TY - JOUR
T1 - Combining the CowPEAsy Web Application With in Planta Agroinfiltration for Native Promoter Validation in Vigna unguiculata
AU - Jeong, Jooyeon
AU - Harris, Jake
AU - de Souza, Larissa Larocca
AU - Leonelli, Lauriebeth
N1 - This work is supported by the Realizing Increased Photosynthetic Efficiency (RIPE) project (Investment ID 57248), funded by Bill & Melinda Gates Agricultural Innovations. We would like to thank Dr. Alvaro Hernandez and Dr. Chris Wright with the UIUC Roy J. Carver Biotechnology Center for their help processing our RNA samples; Dr. Timothy Close from University of California at Riverside for providing the cowpea seed used in this study; Benjamin Haas for providing Agrobacterium strains; and Dr. Donald Ort for his unwavering support and for critical review of the manuscript. We also thank Rosie Metallo and Monte Flack for greenhouse support, Jing Dong for general lab and logistical support, Eary Atalay for plant care and sampling, and Rachel Dalke for help with sample processing. We would like to acknowledge Dr. Jeshurun Asher Tarun for his assistance in sample collection, Dr. Justin McGrath for advising on statistical analysis, and Dr. Matthew Brooks for advising on RNA-Seq analysis.
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) is an important protein source in Sub-Saharan Africa. Optimizing resilience and productivity through genetic engineering in cowpea has been slow due in part to a lack of defined species-specific regulatory elements and difficulty testing gene function within the native system. In many plant species, Agrobacterium-mediated transient gene expression is widely used to validate constructs before investing in transgenic lines, but its implementation in legumes has been challenging. In this study, we optimized an in planta agroinfiltration assay in trifoliate cowpea leaves using a betalain reporter. To demonstrate the “intact plant” aspect of this system, we used this assay to characterize drought-inducible promoters by challenging cowpea plants with drought stress. Subsequently, to identify and broaden the pool of native promoters known in cowpea, we developed a user-friendly web application, CowPEAsy, allowing users to interrogate gene expression from our canopy-level, developmental-series RNA-Seq data set. Finally, using CowPEAsy, we identified six promoters that showed constitutive expression across all conditions and verified these promoters with our transient system. This work provides an in vivo platform for preliminary validation of regulatory elements in cowpea and other legumes and enhances current genetic resources by identifying a suite of physiologically relevant promoters of varying strengths.
AB - Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) is an important protein source in Sub-Saharan Africa. Optimizing resilience and productivity through genetic engineering in cowpea has been slow due in part to a lack of defined species-specific regulatory elements and difficulty testing gene function within the native system. In many plant species, Agrobacterium-mediated transient gene expression is widely used to validate constructs before investing in transgenic lines, but its implementation in legumes has been challenging. In this study, we optimized an in planta agroinfiltration assay in trifoliate cowpea leaves using a betalain reporter. To demonstrate the “intact plant” aspect of this system, we used this assay to characterize drought-inducible promoters by challenging cowpea plants with drought stress. Subsequently, to identify and broaden the pool of native promoters known in cowpea, we developed a user-friendly web application, CowPEAsy, allowing users to interrogate gene expression from our canopy-level, developmental-series RNA-Seq data set. Finally, using CowPEAsy, we identified six promoters that showed constitutive expression across all conditions and verified these promoters with our transient system. This work provides an in vivo platform for preliminary validation of regulatory elements in cowpea and other legumes and enhances current genetic resources by identifying a suite of physiologically relevant promoters of varying strengths.
KW - CowPEAsy
KW - RNA-sequencing
KW - agroinfiltration
KW - canopy
KW - constitutive promoters
KW - cowpea
KW - drought-inducible promoters
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85217757841&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1111/pce.15431
DO - 10.1111/pce.15431
M3 - Article
C2 - 39948050
AN - SCOPUS:85217757841
SN - 0140-7791
VL - 48
SP - 4301
EP - 4311
JO - Plant, Cell and Environment
JF - Plant, Cell and Environment
IS - 6
ER -