Particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant Egeria densa

Particle bombardment is a powerful and relatively easy method for transient expression of genes of interest in plant cells, especially those that are recalcitrant to other transformation methods. This method has facilitated numerous analyses of subcellular localization of fluorescent fusion protein...

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Main Authors: Yasuhide Osaki, Yutaka Kodama
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2017-09-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/3779.pdf
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spelling doaj-821c466617374df4a693f63c7444f9d42020-11-24T23:00:35ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592017-09-015e377910.7717/peerj.3779Particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant Egeria densaYasuhide Osaki0Yutaka Kodama1Center for Bioscience Research and Education, Utsunomiya University, Utsunomiya, Tochigi, JapanCenter for Bioscience Research and Education, Utsunomiya University, Utsunomiya, Tochigi, JapanParticle bombardment is a powerful and relatively easy method for transient expression of genes of interest in plant cells, especially those that are recalcitrant to other transformation methods. This method has facilitated numerous analyses of subcellular localization of fluorescent fusion protein constructs. Particle bombardment delivers genes to the first layer of plant tissue. In leaves of higher plants, epidermal cells are the first cell layer. Many studies have used the epidermal cell layer of onion bulb (Allium cepa) as the experimental tissue, because these cells are relatively large. However, onion epidermal cells lack developed plastids (i.e., chloroplasts), thereby precluding subcellular localization analysis of chloroplastic proteins. In this study, we developed a protocol for particle bombardment of the aquatic plant Egeria densa, and showed that it is a useful system for subcellular localization analysis of higher plant proteins. E. densa leaflets contain only two cell layers, and cells in the adaxial layer are sufficiently large for observation. The cells in both layers contain well-developed chloroplasts. We fused fluorescent proteins to conventional plant localization signals for the nucleus, cytosol, mitochondria, peroxisome, and chloroplast, and used particle bombardment to transiently express these fusion constructs in E. densa leaves. The plant subcellular localization signals functioned normally and displayed the expected distributions in transiently transformed E. densa cells, and even chloroplastic structures could be clearly visualized.https://peerj.com/articles/3779.pdfFluorescent proteinAquatic plantEgeria densaParticle bombardmentSubcellular localizationTransient expression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yasuhide Osaki
Yutaka Kodama
spellingShingle Yasuhide Osaki
Yutaka Kodama
Particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant Egeria densa
PeerJ
Fluorescent protein
Aquatic plant
Egeria densa
Particle bombardment
Subcellular localization
Transient expression
author_facet Yasuhide Osaki
Yutaka Kodama
author_sort Yasuhide Osaki
title Particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant Egeria densa
title_short Particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant Egeria densa
title_full Particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant Egeria densa
title_fullStr Particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant Egeria densa
title_full_unstemmed Particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant Egeria densa
title_sort particle bombardment and subcellular protein localization analysis in the aquatic plant egeria densa
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Particle bombardment is a powerful and relatively easy method for transient expression of genes of interest in plant cells, especially those that are recalcitrant to other transformation methods. This method has facilitated numerous analyses of subcellular localization of fluorescent fusion protein constructs. Particle bombardment delivers genes to the first layer of plant tissue. In leaves of higher plants, epidermal cells are the first cell layer. Many studies have used the epidermal cell layer of onion bulb (Allium cepa) as the experimental tissue, because these cells are relatively large. However, onion epidermal cells lack developed plastids (i.e., chloroplasts), thereby precluding subcellular localization analysis of chloroplastic proteins. In this study, we developed a protocol for particle bombardment of the aquatic plant Egeria densa, and showed that it is a useful system for subcellular localization analysis of higher plant proteins. E. densa leaflets contain only two cell layers, and cells in the adaxial layer are sufficiently large for observation. The cells in both layers contain well-developed chloroplasts. We fused fluorescent proteins to conventional plant localization signals for the nucleus, cytosol, mitochondria, peroxisome, and chloroplast, and used particle bombardment to transiently express these fusion constructs in E. densa leaves. The plant subcellular localization signals functioned normally and displayed the expected distributions in transiently transformed E. densa cells, and even chloroplastic structures could be clearly visualized.
topic Fluorescent protein
Aquatic plant
Egeria densa
Particle bombardment
Subcellular localization
Transient expression
url https://peerj.com/articles/3779.pdf
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AT yutakakodama particlebombardmentandsubcellularproteinlocalizationanalysisintheaquaticplantegeriadensa
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