Frontiers in Bioscience-Landmark (May 2024)

Establishment of an Efficient Protoplast Isolation and Transfection Method for Eucommia ulmoides Oliver

  • Bin Hu,
  • Mingyang Dong,
  • Ruonan Liu,
  • Wen Shan,
  • Yi Wang,
  • Yang Ding,
  • Jingyi Peng,
  • Luyang Meng,
  • Chaoyong Wang,
  • Qiang Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31083/j.fbl2905187
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 5
p. 187

Abstract

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Background: Eucommia ulmoides Oliver is a unique high-quality natural rubber tree species and rare medicinal tree species in China. The rapid characterization of E. ulmoides gene function has been severely hampered by the limitations of genetic transformation methods and breeding cycles. The polyethylene glycol (PEG)-mediated protoplast transformation system is a multifunctional and rapid tool for the analysis of functional genes in vivo, but it has not been established in E. ulmoides. Methods: In this study, a large number of highly active protoplasts were isolated from the stems of E. ulmoides seedlings by enzymatic digestion, and green fluorescent protein expression was facilitated using a PEG-mediated method. Results: Optimal enzymatic digestion occurred when the enzyme was digested for 10 h in an enzymatic solution containing 2.5% Cellulase R-10 (w/v), 0.6% Macerozyme R-10 (w/v), 2.5% pectinase (w/v), 0.5% hemicellulase (w/v), and 0.6 mol/L mannitol. The active protoplast yield under this condition was 1.13 × 106 protoplasts/g fresh weight, and the protoplast activity was as high as 94.84%. Conclusions: This study established the first protoplasm isolation and transient transformation system in hard rubber wood, which lays the foundation for subsequent functional studies of E. ulmoides genes to achieve high-throughput analysis, and provides a reference for future gene function studies of medicinal and woody plants.

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