Mitigation of deleterious phenotypes in chloroplast-engineered plants accumulating high levels of foreign proteins.
Autor: | Schmidt JA; Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA. jas684@cornell.edu., Richter LV; Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA., Condoluci LA; Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA., Ahner BA; Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA. |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Zdroj: | Biotechnology for biofuels [Biotechnol Biofuels] 2021 Feb 10; Vol. 14 (1), pp. 42. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Feb 10. |
DOI: | 10.1186/s13068-021-01893-2 |
Abstrakt: | Background: The global demand for functional proteins is extensive, diverse, and constantly increasing. Medicine, agriculture, and industrial manufacturing all rely on high-quality proteins as major active components or process additives. Historically, these demands have been met by microbial bioreactors that are expensive to operate and maintain, prone to contamination, and relatively inflexible to changing market demands. Well-established crop cultivation techniques coupled with new advancements in genetic engineering may offer a cheaper and more versatile protein production platform. Chloroplast-engineered plants, like tobacco, have the potential to produce large quantities of high-value proteins, but often result in engineered plants with mutant phenotypes. This technology needs to be fine-tuned for commercial applications to maximize target protein yield while maintaining robust plant growth. Results: Here, we show that a previously developed Nicotiana tabacum line, TetC-cel6A, can produce an industrial cellulase at levels of up to 28% of total soluble protein (TSP) with a slight dwarf phenotype but no loss in biomass. In seedlings, the dwarf phenotype is recovered by exogenous application of gibberellic acid. We also demonstrate that accumulating foreign protein represents an added burden to the plants' metabolism that can make them more sensitive to limiting growth conditions such as low nitrogen. The biomass of nitrogen-limited TetC-cel6A plants was found to be as much as 40% lower than wildtype (WT) tobacco, although heterologous cellulase production was not greatly reduced compared to well-fertilized TetC-cel6A plants. Furthermore, cultivation at elevated carbon dioxide (1600 ppm CO Conclusions: The work reported here demonstrates that well-fertilized tobacco plants have a substantial degree of flexibility in protein metabolism and can accommodate considerable levels of some recombinant proteins without exhibiting deleterious mutant phenotypes. Furthermore, we show that the alterations to protein expression triggered by growth at elevated CO |
Databáze: | MEDLINE |
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