We have developed a novel method for co-expressing multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins in plants to overcome the difficulties of conventional methods. It takes advantage of using a single expression plasmid that contains multiple functionally independent protein expressing cassettes to achieve protein co-expression.
Information about the spatiotemporal subcellular localization(s) of a protein is critical to understand its physiological functions in cells. Fluorescent proteins and generation of fluorescent fusion proteins have been wildly used as an effective tool to directly visualize the protein localization and dynamics in cells. It is especially useful to compare them with well-known organelle markers after co-expression with the protein of interest. Nevertheless, classical approaches for protein co-expression in plants usually involve multiple independent expression plasmids, and therefore have drawbacks that include low co-expression efficiency, expression-level variation, and high time expenditure in genetic crossing and screening. In this study, we describe a robust and novel method for co-expression of multiple chimeric fluorescent proteins in plants. It overcomes the limitations of the conventional methods by using a single expression vector that is composed of multiple semi-independent expressing cassettes. Each protein expression cassette contains its own functional protein expression elements, and therefore it can be flexibly adjusted to meet diverse expression demand. Also, it is easy and convenient to perform the assembly and manipulation of DNA fragments in the expression plasmid by using an optimized one-step reaction without additional digestion and ligation steps. Furthermore, it is fully compatible with current fluorescent protein derived bio-imaging technologies and applications, such as FRET and BiFC. As a validation of the method, we employed this new system to co-express fluorescently fused vacuolar sorting receptor and secretory carrier membrane proteins. The results show that their perspective subcellular localizations are the same as in previous studies by both transient expression and genetic transformation in plants.
Chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins have been regarded as useful tools to study intracellular dynamics and subcellular localization and further understand their physiological functions and working mechanisms1,2,3,4. It is especially beneficial to co-express well-known organelle reporter proteins with the protein in question to better illustrate its spatiotemporal rationale, distribution, and function(s) within the endomembrane system in cells4,5,6,7,8.
A chimeric fluorescent fusion protein can be expressed in plants via transient expression and stable genetic transformation, which have their respective advantages and limitations9,10,11. Transient expression of a protein is a convenient approach that includes biolistic bombardment-, polyethylene glycol (PEG)-, or electroporation-mediated DNA transient expression in protoplasts and Agrobacterium-mediated leaf infiltration in intact plant cells, as shown in Figure 1A,B12,13,14,15,16. However, co-expression of multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins in a single plant cell requires a mixture of several independent expression plasmids. Thus, the drawbacks of employing multiple plasmids for protein co-expression in plants are lower co-expression levels due to the dramatically reduced chance of several plasmids simultaneously entering the same cells when compared to a single plasmid, and the variations of protein expression levels caused by the uncontrollably random amount of each types of plasmid being transferred into the cell17,18. In addition, it is technically challenging to introduce several independent expression plasmids into a single Agrobacterium for protein co-expression9,10,11. Therefore, Agrobacterium-mediated protein transient expression by infiltration of tobacco leaves is only capable of expressing one plasmid at a time, as shown in Figure 1B. In contrast, generation of transgenic plants expressing fluorescent fusion proteins is usually achieved by Agrobacterium that carries a binary transformation vector. However, the binary vector that mediates the gene transfer and insertion into the plant genomes is only capable of expressing a single fluorescent fusion protein (Figure 1B)9,10,12. Generating a transgenic plant which expresses several chimeric fluorescent proteins simultaneously requires multiple rounds of genetic crossing and screening, which can take from months to years depending on the numbers of the genes to be co-expressed.
The employment a single expression vector for co-expression of multiple proteins in plant has been reported by several previous studies19,20,21. However, multiple rounds of enzymatic digestion and DNA ligation of DNA molecules and backbone vectors are usually required for generation of the final plasmid for protein co-expression or over-expression. Here, we have developed a new and robust method for co-expressing multiple chimeric fluorescent proteins in plants. It is a highly efficient and convenient method that achieves multiple protein co-expression in plants for both transient expression and stable transformation in a time-honored fashion. It employs a single vector that contains multiple functionally independent protein expression cassettes for protein co-expression and thereby overcomes the drawbacks of the conventional methods. Moreover, it is a highly versatile system in which DNA manipulations and assembly are achieved by a simple one-step optimized reaction without extra steps of DNA digestion and ligation. The working principle is illustrated in Figure 2. Furthermore, it is fully compatible with current cellular, molecular, and biochemical approaches that are based on chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins.
1. Primer Design Strategy and DNA Amplification
2. DNA Fragment Assembly and Construction of Protein Expression Cassettes
3. Construction of the Vector for Co-expression of Multiple Chimeric Fluorescent Fusion Proteins in Plants
4. Biolistic-bombardment Mediated Transient Co-expression of Multiple Chimeric Fluorescent Fusion Proteins in Plants
5. Generation of Stable Transgenic Arabidopsis Co-expressing Multiple Chimeric Fluorescent Proteins by Agrobacterium-Mediated Transformation.
6. Pharmaceutical treatments
7. Confocal Microscope Imaging and Protein Subcellular Co-localization Analysis
We have developed a robust and highly efficient method for the co-expression of multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins in plants. It breaks through the barriers of the conventional approaches use multiple separated plasmids for protein co-expression, as shown in Figure 1A,B, via either transient expression or stable genetic transformation. In this new method, we generate a single expression vector that is composed of multiple protein expression cassettes to achieve protein co-expression at one time (Figure 1C,D). The protein expression cassette functions semi-independently with its own necessary DNA elements for protein expression. Therefore, each protein expression cassette could be customized independently according to diverse requirements for protein expression. As for the final protein co-expression vector, the protein expression cassettes in it function as basic "Lego" elements which can be modified, re-constructed. and re-placed conveniently. Furthermore, an alternative strategy for DNA molecule assembly, linkage of several protein expression cassettes, and integration of DNA fragments with the final destination vector for co-expression of chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins is simply achieved via an optimized isothermal in vitro recombination reaction without further extra steps of DNA digestion and interlinkage. The working principle of the isothermal in vitro recombination reaction is illustrated in Figure 2. The linkage of multiple DNA molecules (e.g., the three representative DNA fragments 1 – 3 shown in Figure 2) and their integration with the final expression vector are simply and efficiently achieved by the one-step reaction (see Figure 2). It is adapted from previous studies by overlapping recombination of DNA molecules mediated with overlapping short sequences to achieve fusion of DNA fragments and construction of plasmids25,26.
As a test of the method, we chose the vacuolar sorting receptor (VSR) and the secretory carrier membrane protein (SCAMP), which are two reporter proteins participating in protein secretory and endocytosis pathways, respectively6,22,23,29,30. VSRs are type-I integral membrane proteins that mediate biosynthetic protein traffic in the secretory pathway to the vacuole and mainly localizes in prevacuolar compartments (PVCs) in plants6,22,23. In contrast, secretory carrier membrane proteins (SCAMPs) are type-IV membrane proteins that participate in the plant endocytic pathway. It localizes to the plasma membrane (PM) and trans-Golgi networks (TGNs), which serve as early endosomes22,29,30. We constructed two protein expression cassettes that host the chimeric fusions of Arabidopsis VSR2 (AtVSR2) with RFP and Arabidopsis SCAMP4 (AtSCAMP4) with GFP, as shown in Figure 3. To ensure RFP-AtVSR2 can be translated into the ER, a signal peptide (SP) is added before RFP, as previously reported6,31. The two individual protein expression cassettes are further interlinked and ligate with the final protein expression vector pUC18 or pCAMBIA1300 for protein co-expression either via protein transient or plant stable transformation, as shown in Figure 3. AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4 were successfully co-expressed in tobacco BY-2 cells via particle bombardment and showed correct localizations (Figure 4A). RFP-AtVSR2 showed a punctate pattern, which was distinct from the plasma membrane localization of AtSCAMP4-GFP with some cytosolic punctate dots. Moreover, Arabidopsis transgenic plants that co-express AtSCAMP4-GFP and RFP-AtVSR2 were generated via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. The subcellular localizations of co-expressing RFP-AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4-GFP in root and root hair cells were shown in Figure 4B and 4E. The co-expression results of RFP-AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4-GFP obtained from transgenic Arabidopsis were in agreement with the ones from BY-2 cells. In addition, the transgenic Arabidopsis were treated with wortmannin and BFA for 30 min. Wortmmanin caused RFP-AtVSR2 labeled PVCs forming a small ring-like structure, and BFA induced AtSCAMP-GFP labeled TGN aggregation, as shown in Figure 4C,D,F,G. Additionally, little autofluorescent signal can be detected in tobacco BY-2 cells and Arabidopsis root and root hair cells by applying the same settings of image collection as for Figure 4 (Supplemental Figure 1).
Figure 1: A robust system for co-expression of multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins in plants. (A) Conventional approaches of transient co-expression of multiple fluorescent reporter proteins in plants achieved via electroporation, particle bombardment, and PEG-mediated transformation by mixing several independent expression vectors. (B) The conventional method for plant genetic transformation by Agrobacterium with a single fluorescent fusion protein expression vector. To co-express multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins in a transgenic plant, further genetic crossing and multiple rounds of screening are required for obtaining homozygous progenies. (C) and (D) The alternative new protein co-expression method. It takes advantage of a single expression vector, which is composed of multiple protein expression cassettes and is able to co-express several chimeric fluorescent reporter proteins in plants via both transient expression and genetic transformation. Details of this figure were first published in Zhong et al. 201736 (reprinted with permission; copyright Frontiers in Plant Science). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Demonstration of the working principle of one-step DNA assembly method by isothermal recombination reaction. The DNA fragments and linearized plasmid with overlapping sequences (OSs) are attached by base paring between the 5'-overhang overlapping regions, extending by DNA polymerase, and linking by ligase. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: The strategy of constructing a single plasmid for co-expressing multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins. The diagram demonstrates the strategy for constructing a single expression plasmid for the co-expression of multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins either for transient expression or stable transformation in plants. The expression vector is composed of two protein expression cassettes, each of which contains its own necessary elements for protein expression, and functions in expressing its individual chimeric fluorescent fusion protein semi-independently. Assembly and Interlinkage of all the DNA molecules are conveniently achieved by an optimized isothermal in vitro recombination method mediated with the overlapping DNA fragments. Details of this figure were first published in Zhong et al. 201736 (reprinted with permission; copyright Frontiers in Plant Science). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Representative images of co-expression of chimeric fluorescent fusion of VSR and SCAMP in plant cells.
(A) Co-expression of RFP-AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4-GFP via particle bombardment in tobacco BY-2 suspension cells. (B) A representative image of a transgenic Arabidopsis root cell co-expressing RFP-AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4-GFP. (C) and (D) Transgenic Arabidopsis roots co-expressing RFP-AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4-GFP were treated with wortmannin and BFA for 30 min respectively. (E) A representative image of a transgenic Arabidopsis root hair co-expressing RFP-AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4-GFP. (F) and (G) Transgenic Arabidopsis root hairs co-expressing RFP-AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4-GFP were treated with wortmannin and BFA for 30 min. Arrows in (D) and (G) indicate BFA-induced protein aggregation. rp = Pearson correlation coefficient; rs = Spearman's rank correlation. Scale bar in (A)–(D) is 50 µm, (E)–(G) is 30 µm. Details of this figure were first published in Zhong et al. 201736 (reprinted with permission; copyright Frontiers in Plant Science). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Expression cassette 1 | ||
1-FP35S | GAATTCGAGCTCGGTACCCACATGGTGGAGCACGACACA | |
1-RP35S | AGGACGCGGGCGTGGGCCATTATCACATCAATCCACTTGC | |
1-FRFP | GCAAGTGGATTGATGTGATAATGGCCCACGCCCGCGTCCT | |
1-RRFP | ATTATCCATATCACTCCCCAGGCGCCGGTGGAGTGGCGGC | |
1-FAtVSR2 | GCCGCCACTCCACCGGCGCCTGGGGAGTGATATGGATAAT | |
1-RAtVSR2 | AAATGTTTGAACGATCGGGATTACAACTCTAGTTGAGAAG | |
1-FNOS | CTTCTCAACTAGAGTTGTAATCCCGATCGTTCAAACATTT | |
1-RNOS | GAGAATGGATGCGAGTAATGTCTAGTAACATAGATGACAC | |
Expression cassette 2 | ||
2-FP35S | CATTACTCGCATCCATTCTCACATGGTGGAGCACGACACA | |
2-RP35S | TTAGGATCGTGTCGTGCCATTATCACATCAATCCACTTGC | |
2-FAtSCAMP4 | GCAAGTGGATTGATGTGATAATGGCACGACACGATCCTAA | |
2-RAtSCAMP4 | TCCTCGCCCTTGCTCACCATTAGTGCACGCATCAAGGTCG | |
2-FGFP | CGACCTTGATGCGTGCACTAATGGTGAGCAAGGGCGAGGA | |
2-RGFP | TAAAACCAAAATCCAGTGACTTACTTGTACAGCTCGTCCA | |
2-FT35S | TGGACGAGCTGTACAAGTAAGTCACTGGATTTTGGTTTTA | |
2-RT35S | GTCGACTCTAGAGGATCCCCGTCCGCAAAAATCACCAGTC |
Table 1: Primer design strategy and sequences used in this study. Name of each primer is given on the left panel. The complementary overlapping sequences of the primers are underlined. Details of this table were first published in Zhong et al. 201736 (reprinted with permission; copyright Frontiers in Plant Science).
Supplemental Figure 1: Representative images of autofluorescence in BY-2 cells and Arabidopsis roots and root hairs. (A) The autofluorescence of wild type BY-2 cells was detected under the same imaging conditions with the transformed cells. (B) and (C) Arabidopsis root hair and root cells were detected under the same imaging conditions with the transformed Arabidopsis cells. Scale bar in (A)–(C) is 20 µm. DIC, differential interference contrast. Please click here to download this file.
Here we have demonstrated a novel method to robustly co-express chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins in plants. It can be used for both transient expression and genetic transformation and is compatible with current fluorescent protein-based bio-imaging, molecular, and biochemical applications and technologies9,10,13. In addition, it overcomes the difficulties of the conventional methods that use several individual expression plasmids for the protein co-expression. In contrast, it employs a single expression vector that contains multiple protein expression cassettes with their own individual promoters, fluorescent tags, target proteins, and terminators. Moreover, the protein expression cassette can be managed independently to meet diverse expression requirements, such as usage of a specific promoter and the N- or C-terminal chimeric fusion of a fluorescent protein with the target protein. Therefore, the protein expression cassette functions like a basic "Lego" element that works semi-independently in the plasmid. Furthermore, it is also a highly versatile system in which gene editing, replacement, and assembly all can be easily achieved by a one-step isothermal recombination reaction without extra processes of enzyme digestion and ligation. We have optimized the efficiency of isothermal recombination reaction from previous studies, as described in step 2.4, by testing different concentrations of T5 exonuclease, Phusion DNA polymerase, and Taq polymerase. In addition, the concentration of each DNA fragments for the one-step isothermal recombination reaction is suggested to be between 0.05 and 0.1 pmol to achieve maximum ligation efficiency.
Over-expression of a transgene by replacing its endogenous promoter with a strong and continuous promoter, such as ubiquitin-10 promoter (UBQ10), and introducing additional copies of the gene is a wildly used approach to study its cellular functions and underlying working mechanism in cells15,32. However, unexpected down-regulation and strong inhibition of the gene expression sometimes was found as well33,34. The percentage of unpredictable gene silencing ranges from 2 to 100% under these situations33,35. Moreover, gene silencing has a higher chance to happen in expression of several genes simultaneously, transformation of high copies of DNA, and significant increases of gene transcriptional level9,33,24,35. In order to minimize the occurrence of gene silencing in the robust multiple fusion protein co-expression system, we chose different active promoters to drive the different protein expression cassettes when co-expressing multiple fusion proteins. Moreover, we avoided continually using the same promoter for different expression cassettes. In addition, another potential limitation of this protocol is the reduced efficiency of one-step DNA isothermal recombination caused by the increasing numbers of protein expression cassette for co-expression. Furthermore, the number of the expression cassettes that can be hosted in the final expression plasmid mainly relies on the replicon of the backbone plasmid24,25,35.
Taken together, we have developed a powerful system for co-expressing multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins conveniently in plants36. It overcomes the limitations of the classical methods and utilizes an optimized one-step DNA assembly reaction for DNA interlinkage and plasmid construction in a time-honored fashion. This technical advance has been validated by AtVSR2 and AtSCAMP4 co-expression in plant cells via both transient expression and genetic transformation. Therefore, it demonstrates a convincing and novel method for different aspects of scientific discoveries by co-expression of chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins in plants. Additionally, the concept and principle of co-expression of multiple chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins via a single expression vector are fully compatible with CRISPR-Cas9, RNAi, and protein over-expression technologies to study the functions and interactions of multiple genes in plants37,38,39.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank the members of the Wang laboratory for helpful discussions and comments. This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC, grant no. 31570001) and the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province and Guangzhou City (grant no. 2016A030313401 and 201707010024) to H.W.
KOD-FX Polymerase | TOYOBO | KFX-101 | |
Sma I | NEB | R0141L/S/V | |
Tris-HCl | BBI | A600194-0500 | |
MgCl2 | BBI | A601336-0500 | |
dNTP | NEB | #N0447V | |
DTT | BBI | C4H10O2S2 | |
PEG 8000 | BBI | A100159-0500 | |
NAD | BBI | A600641-0001 | |
T5 exonuclease | Epicentre | T5E4111K | |
Phusion High-Fidelity DNA polymerase | NEB | M0530S | |
Taq DNA polymerase | NEB | B9022S | |
Murashige and Skoog Basal Salt Mixture(MS) | Sigma | M5524 | |
Ethanol | BBI | A500737-0500 | |
Tween 20 | BBI | A600560-0500 | |
Agar | BBI | A505255-0250 | |
Spermidine | BBI | A614270-0001 | |
Gold microcarrier particles | Bio-Rad | 165-2263 | 1.0 µm |
CaCl2 | BBI | CD0050-500 | |
Macrocarriers | Bio-Rad | 165-2335 | |
Rupture disk | Bio-Rad | 165-2329 | |
Stopping screen | Bio-Rad | 165-2336 | |
Tryptone | OXOID | LP0042 | |
Yeast Extract | OXOID | LP0021 | |
NaCl | BBI | A610476-0001 | |
KCl | BBI | A610440-0500 | |
Glucose | BBI | A600219-0001 | |
Hygromycin B | Genview | AH169-1G | |
Wortmannin | Sigma | F9128 | |
Brefeldin A | Sigma | SML0975-5MG | |
Dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) | BBI | A600163-0500 | |
T100 Thermal Cycler | Bio-Rad | 1861096 | |
Growth chamber | Panasonic | MLR-352H-PC | |
PSD-1000/He particle delivery system | Bio-Rad | 165-2257 | |
Gene Pulser | Bio-Rad | 1652660 | |
Cuvette | Bio-Rad | 1652083 | |
Benchtop centrifuge | Eppendorf | 5427000097 | |
Confocal microscope | Zeiss | LSM 7 DUO (780&7Live) | |
NanoDrop 2000/2000c Spectrophotometers | Thermo Fisher Scientific | ND-2000 | |
EPS-300 Power Supply | Tanon | EPS 300 | |
Fluorescent microscope | Mshot | MF30 | |
Agrose | BBI | A600234 | |
Ampicillin | BBI | A100339 | |
Ethylene Diamine Tetraacetie Acid | BBI | B300599 |