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Sulfadiazine and phosphinothricin selection systems optimised for the transformation of tobacco BY-2 cells

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2023

Abstract

Tobacco BY-2 cell line is the most commonly used cytological model in plant research. It is uniform, can be simply treated by chemicals, synchronised and easily transformed.

However, only a few selection systems are available that complicate advanced studies using multiple stacked transgenes and extensive gene editing. In our work, we adopted for BY-2 cell line two other selection systems: sulfadiazine and phosphinothricin (PPT, an active ingredient of Basta herbicide).

We show that sulfadiazine can be used in a wide range of concentrations. It is suitable for co-transformation and subsequent double selection with kanamycin or hygromycin, which are standardly used for BY-2 transformation.

We also have domesticated the sulfadiazine resistance for the user-friendly GoldenBraid cloning system. Compared to sulfadiazine, establishing selection on phosphinothricin was considerably more challenging.

It did not work in any concentration of PPT with standardly cultured cells. Since the selection is based on blocking glutamine synthetase and consequent ammonium toxicity and deficiency of assimilated nitrogen, we tried to manipulate nitrogen availability.

We found that the PPT selection reliably works only with nitrogen-starved cells with reduced nitrate reserves that are selected on a medium without ammonium nitrate. Both these adjustments prevent the release of large amounts of ammonium, which can toxify the entire culture in the case of standardly cultured cells.

Since high nitrogen reserves can be a common feature of in vitro cultures grown on MS media, nitrogen starvation could be a key step in establishing phosphinothricin resistance in other plant models.