articlePlant MethodsSep 30, 2011GOLD OA

A highly efficient rice green tissue protoplast system for transient gene expression and studying light/chloroplast-related processes

Sun Yat-sen University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

Plant protoplasts, a proven physiological and versatile cell system, are widely used in high-throughput analysis and functional characterization of genes. Green protoplasts have been successfully used in investigations of plant signal transduction pathways related to hormones, metabolites and environmental challenges. In rice, protoplasts are commonly prepared from suspension cultured cells or etiolated seedlings, but only a few studies have explored the use of protoplasts from rice green tissue.

Results

Here, we report a simplified method for isolating protoplasts from normally cultivated young rice green tissue without the need for unnecessary chemicals and a vacuum device. Transfections of the generated protoplasts with plasmids of a wide range of sizes (4.5-13 kb) and co-transfections with multiple plasmids achieved impressively high efficiencies and allowed evaluations by 1) protein immunoblotting analysis, 2) subcellular localization assays, and 3) protein-protein interaction analysis by bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) and firefly luciferase complementation (FLC). Importantly, the rice green tissue protoplasts were photosynthetically active and sensitive to the retrograde plastid signaling inducer norflurazon (NF). Transient expression of the GFP-tagged light-related transcription factor OsGLK1 markedly upregulated transcript levels of the endogeneous photosynthetic genes OsLhcb1, OsLhcp, GADPH and RbcS, which were reduced to some extent by NF treatment in the rice green tissue protoplasts.

Citation impact

1,033
total citations
FWCI
8.11
Percentile
100%
References
49
Citations per year

Authors

12

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Protoplast
  • Bimolecular fluorescence complementation
  • Biology
  • Green fluorescent protein
  • Complementation
  • Chloroplast
  • Luciferase
  • Cell biology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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Funding