Published: Vol 4, Iss 1, Jan 5, 2014 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.1019 Views: 12696
Reviewed by: Anonymous reviewer(s)
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Abstract
Biolistic bombardment is based on coating of tungsten or gold particles with DNA and delivery of these “biobullets” into living plant cells under high pressure (Sudowe and Reske-Kunz, 2013). This method enables transient expression of a DNA construct encoding fusion of the protein of interest to a fluorescence protein e.g. GFP for microscopic approaches. Usually it is performed for plants for which infiltration with Agrobacterium tumefaciens does not work efficiently e.g. model plant Arabidopsis thaliana (Ueki et al., 2009). Although transfection rate is relatively low, it is still sufficient to analyze subcellular localization of the protein of interest under a fluorescence microscope. Here we present the protocol that was optimized for Nicotiana benthamiana and also successfully applied to Phaseolus vulgaris (Giska et al., 2013).
Background
Materials and Reagents
Equipment
Procedure
Recipes
Acknowledgments
This protocol is based on the procedure described by Giska et al. (2013).
References
Article Information
Copyright
© 2014 The Authors; exclusive licensee Bio-protocol LLC.
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Readers should cite both the Bio-protocol article and the original research article where this protocol was used:
Category
Plant Science > Plant transformation > Bombardment
Plant Science > Plant cell biology > Cell imaging
Molecular Biology > DNA > Transformation
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