A new rapid transformation system for Aspergillus niger that uses electroporation to render intact germinating conidia permeable to DNA is described. The transformant colonies appeared earlier than transformants obtained by the protoplast-forming method. Without pretreatment of the conidia the transformation frequencies were 1.2 colonies per micrograms of integrative vector and 100 colonies per micrograms of plasmid DNA. When the conidia were treated with a dilute solution of fungal cell wall lytic enzyme, the frequency of transformation was increased by approx. 2-fold when using two vectors. Southern blot analysis of genomic DNA and restriction endonuclease-digested DNA from a random sample of transformants showed homologous and nonhomologous integration of the integrative vector into the genome, as is also observed with the protoplast-forming method. In transformation with the plasmid vector, the transformant DNA was shown to be mostly maintained in free form with minimal integration into the chromosome when transformed by either intact electroporation or the conventional method.
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