Protoplast Isolation, Transfection, and Gene Editing for Soybean (Glycine max )

Methods Mol Biol. 2022:2464:173-186. doi: 10.1007/978-1-0716-2164-6_13.

Abstract

Protoplast is a versatile system for conducting cell-based assays, analyzing diverse signaling pathways, studying functions of cellular machineries, and functional genomics screening. Protoplast engineering has become an important tool for basic plant molecular biology research and developing genome-edited crops. This system allows the direct delivery of DNA, RNA, or proteins into plant cells and provides a high-throughput system to validate gene-editing reagents. It also facilitates the delivery of homology-directed repair templates (donor molecules) into plant cells, enabling precise DNA edits in the genome. There is a great deal of interest in the plant community to develop these precise edits, as they may expand the potential for developing value-added traits which may be difficult to achieve by other gene-editing applications and/or traditional breeding alone. This chapter provides improved working protocols for isolating and transforming protoplast from immature soybean seeds with 44% of transfection efficiency validated by the green fluorescent protein reporter. We also describe a method for gene editing in soybean protoplasts using single guide RNA molecules.

Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; Green fluorescent protein (GFP); Immature seeds; Polyethylene glycol (PEG); Transformation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • CRISPR-Cas Systems / genetics
  • Gene Editing* / methods
  • Glycine max / genetics
  • Glycine max / metabolism
  • Plant Breeding
  • Protoplasts* / metabolism
  • Ribonucleoproteins / metabolism
  • Transfection

Substances

  • Ribonucleoproteins