsis genome by performing Blast homology searches using The Arabidopsis Information Resource (TAIR) database. T-DNA inserts were identified in exons and introns of eight Arabidopsis genes, providing examples for both translational and transcriptional gene fusions (Koncz et al., 1989
To test whether the expression of luciferase gene fusion precisely reflects the regulation of wild-type alleles of tagged genes, reverse transcription (RT)PCR analysis of eight such genes was performed (Fig. 4). RNA was prepared from leaf, cotyledon, hypocotyl, root, and stem of in vitro-germinated plants and from cell suspension cultures. Cell cultures are composed of dividing cells and, therefore, are similar to meristematic regions. cDNA templates obtained by RT were used as templates in RT-PCR reactions. RT-PCR analysis of the 18SrRNA gene At2g01010 showed constitutive expression and served as a loading marker. T-DNA insertion was localized in the 5' region of the At2g01010 gene in line L3033, which showed luciferase expression in all tested organs (Fig. 3A). RT-PCR analysis of the other genes revealed tissue-specific alterations in the transcript levels, which were similar to differences observed in luminescence activities of corresponding tagged lines (Fig. 4).
To study a stress-responsive luciferase gene fusion, we performed a detailed analysis of line L0213, which showed salt-inducible luciferase expression in our initial screen. In L0213 plants, luminescence was detected in all tissues except for roots (Fig. 3B). Cosegregation of luciferase activity and hygromycin resistance was tested in 112 T2 plants. Eighty-five plants displayed luminescence and proved to be hygromycin resistant, whereas 27 plants showing no detectable luminescence were hygromycin sensitive. In addition to salt, the expression of single-copy luc gene fusion in line L0213 was also inducible by Glc, mannitol, and ABA treatments (Fig. 5). The tagged gene thus appeared to be controlled by an ABA-dependent regulatory pathway in response to osmotic stress. H2O2 repressed luciferase activity, whereas heavy metals, such as CdCl2, and other hormones, including 2,4-D and salicylate, had no apparent effect on the expression of the luc reporter gene (Fig. 5).
PCR amplification and sequencing of the right T-DNA insert boundary indicated that the insertion in line L0213 occurred 190 bp upstream of the ATG codon in the 5'-transcribed leader region of a putative gene, At1g17840, located in the F2H15 contig of chromosome 1 (Fig. 6). Thus, the sequence analysis indicated that the insertion event resulted in the formation of a transcription gene fusion between the promoterless luc gene and the 5'-UTR of gene At1g17840. According to gene prediction of TAIR, the At1g17840 gene encodes a putative ABC transporter protein of 703 amino acids. The predicted ABC transporter carries a conserved nucleotide-binding domain at position 59 to 259 and six trans-membrane domains between amino acid residues 401 and 648. RT-PCR analysis showed that the luciferase activity of line L0213 faithfully reflects the expression of At1g17840 gene because it is high in most tested organs except in roots, where transcript level proved to be very low (Fig. 4).
To identify homozygous knockout lines, 16 T2 families were analyzed by PCR amplification using gene- and T-DNA-specific primers (Fig. 6). PCR fragment could not be amplified with the combination of gene-(213R) and T-DNA-(LB21) specific primers in three plants, which showed no luciferase activity. All 13 plants, which carried the amplified T-DNA insert junction of 750 bp, also showed luminescence. From these, four lines proved to be homozygous and nine hemizygous in germination assays on hygromycin-containing medium. The homozygous plants showed no morphological and developmental alterations in comparison with hemizygous and wild-type control lines. In germination assays, differences were not observed in hormone sensitivity (2,4-D, kinetin, ABA, GA3, and salicylic acid) nor in stress responses (NaCl, mannitol, Glc, H2O2, CdCl2, and paraquat; data not shown). To compare the regulation of luc-tagged and wild-type At1g17840 alleles, the temporal expression of luciferase reporter and steady-state levels of wild-type At1g17840 mRNA were tested in 3-week-old heterozygous T2 plants. Plants grown on MSAR medium were transferred to fresh medium containing 250 mM NaCl, 400 mM Glc, or 50 µM ABA (Fig. 7). Transferring the plants into new medium resulted in a slight transient increase in luciferase activity within 2 to 3 h, followed by a gradual, steady decline. In response to Glc and salt treatment, luciferase activity was induced three to four times and reached a peak 4 to 5 h after transfer. In ABA-treated plants, maximum luminescence was detected in 2 to 3 h. To compare the luciferase activity with transcriptional regulation of the endogenous At1g17840 gene, RTPCR analysis was performed with ubiquitin as internal control. Two to 4 times increase of At1g17840 transcription was detected upon Glc, salt, or ABA treatments (Fig. 7). Although some differences were observed between the kinetics of stress induction of luciferase-tagged and wild-type At1g17840 alleles, nonetheless, the RT-PCR assays confirmed that the At1g17840 gene is activated by the same stimuli, as was indicated by the nondestructive luciferase assays. Therefore, analysis of expression of luciferase gene fusions can provide useful information for further studies. This is illustrated by an additional assay performed with the luc-tagged At1g17840 gene, where sequential treatments were employed to monitor hormonal responses of this gene. T2 plants were sprayed by 100 µM ABA and subsequently by 100 µM GA3. Luciferase activity increased 4-fold after ABA treatment, which could be down-regulated by subsequent GA treatment (Fig. 8). Because GA3 treatment alone had no significant effect on luciferase activity, these results suggested that GA is a negative regulator of ABA-induced At1g17840 gene expression.
The Luciferase Gene Fusion System
Using a T-DNA-based luc gene fusion vector, we have generated an Arabidopsis insertion mutant collection, which consists of 20,261 transgenic lines. Segregation analysis indicates that about one-half of these lines carry single T-DNA insertions and that the average copy number of T-DNA tags is 1.6 in the collection. These data predict that the collection carries altogether about 32,000 T-DNA inserts. Random sequencing of T-DNA insert junctions in other collections indicates that about 35% of all inserts are located in exons and introns, whereas about 20% of T-DNA tags are found in 5'- and 3'-regulatory regions of genes within 300 bp from the predicted ATG or STOP codons, respectively (Szabados et al., 2002
It is widely accepted that the activity of gene traps faithfully reflects transcriptional regulation of tagged genes (Smith and Fedoroff, 1995
Our data indicate that the luciferase reporter gene is well suited to identify in situ gene fusions that are regulated by external stimuli. In our experiments, about 8% of active luc gene fusions respond positively or negatively to Glc and salt stress. Thus, further analysis of these luc-gene fusions will provide useful tools to gain more insight into interactions between sugar, ABA, and osmotic stress signaling pathways (Gazzarini and McCourt, 2001
To compare the regulation of luc-tagged mutant and wild-type alleles of a stress-regulated gene, we have characterized in detail a mutant line, L0213, that carries a luc-tag in a stress-responsive ABC transporter gene. The tagged At1g17840 gene encodes a WBC-type transporter with one ABC domain and six trans-membrane domains. Thus, according to the classification of Higgins (1992
Vector Construction
To construct the pTluc promoter-trapping vector, an XhoI-HindIII fragment from the pSKFFlucE9 plasmid (kind gift of Ferenc Nagy, BRC, Szeged, Hungary) was inserted into the BamHI-HindIII sites of the pTgus vector (Koncz et al., 1994
Arabidopsis (Columbia-0) was used for all experiments. A. tumefaciens-transformed Arabidopsis lines were generated by in planta transformation using vacuum infiltration (Bechtold and Pelletier, 1998
Temporal activation of the luc reporter was characterized by sequential recording of bioluminescence images. Three-week-old seedlings were sprayed with 2 mM D-luciferin solution and transferred to germination medium supplemented by 50 µM ABA, 400 mM Glc, or 250 mM NaCl. Luminescence of 20 seedlings from each T2 family was recorded in each experiment every 30 min for at least 12 h. Images were analyzed using the Metaview 4.5r6 software and processed in Microsoft Excel worksheets (Microsoft, Redmond, WA). Each experiment was repeated three times.
DNA fragments flanking the T-DNA insertions were amplified from purified plant DNA samples using either long-range inverse PCR or TAIL-PCR as described (Mathur et al., 1998
RNA samples were isolated from 3-week-old seedlings as described (Pawlowski et al., 1994
All novel materials described in this publication are available for noncommercial research purposes. Obtaining any permissions will be the responsibility of the requestor.
The authors are grateful for the excellent technical assistance of Mónika Gál and Anikó Bíró and thank Drs. László Márton and László Bakó for valuable discussions and critical reading of the manuscript. Received May 21, 2003; returned for revision July 18, 2003; accepted September 11, 2003.
http://www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.103.027151.
1 This research was supported by the European Union Fifth Framework Program (Growth Vigour and Development, no. QLK5-CT-2001-01871), by Országos Tudományos Kutatási Alap (grant no. T038375), by Oktatási Miniszténum Biotechnologia2001 (grant no. BIO-00118/2001), and by the Hungarian-German Cooperation program Tudományos és Technológiai Alapítvány (grant no. D-2/01).
[w] The online version of this article contains Web-only data. * Corresponding author; e-mail szabados{at}nucleus.szbk.uszeged.hu; fax 36-62-433434.
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