Accurate measurement of transgene copy number in crop plants using droplet digital <scp>PCR</scp>

Ray Collier(Western Regional Research Center), Kasturi Dasgupta(University of California, Davis), Yanping Xing(Western Regional Research Center), Bryan Hernandez(University of California, Davis), Min Shao(University of California, Davis), Dominica Rohozinski(Plant Gene Expression Center), Emma Kovak(Plant Gene Expression Center), Jeanie Lin(Western Regional Research Center), Maria Luiza Peixoto de Oliveira(U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory), Ed Stover(U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory), Kent F. McCue(Western Regional Research Center), Frank G. Harmon(Plant Gene Expression Center), Ann E. Blechl(Western Regional Research Center), James G. Thomson(Western Regional Research Center), Roger Thilmony(Western Regional Research Center)
The Plant Journal
February 23, 2017
Cited by 110Open Access
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Abstract

Genetic transformation is a powerful means for the improvement of crop plants, but requires labor- and resource-intensive methods. An efficient method for identifying single-copy transgene insertion events from a population of independent transgenic lines is desirable. Currently, transgene copy number is estimated by either Southern blot hybridization analyses or quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) experiments. Southern hybridization is a convincing and reliable method, but it also is expensive, time-consuming and often requires a large amount of genomic DNA and radioactively labeled probes. Alternatively, qPCR requires less DNA and is potentially simpler to perform, but its results can lack the accuracy and precision needed to confidently distinguish between one- and two-copy events in transgenic plants with large genomes. To address this need, we developed a droplet digital PCR-based method for transgene copy number measurement in an array of crops: rice, citrus, potato, maize, tomato and wheat. The method utilizes specific primers to amplify target transgenes, and endogenous reference genes in a single duplexed reaction containing thousands of droplets. Endpoint amplicon production in the droplets is detected and quantified using sequence-specific fluorescently labeled probes. The results demonstrate that this approach can generate confident copy number measurements in independent transgenic lines in these crop species. This method and the compendium of probes and primers will be a useful resource for the plant research community, enabling the simple and accurate determination of transgene copy number in these six important crop species.


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