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First published online July 11, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.123869 Plant Physiology 148:41-50 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Geminivirus-Mediated Gene Silencing from Cotton Leaf Crumple Virus Is Enhanced by Low Temperature in Cotton1,[C],[OA]Department of Plant Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27606 (J.R.T., C.H.H., D.R.); Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721 (A.M.I., J.K.B.); and Department of Crop Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695 (C.H.H.)
A silencing vector for cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) was developed from the geminivirus Cotton leaf crumple virus (CLCrV). The CLCrV coat protein gene was replaced by up to 500 bp of DNA homologous to one of two endogenous genes, the magnesium chelatase subunit I gene (ChlI) or the phytoene desaturase gene (PDS). Cotyledons of cotton cultivar Deltapine 5415 bombarded with the modified viral vectors manifested chlorosis due to silencing of either ChlI or PDS in approximately 70% of inoculated plants after 2 to 3 weeks. Use of the green fluorescence protein gene showed that replication of viral DNA was restricted to vascular tissue and that the viral vector could transmit to leaves, roots, and the ovule integument from which fibers originate. Temperature had profound effects on vector DNA accumulation and the spread of endogenous gene silencing. Consistent with reports that silencing against viruses increases at higher temperatures, plants grown at a 30°C/26°C day/night cycle had a greater than 10-fold reduction in viral DNA accumulation compared to plants grown at 22°C/18°C. However, endogenous gene silencing decreased at 30°C/26°C. There was an approximately 7 d delay in the onset of gene silencing at 22°C/18°C, but silencing was extensive and persisted throughout the life of the plant. The extent of silencing in new growth could be increased or decreased by changing temperature regimes at various times following the onset of silencing. Our experiments establish the use of the CLCrV silencing vector to study gene function in cotton and show that temperature can have a major impact on the extent of geminivirus-induced gene silencing.
Cotton (Gossypium spp.) is an economically important crop for both fiber and oil production in many warm areas of the world. Cotton's long-standing association with humans derives primarily from its long, strong, spinnable fibers, or seed hairs. Each fiber is a remarkable unicell that elongates to >2.25 cm and deposits a thick secondary wall (Kim and Triplett, 2001
Currently, complete sequencing of cotton genomes is just beginning (Chen et al., 2007
Virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) offers the opportunity to test gene function through silencing, using homologous cDNA sequences cloned from cotton. In geminivirus vectors, only partial gene sequences are needed to initiate gene silencing, ranging from about 90 to 150 bp if inserted as part of a viral gene (Peele et al., 2001
Cotton leaf crumple virus (CLCrV) is in the genus Begomovirus, family Geminiviridae (Brown and Nelson, 1984
The organization of the CLCrV genome is typical of other bipartite begomoviruses and consists of two 2.5-kb circular DNA molecules referred to as the DNA-A and -B component, respectively (for review, see Gutierrez, 1999
To date, only the viral-sense transcriptional unit of DNA-A or -B has been modified for gene silencing (Kjemtrup et al., 1998 Because CLCrV is indigenous to the United States, we modified it as a VIGS vector for cotton. We show here that deleting the coat protein gene, which is absolutely required for insect transmission, does not impair systemic movement in cotton, thereby obviating any chance for escape or transmission of vector sequences. We also report silencing of two different endogenous genes when 250- to 500-bp sequences, homologous to only one of the G. hirsutum homeologs, are used as coat protein gene replacements. We document widespread and long-lasting transmission of silencing signals in cotton vegetative and maternal reproductive tissues, and show that endogenous gene silencing is more efficient at a relatively cool temperature (e.g. 18°C–22°C) for cotton growth.
The Coat Protein Is Not Needed for Systemic CLCrV Infection in Cotton
CLCrV had previously been modified to enable inoculation of plants with the wild-type virus using biolistic bombardment of cotton (Idris and Brown, 2004
One tool for bombardment used in these experiments was a custom-made particle inflow gun (PIG). This was used to inoculate cotyledon-stage seedlings with wild-type CLCrV using 1-µm-diameter DNA-coated gold microprojectiles. Previous experiments using the PIG showed that both Nicotiana benthamiana and Arabidopsis had high frequencies of infection and minimal damage at 30 psi of helium. Conditions for cotton bombardment required increasing the pressure used to propel the microprojectiles to 60 psi and placing the seedlings 4 cm beneath the microprojectile source. The total amount of DNA coated onto microprojectiles was varied from 0.5 to 10 µg each of the DNA-A and -B components (1–20 µg DNA, total). Optimal silencing efficiencies (100% of bombarded plants) using the PIG were found using 7 to 10 µg of each component. The infection rate declined with lower amounts of DNA-A and was about 50% for 5 µg and 30% to 50% for 0.5 µg each component. A commercially available particle delivery system (Bio-Rad PDS1000-He) was also used to inoculate seedlings and, with 0.5 µg of each component, also resulted in an average infection rate of 70%. Most data reported here used the PIG to inoculate plants with 5 µg of each DNA component (approximately 1 µg/shot).
The magnesium chelatase subunit I gene (ChlI) was used to visualize the timing and extent of endogenous gene silencing. Because nearly exact homology is needed for effective silencing, reverse transcription (RT)-PCR was used to amplify a 500-bp ChlI fragment from G. hirsutum. This gene fragment, which was only 78.2% homologous to the Arabidopsis ChlI gene, was cloned in the antisense direction into pJRTCLCrVA.008 (Fig. 1B) to produce a DNA-A component transcribing the ChlI gene fragment using the coat protein gene promoter (Fig. 1C; CLCrV:ChlI). Because functional virus requires both the DNA-A and -B components, the silencing vector that includes both components is referred to here as CLCrV:ChlI. Bombardment of CLCrV:ChlI into seedlings resulted in silencing of ChlI, evidenced by loss of chlorophyll as early as 13 d postinoculation (dpi) at 25°C/23°C. Both the VIGS DNA-A component, carrying ChlI, and DNA-B component replicated out of the respective plasmid as viral episomes (Fig. 1, A and C) and moved together to establish infection. To verify reduction in ChlI mRNA in silenced leaves, a different region of the same cotton ChlI gene used in the vector was amplified from silenced tissues by RT-PCR. Figure 2A shows the molecular evidence for silencing. Almost undetectable ChlI transcript was in CLCrV:ChlI leaves (Fig. 2A, lanes C and D) that showed extensive chlorosis (Fig. 2, C and D). In contrast, leaves after mock inoculation (Fig. 2A, lanes E and F) or inoculation with empty vector (Fig. 2A, lane G) had higher ChlI transcript levels and minimal symptoms (Fig. 2, E–G).
The phytoene desaturase gene (PDS) is another commonly used marker gene for VIGS and also causes loss of chlorophyll and carotenoids (Rotenberg et al., 2006
The CLCrV Vector Was Found in Young and Mature Leaves, Roots, and Ovules
Although geminivirus-mediated VIGS facilitates extensive gene silencing, in situ hybridization using viral DNA-A as the probe has shown that very few of the silenced cells actually accumulate detectable viral DNA (Peele et al., 2001
Research in bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) showed that a GFP-expressing geminivirus (Bean dwarf mosaic virus) could also be localized in leaf cells following microinjection, but that systemic movement was restricted to the vascular tissue (Sudarshana et al., 1998
To try to increase the efficiency of silencing, bombarded plants were grown in greenhouses with tight temperature control in three trials to compare ChlI silencing at relatively high (30°C/26°C) and low (22°C/18°C) temperature regimes. Although silencing was delayed at the cooler temperatures, the extent of silencing was dramatically increased and was significantly more stable throughout the life of the plant (Fig. 5, G and H compared to C and D). Importantly, CLCrV:ChlI-mediated gene silencing occurred in the ovary wall as variegated tissue at lower temperature (Fig. 5H), but this was variable between plants. In contrast, bolls of plants grown at 30°C/26°C did not show conclusive evidence of ChlI silencing (Fig. 5D), probably because plants inoculated at the seedling stage could not routinely sustain silencing until the bolls formed. Plants inoculated with the empty vector were only slightly more symptomatic at lower temperatures (compare Fig. 5, F and B). However, growth of the cotton plants was slower at 22°C/18°C (compare Fig. 5, E and A) and the number of days to flowering increased. To decrease the time to flowering and boll formation, bombarded cotton seedlings were kept in a growth chamber at a constant temperature of 26°C, 16/8 h light/dark photoperiod until 26 dpi, at which time the plants had begun to silence. They were then transferred to the greenhouses with either low or high temperature regimes. The 26°C preincubation did not significantly affect the extent of silencing at either temperature regime compared to continuous incubation at high or low temperature. Silencing in newly formed tissues was still enhanced at low temperatures (data not shown).
To further investigate the relationship between temperature change and silencing, two sets of plants were kept at a constant intermediate (25°C) or low temperature regime (22°C/18°C) until 59 dpi and then switched to the reciprocal temperature regimes for 7 d. Figure 6 shows that new growth formed during the 7-d period showed silencing characteristic for the new temperature, and that the change in silencing effectiveness was immediate for both treatments. These results suggest that CLCrV-induced endogenous gene silencing is quite sensitive to temperature and verify that temperature was the main variable in the experiment.
To determine if the lack of ChlI silencing at high temperatures was due to a breakdown in the host gene silencing response or to a lack of CLCrV:ChlI vector, leaf tissue that showed at least some silencing was used for DNA isolation and probed with viral vector DNA. Figure 7 shows that much less CLCrV:ChlI vector DNA was present in plants grown at 30°C/26°C compared to 22°C/18°C. Analysis of the blot using Image J showed that there was a 12-fold difference between DNA accumulation in the two treatments.
This report describes a geminivirus-induced gene silencing vector that functions in cotton, an important, sustainable source of fiber and oil. Because cotton is difficult to transform, development of a transient gene silencing method greatly extends the power of molecular analysis for testing gene function. Genes with homology to previously characterized genes can now be tested for predicted loss-of-function phenotypes to verify or refute the possible conservation of function. Using data from several cotton EST projects (Udall et al., 2006
Geminivirus-mediated VIGS in Arabidopsis (Turnage et al., 2002
With the CLCrV silencing system, plants grown in a temperature-controlled greenhouse at low temperatures (22°C/18°C) showed substantially better silencing than those grown at higher (30°C/26°C) temperatures (Fig. 5). For naturally occurring plant virus infections, symptom severity and the molecular processes involved in infection are known to be affected by temperature, with lower temperatures inhibiting silencing and higher temperatures favoring silencing and even viral elimination in some cases (Szittya et al., 2003
Although the higher temperatures employed here appear to have increased PTGS of the viral DNA vector, the efficiency of endogenous ChlI silencing from VIGS was reduced at higher versus lower temperatures. Fauquet's group showed that siRNAs increase with temperature while viral DNA accumulation dropped at 30°C compared to 25°C (Chellappan et al., 2005
An important goal for cotton research is to be able to modify properties of the cotton fiber, which arise from ovular epidermal cells near the time of flower opening. Because the ChlI VIGS could not be used to track silencing in tissues lacking chlorophyll, we used GFP expression to determine if the CLCrV vector was capable of infecting the ovule integument, which is derived from maternal tissue. GFP fluorescence from geminivirus vectors invading the maternal tissue of developing ovules has now been observed in two plants, cotton (this report, Fig. 4) and bean (Sudarshana et al., 1998
Cotton Plant Growth
Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum Deltapine 5415 for experiments) seeds were germinated in MetroMix potting soil in 4-inch square pots with four seeds per pot. Seedlings were grown until they had initiated the first true leaves (5–10 d), then biolistically inoculated and transplanted to individual pots (2–4 dpi). Plants were kept in a custom-built, walk-in growth chamber with a 16/8 h photoperiod at 900 µmol m–2 s–1 and a 25°C/23°C temperature regime for all experiments except the low and high temperature comparisons. Plants were fertilized twice weekly with Miracle Gro (Miracle Gro Products, Inc.). The temperature comparison experiments were carried out in two North Carolina State University Phytotron temperature-controlled (±1°C) greenhouses with either 30°C/26°C or 22°C/18°C day/night temperature cycles, relative humidity 40% to 50%, or in Percival growth chambers as stated. The Phytotron plants received ambient day length with a 3-h interruption during the dark period with 11 to 12 µmol m–2 s–1 of incandescent light to trigger long day responses throughout the year. Three experiments were performed consecutively from April to December. Plants were started individually in 225-mL styrofoam cups with two-thirds pea gravel, one-third peat-lite (WR Grace Co.) potting mixture, and transplanted to 1,650-mL pots 2 dpi. Plants were watered daily and fertilized three times a week with weak Hoagland solution (Saravitz et al., 2008
Seedlings were bombarded with 1-µm-diameter gold microprojectiles (InBio) coated with a mixture of 5 µg each of the A and B components of CLCrV as described (Kjemtrup et al., 1998
The DNA-A component dimer, pCLCrV-H250 (Idris and Brown, 2004 To insert the MCS, pJRTCLCrVA.007 was digested with HindIII and StuI, releasing a 1,772-bp fragment that was ligated into a HincII- and HindIII-cut pBluescript to make pJRTCLCrVA.004. Two PCR reactions were used to amplify regions of pJRTCLCrVA.007 that flanked AR1 and add an MCS. The first PCR reaction used primer sequences 5'-GCAAGCTTACCTGAACTTCCAAGTCTG-3' and 5'-GTGAATTCGCTAGCGTTAACTGGCCATAATCCTGTGTATGCAACGTTGAA-3' to amplify a 297-bp fragment that spanned AL3, introduced half of the MCS, and retained the AR1 stop codon and putative polyadenylation site. This product was digested with HindIII and EcoRI and ligated into pJRTCLCrVA.004 to produce pJRTCLCrVA.005. The second PCR reaction used the primers 5'-GCGAATTCACTAGTCTGCAGGCATGCCATTTTGCTCTATACCCAT-3' and 5'-GCGGAGCTCCACTTGGGATAGGTTAAGAA-3' to produce a 454-bp fragment that contained the common region, the start codon of AR1, and the remaining MCS. This product was digested with EcoRI and SacI and ligated into pJRTCLCrVA.005 to complete the MCS and produce pJRTCLCrVA.008 (GenBank EU541443). This plasmid contained the entire viral genome and two common regions, with AR1 replaced by an MCS, inserted between the AR1 start and stop codons.
From young leaves, 100 mg total RNA was isolated using the Spectrum Total Plant RNA kit (Sigma). A 500-bp fragment of the cotton ChlI gene (GenBank accession EU541445) was obtained by RT-PCR using primers 5'-GCATGGCCATTCGGTGACCCTTATAAC-3' and 5'-GCTTGGCCAATCAAACCGTGCTCTTTC-3'. The PCR product was digested with MscI and ligated into pJRTCLCrVA.008 to produce pJRTCLCrVA.009 (GenBank accession EU541444), an A component vector for silencing the ChlI gene. The PDS gene fragment was similarly obtained by RT-PCR using the primers 5'-GCCGCATGCGCCTGAAGACTGGAGAGAGATT-3' and 5'-GCTACTAGTGCTTTACTCTGATCCGCAGATA-3' (GenBank accession no. EU541446) and was cloned into pJRTCLCrVA.008 to construct pJRTCLCrVA.027.
PCR was used to amplify a 729-bp fragment from psmRSGFP (GenBank accession U70496; Davis and Vierstra, 1998
Total RNA was extracted as above and 250 ng was used as a template for RT using ImpromII (Promega). One microliter of each cDNA reaction was used for semiquantitative PCR with primers 5'-GGCTCAGAAGCTTGCTGCTAAAGA-3' and 5'-AACAGTTGTGGACTTCCCAGTTCC-3', which amplified a 123-bp fragment of ChlI with no homology to the silencing vector fragment. A 165-bp fragment of cotton GLYCERALDEHYDE-3-PHOSPHATE DEHYDROGENASE A SUBUNIT (GAPDH; accession TC66315) was used as a reference gene and was amplified by PCR using 5'-ATCAAGGGCACCATGACTACCACT-3' and 5'-ACCAGTTGAAGTCGGGACGATGTT-3'. Threshold cycles, or the cycles for which a 5-µL reaction yielded a DNA product that could be detected by ethidium bromide staining for ChlI and GAPDH, were empirically determined at 27 and 23, respectively.
Cotton DNA was extracted by a modified protocol for Plant DNEASY (Qiagen) as described (Horne et al., 2004
Photos were taken with a Nikon Coolpix digital camera and adjusted in Adobe Photoshop 7.1 (Adobe). Fluorescence was detected using a Leica MZFLIII dissecting microscope connected to a Qimaging Micropublisher 3.3 CCD camera. The red-shifted smRSGFP protein (excitation 495 nm and emission 510 nm) was imaged using a filter set with 450 to 490 nm excitation and 500 to 550 emission. All overlays were produced by setting the opacity of the GFP image to 50%, flattening with the second image, and using gamma correction to readjust the pixel histogram. Quantification of DNA in Figure 7 used the Gel Analysis tool of Image J version 1.40G.
We thank Dr. Alan Wenck for construction of the PIG, and Drs. Steve Spiker and Ron Sederoff for donating it to our lab. We are grateful to Taliesin Cochran for help with the plants and to Drs. Linda Hanley-Bowdoin and George Allen for critical evaluation of the manuscript. The smRSGFP plasmid, originally constructed by the R. Vierstra lab, was obtained from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center. Received June 3, 2008; accepted June 25, 2008; published July 11, 2008.
1 This work was supported by grants from Cotton Incorporated (to D.R., C.H.H., and J.K.B.) and a Fellowship from Cotton Incorporated (to J.R.T.). 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: Dominique Robertson (niki_robertson{at}ncsu.edu).
[C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.123869 * Corresponding author; e-mail niki_robertson{at}ncsu.edu.
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