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THE PLANT CELL, Vol 3, Issue 1 11-22, Copyright © 1991 by American Society of Plant Biologists
Ammonia-Regulated Expression of a Soybean Gene Encoding Cytosolic Glutamine Synthetase in Transgenic Lotus corniculatus
G. H. Miao, B. Hirel, M. C. Marsolier, R. W. Ridge and DPS. Verma
Department of Molecular Genetics and Biotechnology Center, The Ohio State University, 1060 Carmack Road, Columbus, Ohio 43210
A full-length cDNA clone encoding cytosolic glutamine synthetase (GS),
expressed in roots and root nodules of soybean, was isolated by direct
complementation of an Escherichia coli gln A- mutant. This sequence is
induced in roots by the availability of ammonia. A 3.5-kilobase promoter
fragment of a genomic clone ([lambda]GS15) corresponding to this cDNA was
isolated and fused with a reporter [[beta]-glucuronidase (GUS)] gene. The
GS-GUS fusion was introduced into a legume (Lotus corniculatus) and a
nonlegume (tobacco) plant by way of Agrobacterium-mediated transformations.
This chimeric gene was found to be expressed in a root-specific manner in
both tobacco and L. corniculatus, the expression being restricted to the
growing root apices and the vascular bundles of the mature root. Treatment
with ammonia increased the expression of this chimeric gene in the legume
background (i.e., L. corniculatus); however, no induction was observed in
tobacco roots. Histochemical localization of GUS activity in
ammonia-treated transgenic L. corniculatus roots showed a uniform
distribution across all cell types. These data suggest that the tissue
specificity of the soybean cytosolic GS gene is conserved in both tobacco
and L. corniculatus; however, in the latter case, this gene is ammonia
inducible. Furthermore, the ammonia-enhanced GS gene expression in L.
corniculatus is due to an increase in transcription. That this gene is
directly regulated by externally supplied or symbiotically fixed nitrogen
is also evident from the expression of GS-GUS in the infection zone,
including the uninfected cells, and the inner cortex of transgenic L.
corniculatus nodules, where a flux of ammonia is encountered by this
tissue. The lack of expression of GS-GUS in the outer cortex of the nodules
suggests that ammonia may not be able to diffuse outside the endodermis.
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