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First published online July 21, 2006; 10.1104/pp.106.084517 Plant Physiology 142:6-20 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
RNA Interference-Based Gene Silencing as an Efficient Tool for Functional Genomics in Hexaploid Bread Wheat1,[W],[OA]Institute of Plant Biology, University of Zurich, 8008 Zurich, Switzerland
Insertional mutagenesis and gene silencing are efficient tools for the determination of gene function. In contrast to gain- or loss-of-function approaches, RNA interference (RNAi)-induced gene silencing can possibly silence multigene families and homoeologous genes in polyploids. This is of great importance for functional studies in hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum), where most of the genes are present in at least three homoeologous copies and conventional insertional mutagenesis is not effective. We have introduced into bread wheat double-stranded RNA-expressing constructs containing fragments of genes encoding Phytoene Desaturase (PDS) or the signal transducer of ethylene, Ethylene Insensitive 2 (EIN2). Transformed plants showed phenotypic changes that were stably inherited over at least two generations. These changes were very similar to mutant phenotypes of the two genes in diploid model plants. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction revealed a good correlation between decreasing mRNA levels and increasingly severe phenotypes. RNAi silencing had the same quantitative effect on all three homoeologous genes. The most severe phenotypes were observed in homozygous plants that showed the strongest mRNA reduction and, interestingly, produced around 2-fold the amount of small RNAs compared to heterozygous plants. This suggests that the effect of RNAi in hexaploid wheat is gene-dosage dependent. Wheat seedlings with low mRNA levels for EIN2 were ethylene insensitive. Thus, EIN2 is a positive regulator of the ethylene-signaling pathway in wheat, very similar to its homologs in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and rice (Oryza sativa). Our data show that RNAi results in stably inherited phenotypes and therefore represents an efficient tool for functional genomic studies in polyploid wheat.
A major challenge in the postgenome era of plant biology is to determine the functions of all the genes in a plant genome. A straightforward approach to this problem is to reduce or knock out expression of a gene to induce a mutant phenotype that is indicative of the gene function. Insertional mutagenesis is a useful tool for this type of study and is based on transposon/T-DNA insertions (Page and Grossniklaus, 2002
RNAi has proven to be very efficient in interfering with gene expression in various plant systems such as Petunia hybrida, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), Papaver somniferum, Torenia hybrida, Coffea arabica, and rice (Oryza sativa; Stam et al., 1997
In functional gene analysis and isolation of agronomically important genes, wheat is clearly lagging behind compared to other major food crops such as maize (Zea mays), rice, and also species such as tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). This is mainly due to the lack of efficient tools to study gene function in polyploid species. Hexaploid wheat has a large genome (16,000 Mb) that consists of three closely related homoeologous genomes (A, B, and D) and has a high content of repetitive DNA (80%; Flavell et al., 1974
In wheat and barley (Hordeum vulgare), Schweizer et al. (2000)
To investigate the potential of dsRNAi in wheat, we introduced into hexaploid wheat dsRNA-expressing constructs of two genes that have not yet been cloned in wheat, but with previously defined functions in other plant species and with unambiguous phenotypes in corresponding mutant plants. The first gene was Phytoene Desaturase (PDS), which is often used to evaluate VIGS efficiency because of its distinct phenotype (Holzberg et al., 2002
Identification of Wheat Expressed Sequence Tags for PDS and EIN2
The two genes selected for testing RNAi in hexaploid wheat, PDS and EIN2, have not yet been described in the wheat genome. A BLASTN search using the barley PDS cDNA sequence (AY062039; Holzberg et al., 2002
A BLASTN search using the barley EIN2 cDNA sequence (BM816947) identified eight wheat EST sequences, but only one EST (AL816731) showed high nt identity (E < 10100; 93%) to the barley sequence. This AL816731 wheat sequence (564 bp) belongs to the consensus sequence TC257467 of 1,213 bp (http://www.tigr.org/tigr-scripts/tgi/tc_report.pl?tc=TC257467) and aligns with the full-length cDNA of EIN2 of rice (AY396568; 4,646 bp) between nts 3,061 and 3,527 with an 80% identity (Fig. 1B). A pair of primers (Table I) was designed based on the AL816731 wheat sequence, and a 518-bp fragment of wEIN2 was amplified by RT-PCR from wheat leaf cDNA to make the RNAi construct. As described above for the wPDS genes, the RT-PCR product was also cloned, and several independent transformants were sequenced. A multiple sequence alignment identified three distinct groups of sequences based on SNPs (Supplemental Fig. 3A; the same SNPs were detected in three independent RT-PCR reactions), indicating that there are at least three active EIN2 genes in the wheat genome. The same RT-PCR wEIN2 fragment was used as a probe to estimate the number of copies of wEIN2 in the wheat genome (Supplemental Fig. 2C). The hybridization pattern was simple for several enzyme combinations, showing between one and three bands in the diploid T. monococcum species and between two and five bands in hexaploid wheat. Southern hybridizations to nullitetrasomic lines of Chinese Spring (Sears, 1966
One hundred and fifty three putative transgenic plants were produced by particle bombardment with the intron-spliced self-complementary construct containing the sense and antisense repeats of the wPDS cDNA sequence. Genomic DNA from these plants was digested with HindIII, and the wPDS sequence was used as a probe for DNA Southern-blot hybridization. Eighty-two lines, which correspond to 53% of the analyzed plants, contained the expected three intact HindIII fragments of the construct (0.5, 1, and 2.2 kb; Fig. 1C; Supplemental Fig. 4A) and 64 of them (78%) exhibited photobleaching at the seedling stage, indicating specific silencing of endogenous PDS (Fig. 2 ). The PDS-RNAi transgenic lines were arranged into a phenotypic series based on the severity of the photobleached phenotype (strong, intermediate, and weak). Most of the lines (41 lines) developed a strong photobleached phenotype, resulting in a lethal albino phenotype (Fig. 2A). Fifteen lines showed an intermediate phenotype with continuous parallel streaks (Fig. 2, B and C) where photobleaching affected either one-half of the leaves (Fig. 2B) or only the middle part of the leaf, whereas the leaf margins maintained the wild-type phenotype (Fig. 2C). The remaining eight lines produced a weak phenotype where only a small part of the leaves was affected by photobleaching (Fig. 2D). Both single and multiple copy lines with extensive DNA rearrangements showed photobleaching (Supplemental Fig. 4A; Fig. 3A ).
Thus, PDS dsRNA-mediated genetic interference causes photobleaching in hexaploid wheat in a similar way to plants treated with a chemical inhibitor of PDS (Böger and Sandmann, 1998
The expression of PDS in the RNAi transgenic wheat lines was determined by real-time quantitative RT-PCR. Primers were designed to specifically measure effective endogenous PDS mRNA levels and not the transgene transcripts. Primers were located on the wheat EST sequence CK163183 (Table I; Supplemental Fig. 1A) upstream of the conserved nt sequence regions used to design the primers for the RNAi construct. Cloning and sequencing of the products produced by RT-PCR revealed that the activity of all three genes described above was measured. The primer binding sites were completely conserved in the three expressed genes, and three distinct sequences were identified based on SNPs (Supplemental Fig. 1A; the same SNPs were detected in three independent RT-PCR reactions). The SNPs allowed the design of additional primers for specifically amplifying each of the homoeologous copies of the wPDS gene (Supplemental Fig. 1B). The reduction of relative mRNA levels of wPDS was very similar in each of the three homoeologous genes (Fig. 3A). Therefore, the RNAi silencing mechanism affects all three copies of the gene in the same way. The severity of the photobleached phenotype inversely correlated with PDS mRNA expression levels in the leaves of all the transgenic RNAi lines analyzed. As shown in Figure 3A, expression levels of lines that exhibited an albino phenotype (lines 1, 3, 9, and 10) were 11%, 8.4%, 15%, and 7.2% of the wild type, respectively. A transcript reduction relative to the wild type was also observed in lines showing streaks of photobleaching (5 and 11 in Fig. 3A), but they accumulated more mRNA than the albino lines (38% and 48% of the wild type, respectively). In all the other transgenic RNAi lines not showing any photobleaching, PDS mRNA expression levels were not significantly different from the wild type. These results indicate that PDS mRNA levels decline with increasingly severe phenotypes and suggest that endogenous PDS mRNA is a target of dsRNA-mediated genetic interference that equally silences the three homoeologous copies.
Blockage of the carotenoid pathway can be mimicked chemically with the herbicide norflurazon, a specific inhibitor of the PDS enzyme. This inhibition causes accumulation of phytoene in treated tissues (Böger and Sandmann, 1998
T0 PDS-RNAi lines that showed an albino phenotype did not set seeds and therefore could not be analyzed further. The progeny from each PDS-RNAi line that had intermediate phenotypes (streaks on leaves; 23 lines) all showed a 3:1 segregation for the presence and absence of the hp transgene, as shown in Figure 3B, with an example of PCR analysis in the progeny of line 5. This result suggests that the primary transformants integrated the hp transgene at a single locus, although separate integration at very closely linked loci cannot be excluded. All the T1 progeny showed Mendelian segregation for the photobleached phenotype on the leaves. Surprisingly, the intermediate phenotype with continuous parallel streaks (Fig. 2, BD) of some of the T0 transgenic lines was never observed again in the following generations. Twenty-five percent of the T1 plants containing the hp transgene showed strong photobleaching of the leaves with large albino areas, which in a few cases eventually developed into completely albino plants (Fig. 3D). The other T1 plants that had integrated the transgene (approximately 50%) showed a weak phenotype, where photobleaching was affecting only the base of the leaves (Fig. 3D). Quantitative real-time PCR revealed again a correlation between the level of mRNA and the severity of the photobleached phenotype. As shown in Figure 3C, the T1 plants (derived from T0 line no. 5) having a reduction of endogenous wPDS transcripts to less than 20% of wild type (T1 plants 4, 8, 10, and 20) showed strong photobleaching. Among the T1 plants that showed a weak phenotype, plants 3, 5, 6, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, and 19 accumulated mRNA levels between 30% and 70% of wild type (medium reduction). Plants 1, 2, 9, and 12, which did not contain the hp transgene, had the same mRNA levels as the wild type. We subsequently analyzed each of the PDS-RNAi lines in the T2 generation by selfing different T1 plants showing strong/weak photobleaching and wild-type phenotypes. The T1 plants that showed strong photobleaching were homozygous, since all the T2 progenies contained the transgene, showed large albino areas, and had their mRNA levels of endogenous wPDS genes reduced to less than 40% of the wild type (data not shown). The T1 plants that showed weak photobleaching were heterozygous, since all the T2 progenies were still segregating for the phenotype and the transgene. Small RNA-gel blots were used to test whether the amounts of siRNA were different in homozygous and heterozygous lines. Small RNAs were recovered from a subset of the T1 plants used as the source of total RNA for quantitative real-time PCR. We detected sequence-specific siRNAs of around 24 bp in both homozygous and heterozygous plants showing strong/weak photobleaching (Fig. 3E). Wild-type plants did not accumulate small PDS RNAs. Thus, small PDS RNAs accumulated only upon silencing of the PDS genes. The relative intensity of the hybridization signals in the transgenic versus wild-type plants indicated that the homozygous plants contain around double the amount of small RNAs compared to heterozygous plants. It is therefore likely that the strong photobleached phenotype observed in the homozygous plants is in part related to a higher accumulation of siRNAs. This genetic analysis indicates that RNAi of wPDS is stably inherited over at least two generations in a Mendelian fashion of a single locus. Small RNAs specific for the silenced gene were detected and their accumulation was quantitatively different in homozygous and heterozygous lines. In homozygous plants, accumulation of siRNAs was significantly higher to give effective gene silencing and to develop the most severe phenotype. These results suggest that the effect of RNAi in hexaploid wheat is probably gene-dosage dependent. The reason for the discrepancy of hemizygous phenotypes at T0 versus later generations is not known, but it is intriguing that the streak phenotype of the T0 generation was never recovered in later generations.
To assess whether the EIN2 signal transducer of ethylene can also be effectively silenced by RNAi in wheat, 33 putative transgenic plants were produced by particle bombardment with the intron-spliced self-complementary construct containing the sense and antisense repeats of the wEIN2 cDNA sequence. Genomic DNA from these plants was digested with EcoRI, and blots were hybridized with a probe corresponding to the wEIN2 cDNA sequence of the hpRNA construct. Eighteen lines, which correspond to 54% of the analyzed plants, contained the expected intact EcoRI fragment of the construct (2 kb; Supplemental Fig. 4B; Fig. 1C). We identified by quantitative real-time PCR six T0 primary transgenic lines (33% of the lines that contained the full-length RNAi fragment) with a significant reduction of mRNA expression of the endogenous wEIN2 genes (Fig. 4A ). As for the wPDS genes, the RT-PCR primers were designed to specifically detect the endogenous EIN2 and not the transgene transcripts. Primers were located on the wheat EST sequence CD925940 (Table I; Supplemental Fig. 3A) upstream of the conserved nt sequence regions used to design the primers for the RNAi construct. Cloning and sequencing of the RT-PCR products revealed that the activity of all three homoeologous genes was measured (Supplemental Fig. 3A). Three distinct sequences were identified based on SNPs (the same SNPs were detected in three independent RT-PCR reactions). Quantitative real-time PCR with primers specific to each of the homoeologous copies of the wEIN2 gene (Supplemental Fig. 3B) revealed that the RNAi silencing mechanism is affecting all three homoeologous genes in the same way (Fig. 4A).
For five lines, wEIN2 transcript level was reduced to between 30% and 50% compared to the wild type (intermediate reduction in lines 2, 7, 10, 13, and 19 of Fig. 4A). Line 18 had a strong reduction of the wEIN2 mRNA level, which was only 1% of the level detected in the wild-type plant (Fig. 4A). As for the wPDS genes, both single and multiple copy lines with extensive DNA rearrangements showed a significant reduction of wEIN2 mRNA levels (Supplemental Fig. 4B; Fig. 4A). The six T0 primary transgenic lines with lower EIN2 expression showed a normal phenotype, and their ethylene response signaling was studied in the next generations.
EIN2 was identified as a central component of the ethylene signaling pathway both in Arabidopsis (Alonso et al., 1999 There was a very high negative linear correlation (r2 = 0.976) between the length of the seedlings in the presence of ACC and the amount of wEIN2 transcript measured in the T1 progenies. As observed with the wPDS genes, EIN2 mRNA levels declined with increasingly severe phenotypes (Fig. 4D). T1 plants completely insensitive to ethylene showed the strongest mRNA reduction (around 70%) compared to wild type. T1 plants with an intermediate phenotype accumulated mRNA levels around 50% of wild type, whereas all the other T1 plants that did not contain the hp transgene and were sensitive to ethylene with a stunted morphology had the same mRNA levels as the wild type. By analyzing the T2 generation, we confirmed that those T1 plants that had the strongest mRNA reduction and were completely insensitive to ethylene were homozygous plants, because all their T2 progeny contained the transgene (Fig. 5A ), had their mRNA levels reduced to less than 40% of the wild-type (Fig. 5B), and showed complete ethylene insensitivity in the presence of ACC (Fig. 5, B and C). T1 plants that were partially affected by ethylene were heterozygous, since their T2 progeny were still segregating for normal and stunted growth when grown in the presence of ACC.
These results demonstrate that the EIN2-RNAi transgenic wheat lines produced in this study are ethylene insensitive. This is consistent with the hypothesis that EIN2 is a positive signal component in ethylene signaling and that inhibiting its expression reduces the ethylene response. We conclude that RNAi silencing in hexaploid wheat is also effective for the silencing of a gene involved in a signaling process.
We have demonstrated that RNAi-mediated gene silencing is effective in hexaploid wheat and can efficiently induce reduction of mRNA levels of three homoeologous genes. Expression of the three homoeologous genes was reduced to the same extent, suggesting that RNAi can resolve the issue of genetic redundancy in hexaploid wheat in an efficient way, as it was also suggested by studies in the two allotetraploid species Arabidopsis suenica (Lawrence and Pikaard, 2003
Knowledge of the complete and exact sequence of the target genes was not essential to induce specific gene silencing, as sequence information from ESTs was sufficient. This is important for the development of high-throughput methods for functional genomics. Trigger-dsRNAs as short as 23 to 26 bp have been shown to induce degradation of target mRNAs (Hamilton and Baulcombe, 1999 We have used two different genes to assess the effectiveness of RNAi in hexaploid wheat, the enzyme PDS and the ethylene signaling component EIN2. These genes were chosen because mutant alleles have been reported to give distinct phenotypes in diploid plant species. It was also important to assess whether a gene that encodes a regulatory factor can be effectively silenced in wheat. Indeed, a reduction of enzyme amount might allow the detection of a mutant phenotype, whereas silencing of a signaling component might not be sufficient to cause a mutant phenotype, because even a strongly reduced amount of protein might still be sufficient for proper function. We have shown that RNAi-mediated silencing of both genes results in the reduction of transcripts by up to 93% for PDS and 99% for EIN2. Therefore, dsRNAs corresponding to these two genes caused strong and specific genetic interference, suggesting that dsRNA-mediated gene silencing under the control of the ubiquitin promoter can occur in the tissues where these genes normally function.
We found a strong correlation between decreased levels of mRNA and increased severity of phenotypes. A phenotypic series was obtained from the RNAi lines with a full spectrum of the effect of RNAi (weak, intermediate, and strong) on gene expression, which is in agreement with the results in Arabidopsis (Chuang and Meyerowitz, 2000
It has been shown by Smith et al. (2000)
We confirmed that the expression of the RNAi phenotype is stably inherited over at least two generations for both wPDS and wEIN2 genes, possibly making this approach a reliable tool not only for functional genomics but also for the genetic modification of agronomically interesting traits. In our study, dsRNA-expressing constructs were inherited in a Mendelian fashion as a single locus, and the most severe phenotype was observed in homozygous plants that showed the strongest mRNA reduction. Among the phenotypic series that we obtained from the transgenic PDS-RNAi lines, we have also observed T0 lines showing a strong phenotype in a hemizygous state. This strong phenotype was lethal for the wPDS genes but had no effect in the case of the wEIN2 genes (Fig. 5A, plant 18). The intermediate phenotype of wPDS with continuous parallel streaks (Fig. 2, BD) of some of the T0 transgenic lines was never observed again in the following generations. This suggests that in the early development of newly transformed T0 seedlings, RNAi is not fully established, and therefore, the mutant phenotypes differ from later generations. Thus, it might be advisable to not only study the T0 generation in wheat RNAi projects but also in later generations. Our results indicate that the most efficient silenced phenotypes are stably recovered in homozygous lines, suggesting that the effect of RNAi in hexaploid wheat is gene-dosage dependent. This is possibly due to the progressive repression of the target gene with increasing allelic concentration of the transgene. This hypothesis is supported by our observation of gene-dosage dependence of specific siRNAs that were approximately double the amount in homozygous plants compared to heterozygous plants. These results are in agreement with García-Pérez et al. (2004)
New studies provide convincing biochemical and genetic evidence that RdRP plays a critical role in amplifying the RNAi effect, explaining the extreme efficiency and the self-sustaining nature of RNAi (Lipardi et al., 2001
Down-regulation of EIN2 by RNAi resulted in ethylene-insensitive wheat plants that showed normal wild-type growth in presence of ACC, the immediate precursor of ethylene. This is consistent with the hypothesis that EIN2 is a positive regulator of the ethylene-signaling in wheat, very similar to its homologs in Arabidopsis (Alonso et al., 1999
RNAi silencing has an enormous potential as a tool in functional genomics of hexaploid wheat, a species for which other methods such as insertional mutagenesis are not available. dsRNA-expressing constructs, when delivered into wheat by particle bombardment-mediated transformation, created a heritable phenotypic series in the transformants that may be a useful feature for gene discovery and functional genomics. Technical barriers for high-throughput functional genomics have recently been lowered considerably by the development of pHELLSGATE vectors that utilize the Gateway recombination system and give the possibility of making hpRNA constructs for large sets of genes (Helliwell and Waterhouse, 2003
Plant Material Wheat (Triticum aestivum) cv Bobwhite, accession SH98 26 (provided by Dr. A. Pellegrineschi, International Center for Development of Maize and Wheat, Mexico) was used for all experiments. Donor plants for embryo transformation and transgenic plants were grown in a greenhouse with 16-h light at 21°C and 8-h night at 16°C. Every 10 to 15 d, routine fertilizer treatments were applied to the donor plants.
PDS and EIN2 nt sequences were obtained from The Institute for Genome Research database (www.tigr.org). Using barley (Hordeum vulgare) sequences, a BLASTN search was carried out to find hexaploid wheat ESTs. Multiple sequence alignments were done with ClustalW (Thompson et al., 1994
RNAi lines were produced using particle bombardment-mediated transformation of immature embryos as described (Pellegrineschi et al., 2002
To determine the inheritance of the RNAi construct and the phenotype, transgenic lines were allowed to self pollinate, and segregation analyses were performed in the T1 and T2 generations by means of PCR, phenotype observation, and quantitative real-time PCR. Rapid DNA extractions at the two-leaf stage (modified for small volumes from Stein et al., 2000
Total RNA was isolated from leaves using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen Life Technologies). Leaves were collected 3 weeks after transferring the transgenic and control plants from culture tubes to soil. For RT, 10 µg of total RNA was denatured at 70°C for 5 min in the presence of 0.07 µg of oligo(dT)21 primers. The tubes were immediately chilled on ice and reverse transcribed with 7 units of reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen Life Technologies), 1x buffer, 0.7 mM of each dNTPs, 10 mM dithiothreitol, and 1.5 units of RNase OUT (Invitrogen Life Technologies) in a total volume of 30 µL at 42°C for 90 min. Real-time PCR assays were performed with the ABI PRISM 7700 Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems) using SYBR Green PCR Master mix (Applied Biosystems) in a final volume of 26 µL including cDNA template and appropriate primer pairs (Table I). The amplification conditions were 2 min at 50°C, 10 min at 95°C, and 40 cycles of 15 s at 95°C and 1 min at 60°C. To normalize results, the glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase (GAPDH; AF251217) gene was used as an internal standard (Table I). Three replicates were performed for each sample. The specificity of the unique amplification product was determined by melting curve analysis according to the manufacturer's instructions.
To detect small RNAs, the procedures described by Hamilton and Baulcombe (1999)
Leaf samples were collected when the transgenic and control plants were transferred from culture tubes to soil. Norflurazon-treated wild-type plants were produced by watering 15-d-old seedlings with 3 µM norflurazon (Syngenta) to induce bleaching. To compensate local variations within a plant, three samples were taken from each transgenic and control plant, corresponding to three different leaves of the same plant.
Carotenoid extraction was performed essentially as described (Wurtzel et al., 2001
We thank Dr. A. Pellegrineschi (Centro Internacional de Mejoramiento de Maiz y Trigo, Mexico) for providing us with seeds of Bobwhite SH 98 26 and Dr. P. Quail (University of California, Berkeley and U.S. Department of Agriculture Plant Gene Expression Center, Albany, California) for the plasmid pAHC17. Syngenta (Basel, Switzerland) is acknowledged for the PMI gene. We thank Stephi Narain and Geri Herren (Institute of Plant Biology, Zürich) for excellent technical assistance. We also thank Dr. Markus Klein and Dr. Valeria Gagliardini (Institute of Plant Biology, Zürich) for helping with the HPLC and quantitative real-time experiments, respectively. Finally, special thanks to Dr. Christoph Ringli (Institute of Plant Biology, Zürich) for useful technical advice and critical reading of the manuscript. Received June 2, 2006; accepted July 12, 2006.
1 This work was supported by the Indo-Swiss Collaboration in Biotechnology. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Beat Keller (bkeller{at}botinst.unizh.ch).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.084517 * Corresponding author; e-mail bkeller{at}botinst.unizh.ch; fax 41446348204.
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