Abstract

Stable genetic transformation of plants is a low‐efficiency process, and identification of positive transformants usually relies on screening for expression of a co‐transformed marker gene. Often this involves germinating seeds on solid media containing a selection reagent. Germination on solid media requires surface sterilization of seeds and careful aseptic technique to prevent microbial contamination, but surface sterilization techniques are time consuming and can cause seed mortality if not performed carefully. We developed an antimicrobial cocktail that can be added to solid media to inhibit bacterial and fungal growth without impairing germination, allowing us to bypass the surface sterilization step. Adding a combination of terbinafine (1 μM) and timentin (200 mg l−1) to Murashige and Skoog agar delayed the onset of observable microbial growth and did not affect germination of non‐sterile seeds from 10 different wild‐type and mutant Arabidopsis thaliana accessions. We named this antimicrobial solid medium “MSTT agar”. Seedlings sown in non‐sterile conditions could be maintained on MSTT agar for up to a week without observable contamination. This medium was compatible with rapid screening methods for hygromycin B, phosphinothricin (BASTA) and nourseothricin resistance genes, meaning that positive transformants can be identified from non‐sterile seeds in as little as 4 days after stratification, and transferred to soil before the onset of visible microbial contamination. By using MSTT agar we were able to select genetic transformants on solid media without seed surface sterilization, eliminating a tedious and time‐consuming step.

Highlights

  • Driven by cheap and reliable methods of DNA assembly, the synthetic biology revolution has made it possible for molecular biologists to design and build dozens of new plasmids in as little as 1 or 2 weeks even without automation equipment

  • We sought to test whether low concentrations of terbinafine could be used to inhibit fungal growth without impairing germination of A. thaliana

  • Screening for nourseothricin resistance and fluorescent protein expression Having established that MSTT agar delays microbial contamination without impairing germination, we examined whether this medium would allow us to screen A. thaliana genetic transformants without seed sterilization

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Summary

Introduction

Driven by cheap and reliable methods of DNA assembly, the synthetic biology revolution has made it possible for molecular biologists to design and build dozens of new plasmids in as little as 1 or 2 weeks even without automation equipment. Agrobacterium-mediated genetic transformation is one of the most versatile and accessible methods for modifying the genome of Arabidopsis thaliana (Bechtold and Pelletier 1998, Zhang et al 2006), but this approach produces only a small minority of seeds in the T1 generation that carry the transgene of interest. Abbreviations – BASTA, phosphinothricin or glufosinate; mEGFP, monomeric enhanced green fluorescent protein; MS, Murashige and Skoog medium; MSTT, Murashige and Skoog medium with terbinafine and timentin; MSTT+suc, MSTT with sucrose; PDS3, phytoene desaturase 3. Identifying this minority of positive transformants usually relies on selection or screening for a co-transformed marker gene

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