Abstract

Ferns represent the most closely related extant lineage to seed plants. The aquatic fern Ceratopteris richardii has been subject to research for a considerable period of time, but analyses of the genetic programs underpinning developmental processes have been hampered by a large genome size, a lack of available mutants, and an inability to create stable transgenic lines. In this paper, we report a protocol for efficient stable genetic transformation of C. richardii and a closely related species Ceratopteris thalictroides using microparticle bombardment. Indeterminate callus was generated and maintained from the sporophytes of both species using cytokinin treatment. In proof-of-principle experiments, a 35S::β-glucuronidase (GUS) expression cassette was introduced into callus cells via tungsten microparticles, and stable transformants were selected via a linked hygromycin B resistance marker. The presence of the transgene in regenerated plants and in subsequent generations was validated using DNA-blot analysis, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, and GUS staining. GUS staining patterns in most vegetative tissues corresponded with constitutive gene expression. The protocol described in this paper yields transformation efficiencies far greater than those previously published and represents a significant step toward the establishment of a tractable fern genetic model.

Highlights

  • Ferns represent the most closely related extant lineage to seed plants

  • We demonstrate the genetic transformation of both C. richardii and C. thalictroides using microparticle bombardment of callus tissue and hygromycin selection of regenerating transformed plants

  • A similar approach was attempted in both C. richardii and C. thalictroides, first by treating gametophytes with either CK or auxin

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Summary

Introduction

Ferns represent the most closely related extant lineage to seed plants. The aquatic fern Ceratopteris richardii has been subject to research for a considerable period of time, but analyses of the genetic programs underpinning developmental processes have been hampered by a large genome size, a lack of available mutants, and an inability to create stable transgenic lines. We report a protocol for efficient stable genetic transformation of C. richardii and a closely related species Ceratopteris thalictroides using microparticle bombardment. The protocol described in this paper yields transformation efficiencies far greater than those previously published and represents a significant step toward the establishment of a tractable fern genetic model. Transient transformation of fern gametophyte prothallus cells, typically for RNA interference, has been previously demonstrated through either direct DNA uptake by germinating C. richardii spores (Stout et al, 2003) or direct microparticle bombardment in Adiantum capillus-veneris (Kawai-Toyooka et al, 2004), C. richardii (Rutherford et al, 2004), and Pteris vittata (Indriolo et al, 2010). We demonstrate the genetic transformation of both C. richardii and C. thalictroides using microparticle bombardment of callus tissue and hygromycin selection of regenerating transformed plants. With transformation efficiencies of 72% (C. richardii) and 86% (C. thalictroides), this technical advance positions C. richardii as a tractable genetic model for the analysis of gene function in ferns

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