Abstract

SummaryThe genetic transformation of plant cells is critically dependent on the availability of efficient selectable marker gene. Sulfonamides are herbicides that, by inhibiting the folic acid biosynthetic pathway, suppress the growth of untransformed cells. Sulfonamide resistance genes that were previously developed as selectable markers for plant transformation were based on the assumption that, in plants, the folic acid biosynthetic pathway resides in the chloroplast compartment. Consequently, the Sul resistance protein, a herbicide‐insensitive dihydropteroate synthase, was targeted to the chloroplast. Although these vectors produce transgenic plants, the transformation efficiencies are low compared to other markers. Here, we show that this inefficiency is due to the erroneous assumption that the folic acid pathway is located in chloroplasts. When the RbcS transit peptide was replaced by a transit peptide for protein import into mitochondria, the compartment where folic acid biosynthesis takes place in yeast, much higher resistance to sulfonamide and much higher transformation efficiencies are obtained, suggesting that current sul vectors are likely to function due to low‐level mistargeting of the resistance protein to mitochondria. We constructed a series of optimized transformation vectors and demonstrate that they produce transgenic events at very high frequency in both the seed plant tobacco and the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Co‐transformation experiments in tobacco revealed that sul is even superior to nptII, the currently most efficient selectable marker gene, and thus provides an attractive marker for the high‐throughput genetic transformation of plants and algae.

Highlights

  • Marker genes are essential tools for genetic transformation

  • A prominent example of the latter mode of resistance is provided by sulfonamides, a class of drugs and herbicides that inhibit a key protein in folate metabolism, the enzyme dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS; Brown, 1962)

  • We show that much higher levels of sulfonamide resistance are obtained when DHPS is targeted to the mitochondrial compartment

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Summary

Introduction

Marker genes are essential tools for genetic transformation. Typical marker genes confer resistances to antibiotics or herbicides, or complement metabolic deficiencies of specific (auxotrophic) mutants. Most resistance genes encode either enzymes that detoxify the selection agent or variants of the target protein of the selection agent that confer insensitivity, typically by lacking the binding site for the inhibiting substance. A prominent example of the latter mode of resistance is provided by sulfonamides, a class of drugs and herbicides that inhibit a key protein in folate (vitamin B9) metabolism, the enzyme dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS; Brown, 1962). The enzyme dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS) joins 6hydroxymethyldihydropterin pyrophosphate (derived from GTP) with p-aminobenzoic acid (p-ABA; synthesized from chorismate via the shikimate pathway) to form dihydropteroate (Hanson and Gregory, 2002, 2011). Animals acquire folate through the diet, lack the folate biosynthetic pathway and, are insensitive to sulfonamides

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