A sandwich Ct real-time PCR (SC-PCR) was used to detect single-copy T-DNA plants by visualizing Ct patterns of T-DNA and two reference amplicons. Detecting the T-DNA copy number directly by visualizing the Ct pattern eliminates the errors introduced by multistep calculations of relative Ct values. Using SC-PCR, we found that single-copy T-DNA integrations were more frequent in transgenic T Arabidopsis without a vector backbone. On the basis of this phenomenon, we combined the negative screen of the vector backbone and SC-PCR to efficiently identify single-copy T-DNA plants. We found that T-DNA copy number detection was underestimated in transgenic plants containing inverted T-DNA repeats due to hairpin structures formed during PCR, indicating that PCR-based methods for detecting T-DNA copy number should be reevaluated. We solved this problem by releasing T-DNA from the complex structures using restriction enzymes before performing SC-PCR. We also demonstrated that latent Agrobacterium contamination in the T transgenic Arabidopsis generated by the floral dip method was exceedingly low and may not affect the detection of T-DNA copy number. Overall, our method provides a whole-set procedure for detecting single-copy T-DNA plants more efficiently than other screening methods including Southern blotting.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2022.111204 | DOI Listing |
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