Transient down-regulation of the RNA silencing machinery increases efficiency of agrobacterium-mediated transformation of arabidopsis

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Abstract

Summary: Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a plant pathogen that is widely used in plant transformation. As the process of transgenesis includes the delivery of single-stranded T-DNA molecule, we hypothesized that transformation rate may negatively correlate with the efficiency of the RNA-silencing machinery. Using mutants compromised in either the transcriptional or post-transcriptional gene-silencing pathways, two inhibitors of stable transformation were revealed-AGO2 and NRPD1a. Furthermore, an immunoprecipitation experiment has shown that NRPD1, a subunit of Pol IV, directly interacts with Agrobacterium T-DNA in planta. Using the Tobacco rattle virus (TRV)-based virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) technique, we demonstrated that the transient down-regulation of the expression of either AGO2 or NRPD1a genes in reproductive organs of Arabidopsis, leads to an increase in transformation rate. We observed a 6.0- and 3.5-fold increase in transformation rate upon transient downregulation of either AGO2 or NRPD1a genes, respectively. This is the first report demonstrating the increase in the plant transformation rate via VIGS-mediated transient down-regulation of the components of epigenetic machinery in reproductive tissue. © 2014 Society for Experimental Biology, Association of Applied Biologists and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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APA

Bilichak, A., Yao, Y., & Kovalchuk, I. (2014). Transient down-regulation of the RNA silencing machinery increases efficiency of agrobacterium-mediated transformation of arabidopsis. Plant Biotechnology Journal, 12(5), 590–600. https://doi.org/10.1111/pbi.12165

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