Agrobacterium tumefaciens -mediated transformation of wheat using suspension cells as a model system and green fluorescent protein as a visual marker
Brian Weir, Xu Gu, Mingbo Wang, Narayana Upadhyaya, Adrian R. Elliott and
Richard I. S. Brettell
Australian Journal of Plant Physiology
28(8) 807 - 818
Published: 2001
Abstract
Conditions for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) were defined using wheat suspension cells as a model system and green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a visual marker. Different strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens were compared using established wheat cell suspension cultures, where the frequency of cell clusters showing transient activity of GFP ranged from 2 to 52%. High levels of transient GFP activity and stable transformed callus lines were obtained with plasmid pTO134 containing a gfp gene with an enhanced CaMV 35S promoter and a bar gene with a 35S promoter in combination with Agrobacterium strain AGL0. These results suggest that the important variables in Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of wheat cells include media composition, Agrobacterium strain, plasmid vector and the addition of virulence-inducing agents such as acetosyringone. The conditions deemed optimal for transformation of wheat suspension cell lines were applied to scutella isolated from immature embryos and scutella-derived calli. Transient GFP expression in these tissues ranged from 10 to 75% and, while quite variable among and within cultivars, stably transformed scutellum-derived callus was obtained. Further studies with scutellum-derived calli suggested that variables such as duration of pre-inoculation culture and co-cultivation, as well as co-cultivation temperature, were also important. Optimisation of these variables resulted in the recovery of transformed wheat plants at a transformation frequency of 1.8%, which is comparable with other reports.Keywords:
https://doi.org/10.1071/PP99211
© CSIRO 2001