Literature DB >> 15710628

Cytoplasm and chloroplasts are not suitable subcellular locations for beta-zein accumulation in transgenic plants.

Michele Bellucci1, Francesca De Marchis, Roberta Mannucci, Ralph Bock, Sergio Arcioni.   

Abstract

Zeins, the main storage proteins of maize that accumulate in the endoplasmic reticulum of the endosperm cells, are particularly interesting because they are rich in the essential sulphur amino acids. Overexpression of certain zein genes in plants such as alfalfa would be expected to improve the nutritional characteristics of this crop. Recently, significant accumulation values have been reached, but still far from those considered useful for nutritional purposes. This study investigates whether targeting to compartments other than the endoplasmic reticulum (cytosol and chloroplasts) could result in increasing beta-zein accumulation in transgenic plants. To address beta-zein to the cytosol, the fragment which codes for the signal peptide has been removed. beta-zein has also been targeted to alfalfa and tobacco chloroplasts by a transit peptide signal. Both tobacco, as a model plant species, and alfalfa have been transformed with the assembled constructs. An alternative route to accumulate beta-zein in the chloroplasts is to synthesize beta-zein directly in the plastid lumen. Thus, the beta-zein gene has also been inserted into tobacco plastid DNA. The beta-zein gene in each different type of transformed plant was properly transcribed, as determined by northern blot analysis, but no accumulation of beta-zein was detected, either in the cytoplasm or in the chloroplasts of alfalfa and tobacco transformed plants. Therefore, it is concluded that chloroplasts and the cytosol are not favourable subcellular locations for zein protein accumulation.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15710628     DOI: 10.1093/jxb/eri114

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Bot        ISSN: 0022-0957            Impact factor:   6.992


  8 in total

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Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2021

2.  Plastid proteostasis and heterologous protein accumulation in transplastomic plants.

Authors:  Francesca De Marchis; Andrea Pompa; Michele Bellucci
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2012-08-07       Impact factor: 8.340

3.  Chloroplast targeting of FanC, the major antigenic subunit of Escherichia coli K99 fimbriae, in transgenic soybean.

Authors:  Renu Garg; Melanie Tolbert; Judy L Oakes; Thomas E Clemente; Kenneth L Bost; Kenneth J Piller
Journal:  Plant Cell Rep       Date:  2007-03-01       Impact factor: 4.570

4.  A plant secretory signal peptide targets plastome-encoded recombinant proteins to the thylakoid membrane.

Authors:  Francesca De Marchis; Andrea Pompa; Roberta Mannucci; Tomas Morosinotto; Michele Bellucci
Journal:  Plant Mol Biol       Date:  2010-08-18       Impact factor: 4.076

5.  Identification of protein stability determinants in chloroplasts.

Authors:  Wiebke Apel; Waltraud X Schulze; Ralph Bock
Journal:  Plant J       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 6.417

Review 6.  Plastid genetic engineering in Solanaceae.

Authors:  Jelli Venkatesh; Se Won Park
Journal:  Protoplasma       Date:  2012-03-07       Impact factor: 3.356

7.  Comparison of membrane targeting strategies for the accumulation of the human immunodeficiency virus p24 protein in transgenic tobacco.

Authors:  Goretti Virgili-López; Markus Langhans; Julia Bubeck; Emanuela Pedrazzini; Guillaume Gouzerh; Jean-Marc Neuhaus; David G Robinson; Alessandro Vitale
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2013-06-26       Impact factor: 5.923

8.  The Induction of Recombinant Protein Bodies in Different Subcellular Compartments Reveals a Cryptic Plastid-Targeting Signal in the 27-kDa γ-Zein Sequence.

Authors:  Anna Hofbauer; Jenny Peters; Elsa Arcalis; Thomas Rademacher; Johannes Lampel; François Eudes; Alessandro Vitale; Eva Stoger
Journal:  Front Bioeng Biotechnol       Date:  2014-12-11
  8 in total

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