Arabidopsis can be stably transformed using Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transfer of T-DNA. We describe the generation of transgenic plants via root transformation in tissue culture, which can be useful for transforming sterile mutants. - [Read Root Transformation of Arabidopsis Protocol]
Protocol describes a split luciferase complementation assay that can be used to repetitively and noninvasively study the interaction of proteins in small living animals. After the expression of the appropriate vectors has been checked in cell culture in vivo, studies can be performed either by implanting transiently transfected cells for short-term analysis (maximum of 7 days), or with tumor models grown from tumor cells stably expressing the complete reporter system. - [Read Split Luciferase Complementation Assay for Studying Interaction of Proteins X and Y in Living Mice]
Stably transfected cells, generated in the first two stages of the procedure, are induced for expression of the target gene. After harvesting and lysis, the lysates are analyzed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. - [Read Tetracycline as Regulator of Inducible Gene Expression III]
The study of transient gene expression provides a useful complement to the study of stably transformed plants. Transient assays offer a quick method of testing the effects of genes, using either phenotypic, molecular, or biochemical readouts. Transient assays based on Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of leaf explants have been described for other plant species, but it is not known how well these assays work in Arabidopsis. - [Read Transient Expression in Protoplasts]