A tool for functional plant genomics: Chimeric RNA/DNA oligonucleotides cause in vivo gene-specific mutations

PR Beetham, PB Kipp, XL Sawycky… - Proceedings of the …, 1999 - National Acad Sciences
PR Beetham, PB Kipp, XL Sawycky, CJ Arntzen, GD May
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999National Acad Sciences
Self-complementary chimeric oligonucleotides (COs) composed of DNA and modified RNA
residues were evaluated as a means to (i) create stable, site-specific base substitutions in a
nuclear gene and (ii) introduce a frameshift in a nuclear transgene in plant cells. To
demonstrate the creation of allele-specific mutations in a member of a gene family, COs
were designed to target the codon for Pro-196 of SuRA, a tobacco acetolactate synthase
(ALS) gene. An amino acid substitution at Pro-196 of ALS confers a herbicide-resistance …
Self-complementary chimeric oligonucleotides (COs) composed of DNA and modified RNA residues were evaluated as a means to (i) create stable, site-specific base substitutions in a nuclear gene and (ii) introduce a frameshift in a nuclear transgene in plant cells. To demonstrate the creation of allele-specific mutations in a member of a gene family, COs were designed to target the codon for Pro-196 of SuRA, a tobacco acetolactate synthase (ALS) gene. An amino acid substitution at Pro-196 of ALS confers a herbicide-resistance phenotype that can be used as a selectable marker in plant cells. COs were designed to contain a 25-nt homology domain comprised of a five-deoxyribonucleotide region (harboring a single base mismatch to the native ALS sequence) flanked by regions each composed of 10 ribonucleotides. After recovery of herbicide-resistant tobacco cells on selective medium, DNA sequence analyses identified base conversions in the ALS gene at the codon for Pro-196. To demonstrate a site-specific insertion of a single base into a targeted gene, COs were used to restore expression of an inactive green fluorescent protein transgene that had been designed to contain a single base deletion. Recovery of fluorescent cells confirmed the deletion correction. Our results demonstrate the application of a technology to modify individual genetic loci by catalyzing either a base substitution or a base addition to specific nuclear genes; this approach should have great utility in the area of plant functional genomics.
National Acad Sciences