Phenotypic assay for excision of the maize controlling element Ac in tobacco

EMBO J. 1987 Jun;6(6):1547-54. doi: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1987.tb02399.x.

Abstract

We describe a phenotypic assay designed to detect excision of the maize controlling element Ac from a selectable marker gene, neomycin phosphotransferase II (NPT II). An NPT II gene which expresses kanamycin resistance in tobacco cells, and contains a unique restriction enzyme site in the untranslated leader region, was constructed. Ac, or a defective Ac element (Ac big up tri, open), was inserted into the leader region of this gene. The transposon insertions inactivated the NPT II gene as determined by transient NPT II expression assays. The three plasmids were inserted into the T DNA of Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti plasmid vectors, and transferred to tobacco protoplasts. The transformed protoplasts were selected with 100 or 200 microg/ml kanamycin. Protoplasts transformed by the NPT II gene interrupted by Ac formed 25% as many calli resistant to 100 or 200 microg/ml kanamycin as protoplasts transformed by the uninterrupted NPT II gene. Protoplasts transformed by the NPT II gene interrupted by Ac big up tri, open did not form any calli resistant to 200 microg/ml of kanamycin when transformed under similar conditions. Southern blot hybridization analyses of seven kanamycin-resistant calli or plants obtained after transformation by the NPT II gene interrupted by Ac revealed that in all cases Ac had excised, restoring the structure of the NPT II gene. This assay is therefore useful to monitor the activity of a transposable element such as Ac and to define the regions of this element involved in transposition activity.