Method for improving rice yield and/or rice blast resistance and protein used thereof
11692200 · 2023-07-04
Assignee
Inventors
- Li Li (Changsha, CN)
- Yixing Li (Changsha, CN)
- Dabing Zhang (Changsha, CN)
- Mudan Qiu (Changsha, CN)
- Tiankang Wang (Changsha, CN)
- Shufeng Song (Changsha, CN)
Cpc classification
C12N15/8261
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/113
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02A40/146
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
The invention discloses a method for improving rice yield and a protein used thereof. The invention provides a method for cultivating the target rice, comprising the following steps of inhibiting the activity of RAY1 protein in original rice to obtain target rice; compared with the original rice, the target rice shows higher yield and/or larger grain size and/or stronger resistance to rice blast and/or higher plant height and/or longer stem internode length; the RAY1 protein is a protein composed of an amino acid sequence shown as SEQ ID No. 1 in a sequence list. The invention uses CRISPR/Cas9 technology to realize site-directed editing rice RAY1 gene, through knocking out rice RAY1 gene by frameshift mutation, the protein RAY1 is inactivated, and a new generation of rice germplasm with significantly improved yield is obtained.
Claims
1. A method for producing a rice variety, the method comprising: transforming a sgRNA expression vector into an original rice variety using a CRISPR/Cas9 method to produce a target rice variety, wherein the sgRNA expression vector comprises a target sequence as set forth in SEQ ID NO: 8, wherein the transformation causes a loss of function in a gene encoding the RAY1 protein of SEQ ID NO:1; wherein said gene has the polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO:2 or SEQ ID NO:3; and wherein the target rice variety exhibits an increase in an attribute selected from the group consisting of yield, grain size, resistance to rice blast, height, and internode lengthening relative to the original rice variety.
2. A rice plant or a rice plant part with a loss of function in a gene encoding the RAY1 protein of SEQ ID NO:1.
3. The rice plant or rice plant part according to claim 2, wherein the gene encoding the RAY1 protein is: 1) the DNA molecule of SEQ ID NO: 2; or 2) the DNA molecule of SEQ ID NO: 3.
4. The plant or plant part according to claim 2, wherein the rice plant part comprises a plant cell, a plant tissue or plant organs.
5. The plant or plant part according to claim 4, wherein the plant organs comprise seed, leaf, flower, fruit, stem, or root.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(14) The following examples facilitate a better understanding of the invention but do not limit it. The experimental procedures in the following embodiments, if not specified, are conventional. The test materials used in the following embodiments, if not specified, are commercially available.
(15) The expression vector pYLgRNA-U3 is described in the literature “Shi Jiangwei, Li Yixing, Song Shufeng, Qiu Mudan, Deng Yao, Li Li. Targeted Editing of Rice Panicle Development Gene Osal Mediated by CRISPR/Cas9 System. HYBRID RICE, 2017, 32(3): 74-78.”, the public can obtain it from the Hunan Hybrid Rice Research Center. The biological material is only used for repeating the relevant experiments of the present invention and cannot be used for other purposes.
(16) The expression vector pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MTmono is described in the literature “Shi Jiangwei, Li Yixing, Song Shufeng, Qiu Mudan, Deng Yao, Li Li. Targeted Editing of Rice Panicle Development Gene Osal Mediated by CRISPR/Cas9 System. HYBRID RICE, 2017, 32(3): 74-78.”, the public can obtain it from the Hunan Hybrid Rice Research Center. The biological material is only used for repeating the relevant experiments of the present invention and cannot be used for other purposes.
(17) The rice variety Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica (NIP) is disclosed in the literature “MP, A Robust CRISPR/Cas9 System for Convenient, High-Efficiency Multiplex Genome Editing in Monocot and Dicot Plants. Mol Plant. 2015 Aug. 3; 8(8):1274-84. Doi: 10.1016/j.molp.2015.04.007. Epub 2015 Apr. 24.”, the public can obtain it from the Hunan Hybrid Rice Research Center. The biological material is only used for repeating the relevant experiments of the present invention and cannot be used for other purposes.
(18) The Physiological races ZA18, ZB10, ZB133, ZB20, ZC2, ZC10 and ZG1 of Magnaporthe oryzae are disclosed in the literature: “Characterization of molecular identity and pathogenicity of rice blast fungus in Hunan province of China. Plant Disease, 2017, 101(4): 557-561.”, the public can obtain it from the Hunan Hybrid Rice Research Center. The biological material is only used for repeating the relevant experiments of the present invention and cannot be used for other purposes.
Example 1. Cloning and Analysis of RAY1 Protein-Encoding Genes
(19) PCR amplification was performed by using cDNA of Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica as template, RAY1FL-F(ATGGAGATGCACGAGTGCTG) C SEQ ID No.6) and RAY1FL-R(ATGGAGATGCACGAGTGCTG) (SEQ ID No.7) as primers. The amplification product was a DNA fragment of about 1300 bp in size and the results are shown in
Example 2. Selection of Rice RAY1 Gene Target Site and Construction of Knockout Vector
(20) I. Design of Target Sequences
(21) In the CDS region of RAY1 gene, the sequence that the 20.sup.th bases upstream of NGG was determined as A and the sequence composed of 19 bases downstream of the “A” was selected as the target site (since the transcriptional initiation base of the promoter in the intermediate vector pYLgRNA-U3 is A, which is the same as the 20.sup.th base upstream of NGG, therefore the remaining 19 bases are regarded as the target sites to be selected) to obtain the sequence of the target site: TCGTCGAGAGCTACGAGAT (SEQ ID No.8). It locates on the 3.sup.rd exon of gDNA of the RAY1 gene, and particularly was a DNA molecule shown in positions from 864 to 882 of SEQ ID No. 2 in the attached sequence list, namely the DNA molecule shown in positions from 653 to 671 of SEQ ID No. 3 in the sequence list.
(22) II. Construction of Recombinant Plasmids
(23) 1. Construction of Intermediate Vector pYLgRNA-U3-RAY1
(24) (1) Design and Synthesis of RAY1 Target Site Linker Primer
(25) After the target site sequence was determined, adding GGCA before the 5′ of the positive-sense strand and AAAC before the 5′ of the antisense strand of the target sequence to obtain the target site linker primer. The target site linker primer sequence is as follows:
(26) TABLE-US-00001 RAY1-Cas9-F: (SEQ ID No. 9) GGCATCGTCGAGAGCTACGAGAT RAY1-Cas9-R: (SEQ ID No. 10) AAACATCTCGTAGCTCTCGACGA
(27) (2) Preparation of RAY1 Target Site Linker
(28) Diluting RAY1 target site linker primers RAY1-Cas9-F and RAY1-Cas9-R with ddH.sub.2O to obtain mother liquor with the concentration of 10 μM, respectively taking 10 μL to 80 μL of deionized water to obtain a final volume of 100 μL, fully mixing uniformly, carrying out heat shock at 90° C. for 30 s, and moving to room temperature to finish annealing; RAY1 target site linker, labeled RAY1-Cas9, was obtained.
(29) (3) Construction of RAY1 Intermediate Vector
(30) Uniformly mixing 1 μL of pYLgRNA-U3 vector plasmid (shown in
(31) 2. Construction of Recombinant Vector pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MT-RAY1
(32) (1) Amplification of RAY1 Intermediate Vector Expression Cassette
(33) PCR amplification was performed by using intermediate vector pYLgRNA-U3-RAY1 as template and Uctcg-B1 (TTCAGAGGTCTCTCTCGCACTGGAATCGGCAGCAAAGG) (SEQ ID No.11) and gRcggt-BL (AGCGTGGGTCTCGACCGGGTCCATCCACTCCAAGCTC) (SEQ ID No.12) as primers to obtain the amplified product.
(34) The amplified product was subjected to gel electrophoresis and confirmed to be a DNA molecule of about 550 bp in size (as shown in
(35) (2) Construction and Transformation of RAY1 Site-Directed Editing Final Vector
(36) The RAY1 gene site-directed editing final vector was obtained by digesting and linking the gene-editing vector pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MTmono (shown in
(37) (3) Detection of Recombinant Vector pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MT-RAY1
(38) Randomly picking up four monoclonal colonies which are cultured overnight in step (2) and named RAY1-cas9-1, RAY1-cas9-2, RAY1-cas9-3, and RAY1-cas9-4 respectively, and carrying out PCR detection on the four monoclonal colonies by using pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MT vector detection primers SP1 (CCCGACATAGATGCAATAACTTC) (SEQ ID No.13) and SP2 (GCGCGGTGTCATCTATGTTACT) (SEQ ID No.14). The PCR amplified product was subjected to gel electrophoresis, and the electrophoresis results (shown in
(39) The plasmid DNA of RAY1-cas9-2 monoclonal was extracted and sequenced. The sequencing results show that: the DNA fragment shown in SEQ ID No. 5 in the sequence list successfully replaces the DNA fragment between the two Bsa I digestion sites on the gene editing vector pYLCRISPR/Cas9-Mtmon. This indicated that the expression cassette containing U3 promoter and sgRNA encoding gene was successfully constructed into pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MTmono, i.e. RAY1 genome site-directed editing vector was successfully constructed to obtain the recombinant vector pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MT-RAY1.
Example 3. Breeding of Target Rice Using Recombinant Plasmids
(40) I. The Recombinant Vector pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MT-RAY1 was Transformed into Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica
(41) Using the method of Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation of rice callus, the Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica callus was transformed by pYLCRISPR/Cas9-MT-RAY1, and the positive mutants were screened and identified.
(42) II. Detection of Site-Directed Editing
(43) The positive mutants were detected by PCR and the homozygous mutants of three mutation types were obtained by sequencing and named RAY1-46, RAY1-47, and RAY1-48 respectively. The sequencing results showed (shown in
(44) III. Phenotype Identification
(45) Normally cultivating the mutant RAY1-46, the mutant RAY1-47, and the mutant RAY1-48, respectively harvesting the T.sub.1 generation seeds of the mutant RAY1-46, the mutant RAY1-47, and the mutant RAY1-48, planting the T.sub.1 generation seeds, and screening out a T.sub.1 generation rice strain which has no exogenous vector and is stable in heredity at the seedling stage. The T.sub.1 generation rice lines of the screened mutant RAY1-46, mutant RAY1-47, and mutant RAY1-48 were designated as L-46, L-47, and L-48, respectively. Rice lines L-46, L-47, and L-48 and wild type Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica were planted in plots (control), and 32 rice plants were planted in each plot, and the area of each plot was 1.7 square meters.
(46) The phenotypes of mutant T.sub.1 generation plants and wild type plants were compared. Results as shown in Table 1 and
(47) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 1 Phenotypic comparison of mutant T.sub.1 generation plants and wild type plants Phenotype NIP L-46 L-47 L-48 Plant height (cm) 86.34 ± 1.85 97.40 ± 0.42** 96.83 ± 0.72** 96.24 ± 0.67** Panicle length (cm) 21.27 ± 0.75 25.12 ± 0.74** 25.85 ± 0.64** 24.89 ± 0.37** Internode I length (cm) 35.51 ± 0.81 37.10 ± 1.44* 37.51 ± 0.98* 37.14 ± 1.12* Internode II length (cm) 15.84 ± 0.97 18.44 ± 1.06** 17.98 ± 1.02** 18.09 ± 0.89* Internode III length (cm) 9.83 ± 0.48 12.73 ± 1.21* 11.98 ± 0.89* 12.64 ± 0.69* Internode IV length (cm) 2.05 ± 0.50 3.09 ± 1.32 2.36 ± 1.62 2.17 ± 1.06 Total number of grains 89.8 ± 10.02 146.80 ± 9.34** 138.67 ± 10.23** 143.69 ± 10.02** per panicle Primary branch number 8.93 ± 0.44 12.60 ± 0.44** 13.69 ± 0.79** 12.04 ± 0.68** Grain length (mm) 5.06 ± 0.03 5.51 ± 0.09** 5.46 ± 0.07** 5.34 ± 0.11** Grain width (mm) 2.75 ± 0.09 2.7 ± 0.04 2.71 ± 0.06 2.69 ± 0.06 Grain length-width ratio 1.84 ± 0.05 2.04 ± 0.01** 2.01 ± 0.04** 1.98 ± 0.06** 1000-grain weight (g) 25.15 ± 0.78 25.63 ± 0.04 25.37 ± 0.34 25.69 ± 0.61 Note: *p < 0.05 represents a significant difference from the Oryza Sativa L. spp. japonica, and **p < 0.01 represents a very significant difference from the Oryza Sativa L. spp. japonica.
(48) The yield of mutant T.sub.1 generation plants and wild type Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica rice plants were compared. Results as shown in Table 2 and
(49) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 2 Yield Comparison of Mutant T1 generation plants and wild type plants Phenotype NIP L-46 L-47 L-48 Total grain weight per plant (g) 21.29 ± 1.32 24.13 ± 1.36** 23.89 ± 1.98* 23.42 ± 1.11* Total grain weight (yield) in the 681.32 ± 62.32 749.44 ± 59.35* 764.48 ± 74.67* 743.04 ± 55.52* plot (32 plants) (g) Note: *p < 0.05 represents a significant difference from the Oryza Sativa L. spp. japonica, and **p < 0.01 represents a very significant difference from the Oryza Sativa L. spp. japonica.
(50) IV. Identifying the Resistance of the Mutant to the Rice Blast
(51) 1. Preliminary Detection of Resistance to Rice Blast
(52) The rice blast physiological races ZA18, ZB10, ZB13, ZB20, ZC2, ZC10 and ZG1 were inoculated with rice mutant lines L-46, L-47 and L-48, respectively, and the resistance spectrum of rice blast was determined. At the same time, wild-type Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica and co39, a type with high susceptibility to rice blast, were used as controls. The specific methods are as follows: different physiological races were prepared into spore suspension with 5×10.sup.4 spores/ml by using 5‰ gelatin solution, and the spore suspension was evenly sprayed on the leaf surface of rice seedlings at two-leaf or three-leaf stage with a spray gun. Then the inoculated rice seedlings were cultured in the dark for 24 h, and then transferred to cultivate in the environment with alternating light and dark (12 h of light and 12 h of darkness), in which the ambient temperature was 27° C., the relative humidity is 90%. Each mutant and control was inoculated with 10 rice plants and the experiment was repeated three times. The incidence was investigated one week later (see Table 3 for evaluation criteria). The disease index of mutant and wild type rice plants was calculated according to the incidence.
(53) The rice seedling stage leaf disease index formula is as follows: disease index=Σ (number of diseased plants at each stage×corresponding stage)/(total number of investigated plants×9)×100.
(54) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 3 Criteria for evaluating the incidence of rice plants Resistance Stages Incidence High resistance (hR) 0 Disease-free Anti (R) 1 Needle size brown spots Anti (R) 2 Larger brown spots with a diameter smaller than 1 mm Moderate resistance (mR) 3 Gray plaque round to oval with brown margin and diameter in 1 mm~2 mm Moderate resistance (mR) 4 Typical spindle-shaped plaque, more than 2 mm in length, usually confined between two veins, with a damaged area of less than 2.0% of the leaf area Moderate resistance (mR) 5 Typical spindle-shaped plaque with damage area greater than or equal to 2.0% to less than 10.0% of leaf area Susceptible (S) 6 Typical spindle-shaped plaque with damage area greater than or equal to 10.0% to less than 25.0% of leaf area Susceptible (S) 7 Typical spindle-shaped plaque with damage area greater than or equal to 25.0% to less than 50.0% of leaf area High susceptible (hS) 8 Typical spindle-shaped plaque with damage area greater than or equal to 50.0% to less than 75.0% of leaf area High susceptible (hS) 9 Typical spindle-shaped plaque with damage area greater than or equal to 75.0% to less than or equal to 100.0% of leaf area
(55) As shown in tables 4, 5, and
(56) TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 4 Investigation results on the incidence of mutant T1 generation rice plants and wild-type rice plants Physiological Rice race co39 NIP L-46 L-47 L-48 ZA18 7 (24 plants); 7 (16 plants); 0 (30 plants) 0 (30 plants) 0 (30 plants) 6 (6 plants) 6 (6 plants); 0 (8 plants) ZB10 7 (22 plants); 7 (4 plants); 0 (30 plants) 2 (3 plants) 0 (30 plants) 6 (8 plants) 6 (18 plants); 0 (27 plants) 0 (8 plants) ZB13 7 (27 plants); 5 (8 plants); 0 (30 plants) 3 (2 plants); 2 (3 plants); 5 (3 plants) 4 (11 plants); 0 (28 plants) 0 (27 plants) 0 (11 plants) ZB20 7 (24 plants); 7 (15 plants); 2 (4 plants); 4 (3 plants); 2 (3 plants); 6 (6 plants) 6 (7 plants); 0 (26 plants) 0 (27 plants) 0 (27 plants) 5 (3 plants); 0 (5 plants) ZC2 7 (22 plants); 6 (9 plants); 0 (30 plants) 0 (30 plants) 0 (30 plants) 6 (8 plants) 5(13 plants) 2 (5 plants); 0 (3 plants) ZC10 7 (27 plants); 5 (13 plants); 0 (30 plants) 0 (30 plants) 0 (30 plants) 5 (3 plants) 4 (8 plants); 3 (6 plants); 0 (3 plants) ZG1 7 (26 plants); 6 (13 plants); 0 (30 plants) 0 (30 plants) 0 (30 plants) 4 (4 plants) 5 (8 plants); 4 (4 plants); 0 (5 plants)
(57) TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 5 Statistical table of disease index of mutant T1 generation rice plants and wild type rice plants Rice Physiological race co39 NIP L-46 L-47 L-48 ZA18 75.6 54.8 0 0 0 ZB10 74.8 50.4 0 2.2 0 ZB13 75.6 31.1 0 2.2 2.2 ZB20 75.6 60.0 3.0 4.4 2.2 ZC2 74.8 47.8 0 0 0 ZC10 75.6 42.6 0 0 0 ZG1 73.3 49.6 0 0 0
(58) 2. Analysis of Expression Characteristics of Rice Blast Resistance-Related Genes OsPR1a, OsPR10, PBZ1 in Strains L-46, L-47 and L-48
(59) The total RNA was extracted from the leaf sheath and leaves of rice varieties Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica, L-46, L-47, and L-48 respectively, the residual DNA was removed by DNAseDNase I treatment and reverse transcribed into cDNA by OligdT. Using the cDNA as a template, qRT-PCR amplification was performed with primers PR1a-QF/QR (PR1a-QF: CGTCTTCATCACCTGCAACT (SEQ ID No.22) and PR1a-QR: TGTCCATACATGCATAAACACG (SEQ ID No.23)), PR10-QF/QR (PR10-QF: CTCATCCTCGACGGCTACTT (SEQ ID No.24) and PR10-QR: ATCAGGAAGCAGCAATACGG (SEQ ID No.25)), and PBZ1-QF/QR (PBZ1-QF: GGGTGTGGGAAGCACATACA (SEQ ID No.26) and PBZ1-QR: CCTCGAGCACATCCGACTTT (SEQ ID No.27)) to detect the expression of rice blast resistance related genes OsPR1a, OsPR10 and PBZ1 in Oryza sativa L. spp. japonica, L-46, L-47, and L-48. ACTIN was used as an internal reference, and the primers used were ACTIN-QF (ACTIN-QF: TGCTATGTACGTCGCCATCCAG) (SEQ ID No.28) and ACTIN-QR (ACTIN-QR: AATGAGTAACCACGCTCCGTCA) (SEQ ID No.29).
(60) Results as shown in
INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS
(61) The invention uses CRISPR/Cas9 technology to achieve site-directed editing rice RAY1 gene, through knocking out rice RAY1 gene by frameshift mutation, the protein RAY1 is inactivated, and a new generation of rice germplasm with significantly improved yield and disease resistance are obtained. Compared with the wild type control, the RAY1 site-directed edited lines had higher yield, larger rice grains, longer rice panicles, more panicles, more primary branches, and stronger resistance to rice blast. The invention can be used for improving the yield of rice and the disease resistance to rice blast and provides material for developing new varieties with high yield and disease resistance.