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Molecular Strategies for detection of insertion of genes in transgenic plants Dr Anil Kumar Associate Professor & In charge Dept. Of Molecular Biology & Genetic Engineering, CBSH GBPUAT Pantnagar Uttranchal Pin-263245 Genes and Proteins transcription mRNA Gene (a piece of DNA) protein trait translation Any agriculturally important trait can be introduced by incorporation of a useful gene Transgenic Technology : Art and science of creating designer crops • Identification of useful gene (s) • Creation of a suitable gene construct • Transfer of this construct in to plant cells/tissues in vitro ( maintained as organized explants such as immature embryos, stem sections, cotyledons etc. Using tissue culture techniques, through a process called transformation. • Selection of transformed cell lines or seedling using a suitable marker system and regeneration of fertile plants from the transformed cells. • Analysis of transformed plants for several aspects including stable integration, expression and genetic behavior of transgene(s) DESIGNER CROPS OF SUPERIOR TRAITS • Agronomic Traits – Biotic Stress • Insect Resistance • Disease Resistance – Viral, Bacterial, Fungal, Nematode • Weed, herbicide tolerance, parasitic weeds – Abiotic Stress • Drought, Cold, Heat, Salinity, Poor soils • Quality Traits – – – – – – – – – • Yield- Nitrogen Assimilation, Starch Biosynthesis, O2 Assimilation Processing Shelf-life Reproduction: sex barriers, male sterility ,seedless ness Nutrients (Nutraceuticals) • Macro: Protein, Carbohydrates, Fats, Fiber • Micro: Vitamins, Minerals, Antioxidatnts, Isoflavonoids, Phytoestrogens, Condensed tannins • Anti-nutrients: Phytase, Allergen and Toxin removal Taste Fiber, quality, strength, natural colors Architecture Ornamentals: color, shelf-life, morphology, fragrance Novel Crop Products – Oils – Proteins: nutraceuticals, therapeutics, vaccines – Polymers • Renewable Resources, Biofuels, feedstocks for synthetics How are Transgenic crops made ? Locating Genes for Plant Traits Identifying & locating genes for agriculturally important traits: Most limiting step in transgenic process Little is Known about specific genes to enhance yield potential improve stress tolerance modify chemical properties of harvested products otherwise affect plant characters Identifying a single gene for a trait is not sufficient Must understand how the gene is regulated What other effects it might have on the plant How it interacts with other genes active in the same biochemical pathway Designing Genes for Insertion Once a gene has been isolated & cloned : it must be suitably modified for effective insertion into a plant A promoter sequence must be added for the gene to be correctly expressed Sometimes, the cloned gene is modified to achieve greater expression in a plant The termination sequence signals to the cellular machinery that the end of the gene sequence has been reached A selectable marker gene is added to the gene "construct" in order to identify plant cells or tissues that have successfully integrated the transgene. Simplified representation of a constructed transgene, containing necessary components for successful integration and expression Promoters used for Transgene expression It is the ON/OFF switch : controls when & where in the plant the gene will be expressed Most promoters used are CONSTITUTIVE : cause gene expression throughout the life cycle of plant in most tissues. CaMV 35S Promoter : Most commonly used & gives high degree of expression in plants Other promoters : More Specific : respond to cues in the plant’s internal & external environment Promoter from cab gene (encoding chlorophyll a/b binding proteins) : Light – inducible Promoters from Arabidopsis : Specifically & rapidly induced by natural plant stress/wounding related semiochemical cis-jasmone How are Transgenic Plants Produced? Commonly Used Methods: • Agrobacterium tumefaciens • Gene Gun / Biolistics • Electroporation Transformation System Protoplast Electroporation/ PEG mediated transformation Immature embryo (IE) Embryo derived calli (EDC) Biolistic transformation Agrobacterium mediated transformation Selection in presence of Selectable marker gene Plant regeneration Molecular characterization event selection/gene expression/function of transgene Development of transgenic plants Transgenic Plants- From Lab to the field Transgenic lines obtained through Transformation and regeneration Laboratory analysis to confirm ¾ Stable integration of transgene(s) ¾ Number of copies of the transgene(s) ¾ Expression of transgene(s) Monitoring and analysis of transgenics in a Containment (Glasshouse) Facility for ¾ Stability of transgene expression ¾ Agronomically desirable expression of transgenic trait ¾ Genetic behavior of transgene(s) ¾ Biosafety evaluation and risk assessment Small plot (<500m2) field experiments To evaluate agronomic performance And to further analyze biosafety Large scale field testing at multiple sites Commercilization of transgenic variety After risk assessment and evaluation of Net benefit offered by the transgenic Monitoring of transgenic variety during commercialization TRANSGENIC CROPS DEVELOPED SO FAR AT PANTNAGAR PRODUCTS GENE INTROGR -ESSED GENETICALLY ALTERED TRAITS WHEAT PAT HERBICIDE RESISTANCE (BASTA) BRASSICA OSMOTIN TOLERANCE TO ALTERNARIA BLIGHT AND SALINITY BRASSICA ANNEXIN MODULATION OF HYPERSENSITIVE RESPONSE AGAINST ALTERNARIA BLIGHT AND POWDERY MILDEW TOMATO CARROT Pr M E Pr M E GUS PRODUCTION OF EDIBLE VACCINE AGAINST JAPANESE ENCEPHALITIS VIRUS Core Characterization •Gene(s) – Source(s) – Molecular characterization – Insert / copy number / gene integrity •Protein(s) – History of safe use and consumption – Function / specificity / mode-of-action – Levels – Toxicology / allergenicity testing •Food/Feed Composition – – – – Proximate analysis Key nutrients Key anti-nutrients Animal performance assessment •Environmental – Host organism – Safety to non-target organisms – Soil degradation, toxicity – Outcrossing, weediness METHODS TO CHECK GENE INTEGRATION Gene that facilitates the detection of genetically modified plants during development Use of selectable marker genes-Antibiotic resistance markers -Herbicide resistance markers -Non-antibiotic based markers These genes coming up Use of a reporter genegene whose expression is easy to observe. Used to “report” gene expression, regulation and localization •Luciferase (luc) gene •Green fluorescent protein (GFP •GUS (uidA) gene Antibiotic/Herbicide resistance Marker Substrate for selection npt II (Neomycin Phosphotransferase) G418, Kanamycin, Neomycin hpt (Hygromycin Phosphotransferase) Hygromycin dhfr (Dihydrofolate reductase) Methotrexate, Trimethoprim ble Bleomycin gat (Gentamycin Acetyltransferase) Gentamycin bar & pat (Phosphinothricin acetyltransferase) Phosphenothricin (Bialaphos, Basta) epsps (5-enolpyruvylshikhimate-3phosphate synthase) Glyphosate Risks & Concerns of using Antibiotic/Herbicide Resistance Genes Horizontal Gene Transfer Transfer of these genes from the transgenic plants to the microbes Make the bacteria in the guts of animals and humans resistant to antibiotics Make antibiotic medicines less effective Transfer to soil microbes : A field study shows that transgenic DNA persists for 2 years after the GM crop has been harvested Other genes used as Selectable Marker Genes man A gene from E coli encodes mannose phosphate transferase and confer upon transformed cells ability to use mannose as a sole carbon source Ipt (isopentenyl transferase) gene from Agrobacterium located on T-DNA and induces cytokinin synthesis. Plants selected on the basis of their ability to produce shoots from callus on medium lacking cytokinins. Betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase gene (BADH) from Spinach Used with chloroplast genome.Converts toxic betaine aldehyde to non-toxic glycine betaine, which also serves as an osmoprotectant and confer drought/salt tolerance GUS (uidA) gene β-glucuronidase X-Gluc Blue precipitate 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-inolyl -β-D-glucuronic acid gus expression in Roots Green fluorescent protein (GFP) Protein identified form luminescent jellyfish Aequorea victoria. GFP has now been produced in a number of heterologous cell types and there appears to be little requirement for specific additional factors for post-translational modification of the protein, which may be autocatalytic or require ubiquitous factors. Many structural variants now available commercially (e.g. red fluorescent protein) A. thaliana C24 wild type (left) 35S-mgfp4-ER transformed (right) Aequorea victoria Luciferase (luc) gene The glow is widely used as an assay for luc expression, which acts as a "reporter" for the activity of any regulatory elements that control its expression. Luciferase is particularly useful as a reporter- low-light cameras can detect bioluminescence, in real time and with high sensitivity, in living cells and organisms. Plants (Arabidopsis) Crystal structure of luciferase Significance of Molecular characterization • Need for rigorous molecular characterization of each transgenic plant submitted for review for predicting the safety of a novel food. • Molecular characterization of transgenic plants provide attention to regulators about the information in terms of food, feed or environmental safety consideration. Three Aspects to Consider 1. The transformation system – Agrobacterium-mediated – Protoplast system – Microparticle bombardment 2. – – Molecular characterization of the inserted DNA Insert number Insert composition 3. Genetic stability of the introduced trait – Segregation analysis – Integron stability WHY IT IS NEEDED? Introgression of Transgene to Product Development Utility of Molecular Characterization • May be able to address issues related to positional effects, pleiotropic effects, and gene silencing • Provides information on the composition and integrity of the inserted DNA • Ensures that the developer has appropriately characterized the genetic modification NUCLEUS Transcription Splicing Translation CYTOSOL USE OF PCR TO CHECK GENE INTEGRATION Different stages of hardening of annexin transformed Brassica plants. (a) Rooted PCR positive shoots transferred in plastic pots covered with polybags kept for hardening at transgenic glass house. (b) A PCR positive plant growing in the pot. (c) A hardened PCR positive plant growing in plantation pot after 2 months. (d) Hardened PCR positive plants growing at transgenic glass house. INHERITANCE OF ANNEXIN TRANSGENE IN T1 PLANTS M 1 2 3 4 5 M 6 7 8 9 10 1.5 kb 1.0 kb Annexin PCR of T1 progeny of T0 Brassica plant Lane M = 100 bp ladder Lanes 1-10 = T1 progeny plants of T0 plant THIS EXPERIMENT HAS REVEALED THAT A TRANSFORMANT PLANT HAS MOSAICS OF GENE WHEN GROWN IN VITRO FROM CALLUS. • THE GENE MOSAICS COULD OCCUR AT BOTH ORGAN AND TISSUE OR CELLULAR LEVEL. Edible vaccine against Japanese Encephalitis virus Shoot initiation Callusing Different stages of regeneration in tomato Rooting in solid medium Rooting in liquid medium Presence of Transgene in tomato by PCR amplification Transformed plant kept for hardening Transgene silencing Reduced/abolished expression of foreign gene Loss of expression : Not due to loss of transgene but due to their inactivation Concept of gene Space : Genomes are made of isochores (long stretches of DNA with high compositional homogeneity) If a GC rich transgene is integrated into a GC isochore or an AT rich transgene is integrated into an AT isochore : It is Transcribed If a GC rich transgene is integrated into the AT rich gene space or vice versa : It is Inactivated, as there is no compositional homogeneity with the neighboring sequences Position Dependent & Sequence Dependent Gene silencing Transgene integrates into a genomic region containing heterochromatin. The repressive chromatin structure & DNA methylation can spread into the transgenic locus from the flanking genomic DNA Homology Dependent Gene Silencing Caused by Multiple copies of transgene (Repeat induced gene silencing) Affect not only the stability of transgene but also alter the activity of endogenous gene (Cosuppression) Transcriptional Gene Silencing No mRNA is produced from silenced gene Affected loci : nucleation points for heterochromatin formation & DNA methylation Post – Transcriptional Gene Silencing Transcription is required for silencing to take place Induce degradation of mRNA : very little accumulate in cytoplasm Transgene Expression • So expression of transgenes has been attributed to: – copy number - the number of transgene copies integrated into the host genome – “positional effects” - the position of the T-DNA integration site in the host genome may affect the level of expression – variable arrangements of transgene sequences in the host genome e.g. multiple copies in direct or inverted repeats Detection of Insert Number • Refers to the number of sites where the transgenic element is incorporated into the host genome. • This is deduced by digesting genomic DNA with a restriction enzyme that does not cut within the transgenic element followed by Southern blot analysis with a probe specific to one or more of the introduced genes. • More than one band = more than one insertion site. • This should be repeated with at least one other restriction enzyme to confirm the number of inserts. aattcc 32p-taagg ttaagg attcc-32p gggccat cccggta 32pt Insert Number Inserted Element Gene A 32P-labelled Gene B cDNA probe BamHI Genomic DNA BamHI digest Southern blot Should yield a single band if one insert Example: Insert Number 11 49 50 52 53 54 56 57 59 62 64 90 94 95 96 97 98 99 100102 NT PC Fig. 1A 3.5 kb 109 135 136 146 147 150 151 152 154 155 156 157 NT PC 3.5 kb Fig. 1B Southern analysis showing the integration of crtI gene cassette in selected PCR+ primary transgenics of BR29 (Golden indica rice) developed by Agrotransformation. Enzyme = Eco RI, Probe = PCR generated 1.03 kb crtI fragment, Positive control Eco RI released 3.5 kb fragment of pCaCar; lines showing single insertion are marked by red rectangles (Datta et al., unpublished data). Detection Of Transgene Copy Number • This is not the same as the number of insertion sites • Digestion with one or more (i.e. can be single or double digests) restriction enzymes that either do not cut within the transgenic element, or cut only once but not within the sequence complementary to the hybridization probe • This should yield one band per inserted element. • Usually this is done with more than one restriction enzyme, or combination of enzymes. Transgene Copy Number Inserted Element Gene A 32P-labelled Gene B cDNA probe A XhoI EcoRI Genomic DNA A B B EcoRI digest Southern blot XhoI digest Southern blot A single band from each digestion indicates a single copy Transgene Rearrangements • • • • Rearrangements of transgenic sequences may be observed in Southern blot analyses as hybridizing fragments of a different size than the full-length DNA insert. Larger fragments are indicative of concatenation (head to head or head to tail). Concatemers may be deduced by digesting genomic DNA with a restriction enzyme that cuts at a single site within the transgenic element; multiple copies of the DNA insert will then be resolved by Southern blot analysis. Larger than full length fragments of transgenic DNA may also be caused by interspersion of inserted DNA with host DNA (oats, rice). Smaller than full-length fragments are evidence of deletions and truncations Gene Integrity • The goal is to determine if the gene(s) of interest are intact, or whether there have been truncations/deletions • Digest genomic DNA with restriction enzymes to isolate the gene of interest • Hybridize with a gene-specific probe. • Resolved band should be the same size as that isolated from the plasmid. • Alternatively, PCR with 5’- and 3’-terminal specific primers in order to amplify a fragment of the same size as the inserted gene Gene Integrity: MON 810 •Southern blot analysis of plasmid DNA (lane 1), control genomic DNA (lane 2), and transgenic maize DNA (lane 3) digested with NcoI and EcoRI and hybridized with a 32P-labelled probe specific to the cry1Ab gene. nptII ori-pUC BamHI 5336 cryIA(b) MON810 Example: Plasmid Backbone Southern blot analysis of plasmid DNA (lane 1), control genomic DNA (lane 2), and transgenic maize DNA (lane 3) digested with NcoI and EcoRI and hybridized with 32P-labelled probes specific for the nptII region (lanes 1-3) or the ori-pUC region (lanes 4-6). nptII ori-pUC BamHI 5336 cryIA(b) Genetic Stability • For each novel trait, the pattern and stability of inheritance must be demonstrated as well as the level of expression of the trait. • Serological techniques are generally used to measure trait expression (gain of function) ( either qualitatively [e.g., Western immunoblotting, enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), etc.] or quantitatively (e.g., ELISA, radioimmunoassay, etc.). • If the new trait is one that does not result in the expression of a new or modified protein (e.g., transgenic plants containing inserted antisense sequences i.e loss of function) then its inheritance will have to be determined by examining the DNA insert directly or by measuring RNA transcript production. Transformation Vector Map (Partial), Southern and Enzyme Assay Fig 2 represents partial map of transformation vector containing a bacterial transgene (hph) encodes hygromycinphosphotransferase under the control of CaMV35S constitutive promoter. Fig 3 represents a Southern blot analysis showing integration of transgene (expected size) in To and T1 offspring plants. Fig 4 represents enzyme assay for HPH of the same To and T1 plants shown in the Southern blot confirming inheritance and functioning of the transgene. Hazard Identification Requires • Knowledge of which genes are expressed • Characteristics, concentration and localization of expressed products • Consequences of expression – effects on metabolite pools • And, in cases where the modification results in the production of antisense mRNA, the consequences of altering the expression of an endogenous gene must be evaluated Characterize Expressed Protein • Identity – Immunological cross-reactivity (Western blotting, ELISA) – Physiochemical properties (size, stability to heat and proteolytic digestion) • Functionality – Enzymatic activity in the case of introduced enzymes [e.g. phosphinothricin acetyltransferase (PAT)] – Biological activity • Where appropriate, similarity to products from traditional sources WESTERN BLOTTING TO CHECK GENE EXPRESSION +ve electrode Nitrocellulose membrane -ve electrode Control Gel Transgenic DOT BLOTTING TO CHECK GENE EXPRESSION IN TRANSGENIC PLANTS Control transgenic Patterns of Expression • How, when, and where • Based on the promoter used (constitutive, tissue-specific, inducible, etc), is the novel protein expressed in the expected tissues and under the expected conditions? • Presence or absence and amounts of expressed protein should be determined for a range of plant tissues (e.g. roots, leaves, seeds, pollen) • And, from a food safety perspective, levels of expression of the protein(s) in the edible portions of the plant are critical Microarrays for detecting gene and protein expression Normal Transgenic Microarrays for detecting gene and protein expression