International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Feb 2023)

Optimization of Isolation and Transformation of Protoplasts from <i>Uncaria rhynchophylla</i> and Its Application to Transient Gene Expression Analysis

  • Yingying Shao,
  • Detian Mu,
  • Limei Pan,
  • Iain W. Wilson,
  • Yajie Zheng,
  • Lina Zhu,
  • Zhiguo Lu,
  • Lingyun Wan,
  • Jine Fu,
  • Shugen Wei,
  • Lisha Song,
  • Deyou Qiu,
  • Qi Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24043633
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 4
p. 3633

Abstract

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Protoplast-based engineering has become an important tool for basic plant molecular biology research and developing genome-edited crops. Uncaria rhynchophylla is a traditional Chinese medicinal plant with a variety of pharmaceutically important indole alkaloids. In this study, an optimized protocol for U. rhynchophylla protoplast isolation, purification, and transient gene expression was developed. The best protoplast separation protocol was found to be 0.8 M D-mannitol, 1.25% Cellulase R-10, and 0.6% Macerozyme R-10 enzymolysis for 5 h at 26 °C in the dark with constant oscillation at 40 rpm/min. The protoplast yield was as high as 1.5 × 107 protoplasts/g fresh weight, and the survival rate of protoplasts was greater than 90%. Furthermore, polyethylene glycol (PEG)-mediated transient transformation of U. rhynchophylla protoplasts was investigated by optimizing different crucial factors affecting transfection efficiency, including plasmid DNA amount, PEG concentration, and transfection duration. The U. rhynchophylla protoplast transfection rate was highest (71%) when protoplasts were transfected overnight at 24 °C with the 40 µg of plasmid DNA for 40 min in a solution containing 40% PEG. This highly efficient protoplast-based transient expression system was used for subcellular localization of transcription factor UrWRKY37. Finally, a dual-luciferase assay was used to detect a transcription factor promoter interaction by co-expressing UrWRKY37 with a UrTDC-promoter reporter plasmid. Taken together, our optimized protocols provide a foundation for future molecular studies of gene function and expression in U. rhynchophylla.

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