This presentation is about chloroplast transformation, the importance of chloroplast transformation on nucleus transformation and strategies for making marker-free transplastomic plant
Presented by- MD JAKIR HOSSAIN
Doctoral Research Scholar
Department of Agricultural Genetic Engineering ,
Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Technologies,
Nigde Omer Halisdemir University, Turkey
E. Mail- mjakirbotru@gmail.com
This presentation is about chloroplast transformation, the importance of chloroplast transformation on nucleus transformation and strategies for making marker-free transplastomic plant
Presented by- MD JAKIR HOSSAIN
Doctoral Research Scholar
Department of Agricultural Genetic Engineering ,
Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Technologies,
Nigde Omer Halisdemir University, Turkey
E. Mail- mjakirbotru@gmail.com
Introduction
History
Genetic mapping
DNA Markers
Physical mapping
Importance
Drawback
Conclusion
References
uses genetic techniques to construct maps showing the positions of genes and other sequence features on a genome.
Genetic techniques include cross-breeding experiments or, in the case of humans, the examination of family histories (pedigrees).
A concise and well fabricated presentation the current techniques used for plant genome editing including CRISPER/cas9 system, TALENS, TELES, ZINC FINGER NUCLEASES(ZFN), HEJ (homologous endjoing) and many other high throughout techniques along references.
introduction
What is virus
What is virus resistance plant
History
Gene use for develop virus resistance plant
Coat protein gene
cDNA of satellite RNA
Defective viral genome
Antisense RNA approach and
Ribozyme – mediated protection
conclusion
References
Introduction
History
Genetic mapping
DNA Markers
Physical mapping
Importance
Drawback
Conclusion
References
uses genetic techniques to construct maps showing the positions of genes and other sequence features on a genome.
Genetic techniques include cross-breeding experiments or, in the case of humans, the examination of family histories (pedigrees).
A concise and well fabricated presentation the current techniques used for plant genome editing including CRISPER/cas9 system, TALENS, TELES, ZINC FINGER NUCLEASES(ZFN), HEJ (homologous endjoing) and many other high throughout techniques along references.
introduction
What is virus
What is virus resistance plant
History
Gene use for develop virus resistance plant
Coat protein gene
cDNA of satellite RNA
Defective viral genome
Antisense RNA approach and
Ribozyme – mediated protection
conclusion
References
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Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
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2. Chloroplast Genome
Engineering
Biology and Biotechnology
Seyed Javad Davarpanah
Faculty of Bioscience, Shahid Beheshti University
June 19, 2010
3. Chloroplast genetic system
A 50-290 kb double stranded circular molecule
A pair of 20-30 kb inverted repeat (IR) sequence
Prokaryotic protein synthesis machinery
100 chloroplasts per mesophyll cell and 100 genome
copies per chloroplast (100 x 100 = 10,000 genome
copies per cell)
6. Minicircle Structure in Dinoflagellates
Circular DNA molecules ranging in
size between 2.2-3.8 kb
Around 14 genes –Mostly one gene in a
minicircle (one gene - one circle or two
genes - one circle )
250-500 bp non-coding core region
Gene (s) always in the same orientation Typical coding minicircles
regarding the core region
Core region may function as replication
origin or promoter
Other Minicircles:
Empty, Chimeric minicircles, Jumbled minicircles and Microcircles
7. Nuclear transformation
Biosafety
risk of gene flow to the environment
superweed production
pollen poisoning for non-target insects
Stability of expression of transgene
transgene silencing (TGS) and (PTGS)
8. Chloroplast transformation
Expression level of foreign genes is higher than nuclear
transformation; 5–80 (Chlamydomonas) or 500–10,000 (N
icotiana) DNA copies per cell
Multiple genes can be introduced as an operon
No risk of transgene escape – environmentally friendly
No position effect
No transgene silencing
Sequestration of foreign proteins in the organelle
9. Advantages of transplastomic plants
Transgenic pollen toxic to non-target insects of 60 major crop
plants, only 11 have no wild relatives
No gene escape to WT (exceptions being alfalfa and possibly
rice and pea => No WT insensitiveness to herbicides
Introgression of WT genes to transplastomic is in general in
unusual
introgression of the common weed Raphanus raphanistrum
into Brassica napus (oilseed rape) occurred at higher rates
than the reciprocal cross of Brassica napus pollen into
Raphanus raphanistrum.
10. Stable transplastomic plants
• Transformation of plastids has already been achieved for
tobacco , Arabidopsis, soybean , cotton, lettuce, cauliflower,
poplar and potato
• The cereal crops rice, maize and wheat continue to be
recalcitrant
• plastid-mediated molecular pharming will lead to the
biofabrication of a range of biopolymers and pharmaceutical
proteins
12. Basics of Chloroplast Transformation
Chloroplast Transgenic Production Homologous Recombination Homoplasmy Process
13. Chloroplast transformation techniques
Biolistic delivery systems
Polyethylene glycol (PEG) treatment of protoplast
• For unknown reasons, the technique has a lower success rate
than biolistic bombardment
• long selection times required after initial DNA delivery
• technically demanding and requires specialized tissue culture
skills
Femtoinjection technique: injection of DNA material into
chloroplasts using syringes with extremely narrow tips
Agrobacterium-mediated plastid transformation:
• Two preliminary and thus far unconfirmed reports
15. Advantages and disadvantages of biolistic
method
Relatively high efficiency
Technical simplicity
Potential for mechanical shearing of large plasmids
during particle preparation or delivery
Chemical attack by tungsten (a reactive transition metal)
which can promote modifications or cleavage of DNA
16. Advantages of femtoinjection technique
Cells survive the injection
Transformed cell can be spotted easily
Cellular context remains intact
• The fate of the inserted gene or gene products to
be followed.
17. Galinstan Expansion Femtosyringe (GEF)
Chl autofluorescence GFP fluorescence overlay of both channels
marginal mesophyll cells of tobacco leaf
Ex: Phormidium laminosum, bla gene: spectinomycin
gfp gene under the control of a chloroplast rRNA promoter
18. Reporter gene strategies
• Gene coding for the green fluorescent protein (GFP)
• Resistance genes against lethal agents (e.g. spectinomycin and
streptomycin)
• disadvantage of resistance marker genes: transformed cells must be
traced by stringent methods
• Vectors carrying the bacterial gene aphA-6, coding for an
aminoglycoside phosphotransferase that detoxifies kanamycin or
amikacin
• FLARE-S system, the aminoglycoside 3′′ adenyltransferase (aadA
gene), which confers resistance against spectomycin and
streptomycin,is translationally fused to the gfp gene of Aequorea
victoria
• In the case of an optical marker like GFP, difficulties arise with the
regeneration of a plant from a single GFP-expressing cell
Reporter gene strategy: genetic contamination problems
19. Reasons to produce marker-free
transplastomic plants
Potential metabolic burden imposed by high levels of
marker gene expression
homoplastomic state :the marker gene product 5% to 18% of
the total cellular soluble protein
Shortage of primary plastid selective markers
only genes that confer resistance to spectinomycin and
streptomycin (aadA) or kanamycin (neo or kan and aphA-6
Opposition to having any unnecessary DNA in
transgenic crops, especially antibiotic resistance
genes
20. Approaches for production of marker free
transplastomic plants
Homology-based excision via directly repeated
sequences
Excision by phage site-specific recombinanses
Transient co-integration of the marker gene
Cotransformation-segregation approach
21. Homology-based excision of Marker gene
via directly repeated sequences
Recognition sequence of site-specific recombinanse
23. Marker gene excision by phage site-
specific recombinanses
1-transplastomics carry marker gene flanked by two
directly oriented recombinase target sites
2-removal of marker gene by introduction of a gene
encoding a plastid-targeted recombinase in the plant
nucleus
• recombinases (Cre and Int)
• absence of homology between the attB and attP sites
and the absence of pseudo-att sites in ptDNA=> Int
better than Cre
26. New marker genes applying RNA editing
in plastids
conversion of specific C nucleotides to U in plastids
Mediated by a nuclear encoded complex
Some plastid genes (e.g., psbL, ndhD, rpl2) the start codon is
encoded as ACG and must be edited to AUG
=>constructing new selectable marker gene only expressible
when integrated into the plastome
27. Comparison of Systems for Production of Heterologous Protein
System Overall Production scale-up Product Glycosylation Contamination Storage cost
cost timescale capacity quality risks
Bacteria Low Short High Low None Endotoxins Moderate
Yeast Medium Medium High Medium Incorrect Low risk Moderate
Mammalian High Long Very low Very Correct Viruses, prions Expensive
cell culture high and oncogenic
DNA
Transgenic High Very long Low Very Correct Viruses, prions Expensive
animals high and oncogenic
DNA
Plant cell Medium Medium Medium High Minor Low risk Moderate
cultures differences
Transgenic Very low Long Very High Minor Low risk Inexpensive
plants high differences
29. Production of various protein classes
• expression of genes coding for insecticidal proteins or
allowing for herbicide resistance
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxin: the gene (cry1A)
coding for the Bt toxin Cry1A(c)
cry2Aa2 Bt gene
Nucleus: suboptimal production of toxin=> toxin
resistance
Chloroplast:100% mortality of resistant insects
20-30 fold higher Bt prototoxin production
30. Oxyfluorfen resistance
• plastomic insertion of the Bacillus subtilis gene
encoding protoporphyrinogen oxidase (protox)
• a diphenyl herbicide resistant
• higher degree of oxyfluorfen resistance
31. Glyphosate resistance
• EPSPS: a nuclear encoded, plastid targeted enzyme
• Integration of the petunia EPSPS (5-enol-pyruvyl
shikimate-3-phosphate synthase) gene into the
tobacco plastome
• Overproduction of EPSPS
• Glyphosate resistance
32. • production of a human somatropin in a soluble biologically
active form
• biodegradable protein-based polymers in tobacco
• introduce into plants a set of bacterial genes for the
biosynthesis of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs)
• PHAs: a class of biodegradable polymers
• fermentative production has proven too costly for large-scale
production
• Targeting of PHA biosynthetic genes from Ralstonia eutropha
• Proteins involved in the metabolic pathways of plastids
Rubisco, Reaction Center proteins
rbcL of Synechococcus: mRNA production but no protein or
enzyme activity
33. Engineering of plastid metabolism
Site-directed mutagenesis of Rubisco
o deletion of rbcL, replacement with chimeric plastid targeted LSU
o rbcL replacement with cyanobacterial
homologues: no translation
Plastid reverse genetics
• function of several chloroplastic open reading frames (ORFs)
ycf1,ycf2,ycf9 transplastomics: all lines heteroplasmic
ycf9 ORF: stabilisation of LHC
ycf6: involved in construction of cyt b6f complex
• functioning of plastidic RNA
functioning of plastidic RNA endonuclease
• chloroplast structure and physiology only partly suffered from knocking
out plastid-encoded RNA polymerase
34. Requirements for widespread application of
chloroplast engineering
the number of plant species to which plastome
technology is applicable needs to be increased
considerably
the success rate of gene insertion into the plastome
has to be increased
the screening protocols must be simplified and
become applicable to a large range of plant species