We report on the development of five missense mutants and one recombination substrate of the b-glucuronidase (GUS)-encoding gene of Escherichia coli and their use for detecting mutation and recombination events in transgenic Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants by reactivation of GUS activity in clonal sectors. The missense mutants were designed to find C:Gto-T:A transitions in a symmetrical sequence context and are in that respect complementary to previously published GUS point mutants. Small peptide tags (hemagglutinin tag and Strep tag II) and green fluorescent protein were translationally fused to GUS, which offers possibilities to check for mutant GUS production levels. We show that spontaneous mutation and recombination events took place. Mutagenic treatment of the plants with ethyl methanesulfonate and ultraviolet-C increased the number of mutations, validating the use of these constructs to measure mutation and recombination frequencies in plants exposed to biotic or abiotic stress conditions, or in response to different genetic backgrounds. Plants were also subjected to heavy metals, methyl jasmonate, salicylic acid, and heat stress, for which no effect could be seen. Together with an ethyl methanesulfonate mutation induction level much higher than previously described, the need is illustrated for many available scoring systems in parallel. Because all GUS missense mutants were cloned in a bacterial expression vector, they can also be used to score mutation events in E. coli.
While the RNA interference (RNAi) mechanism has only been discovered a decade ago, RNAi is now often used to study gene function by sequence-specific knockdown of gene expression. However, it is still unknown whether introduction of silencing-inducing transgenes alters the transcriptome. To address this question, genome-wide transcriptional changes in silenced and non-silenced backgrounds were monitored through microarray analysis. No significant transcriptional changes were detected when compared to the non-silenced control. This result was confirmed by real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis of genes known to be involved in RNA silencing. In conclusion, introduction of silencing-inducing constructs does not affect expression of known transcripts in other genes than in those homologous to the targeted ones. Consequently, when gene function is studied by RNAi, the transcriptional changes detected will specifically be the result of knockout of the gene of interest, at least for the genes present on the array used in our study.
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