发布: 2022年12月05日第12卷第23期 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.4567 浏览次数: 1268
评审: Ansul LokdarshiPriyanka DuttaRaviraj Mahadeo Kalunke
Abstract
Genetic transformation is a powerful method for the investigation of gene function and improvement of crop plants. The transgenes copy number in the transgenic line is involved in gene expression level and phenotypes. Additionally, identification of transgene zygosity is important for quantitative assessment of phenotype and for tracking the inheritance of transgenes in progeny generations. Several methods have been developed for estimating the transgene copy number, including southern blot assay and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) experiments. Southern hybridization, although convincing and reliable, is a time-consuming method through which the examination of the copy number is challenging in species with large genomes like wheat plants. Although qPCR is potentially simpler to perform, its results lack accuracy and precision, especially to distinguish between one and two copy events in transgenic plants with large genomes. The droplet digital PCR (ddPCR)–based method for investigation of transgenes copy number has been widely used in an array of crops. In this method, the specific primers to amplify target transgenes and reference genes are used as a single duplexed reaction, which is divided into tens of thousands of nanodroplets. The copy number in independent transgenic lines is determined by detection and quantification of droplets using sequence-specific fluorescently labeled probes. This method offers superior accuracy and reliability with a low cost and scalability as other PCR techniques in the investigation of transgenes copy number.
Graphical abstract
Flow chart for the ddPCR protocol
Background
Plant genetic transformation has been widely used for investigating gene function in wheat as well as the production of environmentally friendly and disease-resistant wheat varieties (Vasil, 2007). During genetic transformation in wheat embryos, the delivery number of transgenes into the plant genome cannot be controlled. Moreover, the expression level of transgenes and, consequently, the phenotype can be influenced by copy numbers. Thus, the validation of the copy number of transgenes is essential for research projects involving transgenic plants (Hobbs et al., 1993; Sivamani et al., 2015). The transgenic wheat plants with a single, full-length copy of a gene at a single locus is the most desirable event because the transgenes typically segregate in a predictable Mendelian fashion (Srivastava et al., 1996). Additionally, copy number determination can also be used to track inheritance and zygosity (Wu et al., 2017).
Gene copy number analysis could be determined by southern blot analysis (Southern, 1975), quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) (Higuchi et al., 2013), thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR (TAIL-PCR) (Y. G. Liu et al., 1995) and, most recently, digital droplet PCR (ddPCR). However, these methods vastly differ in precision, reproducibility, and potential to scale up. Among these, southern blot analysis was regarded as a powerful method for estimating copy number and loci complexity in transgenic plants. In this assay, genomic DNA was digested, separated by electrophoresis, blotted onto a membrane, and then detected with a radioactive, fluorescent, or chemiluminescent-labelled probe. However, it is hard to detect the copy number of transgenes using this method, which are inserted at a single locus. Moreover, the southern blot assay is impractical for examining large populations of transgenic plants because it is unable to automate and requires substantial skills, especially in species with large genomes like wheat plants. In qPCR, the concentration of the transgene in each sample is compared with either a standard curve or an endogenous gene of a known copy number, to estimate the copy number and zygosity of the transgenic allele(s) (Higuchi et al., 2013). Estimation of copy number by qPCR is very sensitive to PCR efficiency because of direct coupling between the PCR amplification and quantification. TAIL-PCR has also been used to establish the copy numbers of transgenes by amplifying the flanking sequence of the transgenic allele(s) (Y. G. Liu et al., 1995; Hanhineva and Krenlampi, 2007).
The ddPCR method has been used to detect the copy number of transgenes with high accuracy (Gowacka et al., 2015). Similar to qPCR, the detection principle of ddPCR is based on a fluorescent dye or probe and requires an endogenous reference gene with a known copy number (Collier et al., 2017). In ddPCR, the PCR reaction partitions individual into separate compartments, such as oil-bounded droplets, and then detects their endpoint amplification products. Poisson probability distribution is also used to derive the template concentration. Accordingly, the ddPCR method enables a more effective calculation of gene target enumeration and accurate quantification of nucleic acid targets. In qPCR, logarithmic PCR template quantification may limit the ability to identify small copy number differences (Bubner and Baldwin, 2004). However, in ddPCR, the decoupling of amplification and quantification with the linearity of the quantification scale allows the detection of small copy differences (Hindson et al., 2013; Bharuthram et al., 2014). In recent years, ddPCR has been successfully applied for the accurate determination of transgene copy number in different plant species. Here, we summarize the protocol of ddPCR used to determine the transgene copy number in wheat plants (P. Liu et al., 2021).
Materials and Reagents
2 mL safe-lock microcentrifuge tubes (Axygen, catalog number: MCT-200-C)
PCR plate heat seal, foil, pierceable (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1814040)
ddPCR plates, 96-well, semi-skirted (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 12001925)
DG8TM cartridge for QX200TM/QX100TM droplet generator (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1864008)
Droplet generator DG8TM gasket (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1863009)
Restriction enzyme EcoRI (ThermoFisher, catalog number: FD0274)
RNase A (Sigma, CAS: 9001-99-4)
Nuclease-free water (ThermoFisher, catalog number: 10977015)
QubitTM dsDNA HS assay kit (ThermoFisher Scientific, catalog number: Q32851)
QX200TM ddPCRTM EvaGreen supermix (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1864033)
QX200 droplet generation oil for EvaGreen® (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1864005)
5' FAMTM (6-Carboxyfluorescein) (ThermoFisher Scientific, catalog number: C1360)
5' VICTM (6-VIC) (AAT Bioquest, catalog number: 212)
Equipment
QubitTM 4 fluorometer (ThermoFisher Scientific, catalog number: Q33238)
QX200TM droplet generator (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1864002)
Thermal cycler (e.g., Bio-Rad C1000 Touch thermal cycler, catalog number: 1851148)
Pipettes (10 µL, 20 µL, 100 µL)
Heat sealer (e.g., Eppendorf S100, catalog number: 5391000036)
DG8 cartridge holder (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1863051)
QX200 droplet reader (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1864003)
Droplet reader plate holder (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 12006834)
Software
Primer design software: Primer5
Sequence analysis software: DNAstar (https://www.dnastar.com/)
QuantaSoftTM software (Bio-Rad, catalog number: 1863007) (https://www.bio-rad.com/)
Software capable of reading comma-separated values (.csv) files: Microsoft Excel
Droplet DigitalTM PCR Applications Guide: http://www.bio-rad.com/webroot/web/pdf/lsr/literature/Bulletin_6407.pdf
Procedure
文章信息
版权信息
© 2022 The Authors; exclusive licensee Bio-protocol LLC.
如何引用
Liu, P., Liu, S., Lei, J., Chen, J. and Yang, J. (2022). Measurement of Transgenes Copy Number in Wheat Plants Using Droplet Digital PCR. Bio-protocol 12(23): e4567. DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.4567.
分类
植物科学 > 植物分子生物学
分子生物学
您对这篇实验方法有问题吗?
在此处发布您的问题,我们将邀请本文作者来回答。同时,我们会将您的问题发布到Bio-protocol Exchange,以便寻求社区成员的帮助。
提问指南
+ 问题描述
写下详细的问题描述,包括所有有助于他人回答您问题的信息(例如实验过程、条件和相关图像等)。
Share
Bluesky
X
Copy link