Literature DB >> 17309732

A synthetic de-greening gene circuit provides a reporting system that is remotely detectable and has a re-set capacity.

Mauricio S Antunes1, Suk-Bong Ha, Neera Tewari-Singh, Kevin J Morey, Anna M Trofka, Paul Kugrens, Michael Deyholos, June I Medford.   

Abstract

Plants have evolved elegant mechanisms to continuously sense and respond to their environment, suggesting that these properties can be adapted to make inexpensive and widely used biological monitors, or sentinels, for human threats. For a plant to be a sentinel, a reporting system is needed for large areas and widespread monitoring. The reporter or readout mechanism must be easily detectable, allow remote monitoring and provide a re-set capacity; all current gene reporting technologies fall short of these requirements. Chlorophyll is one of the best-recognized plant pigments with an already well-developed remote imaging technology. However, chlorophyll is very abundant, with levels regulated by both genetic and environmental factors. We designed a synthetic de-greening circuit that produced rapid chlorophyll loss on perception of a specific input. With induction of the de-greening circuit, changes were remotely detected within 2 h. Analyses of multiple de-greening circuits suggested that the de-greening circuit functioned, in part, via light-dependent damage to photosystem cores and the production of reactive oxygen species. Within 24-48 h of induction, an easily recognized white phenotype resulted. Microarray analysis showed that the synthetic de-greening initiated a process largely distinct from normal chlorophyll loss in senescence. Remarkably, synthetically de-greened white plants re-greened after removal of the inducer, providing the first easily re-settable reporter system for plants and the capacity to make re-settable biosensors. Our results showed that the de-greening circuit allowed chlorophyll to be employed as a simple but powerful reporter system useful for widespread areas.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17309732     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7652.2006.00205.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Biotechnol J        ISSN: 1467-7644            Impact factor:   9.803


  13 in total

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Authors:  Priscilla E M Purnick; Ron Weiss
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Review 2.  Synthetic Switches and Regulatory Circuits in Plants.

Authors:  Jennifer Andres; Tim Blomeier; Matias D Zurbriggen
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Review 3.  Plant synthetic biology for molecular engineering of signalling and development.

Authors:  Jennifer L Nemhauser; Keiko U Torii
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4.  Chloroplast iron-sulfur cluster protein maturation requires the essential cysteine desulfurase CpNifS.

Authors:  Douglas Van Hoewyk; Salah E Abdel-Ghany; Christopher M Cohu; Stephen K Herbert; Paul Kugrens; Marinus Pilon; Elizabeth A H Pilon-Smits
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-03-19       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  Principles of genetic circuit design.

Authors:  Jennifer A N Brophy; Christopher A Voigt
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2014-05       Impact factor: 28.547

6.  Quantitative characterization of genetic parts and circuits for plant synthetic biology.

Authors:  Katherine A Schaumberg; Mauricio S Antunes; Tessema K Kassaw; Wenlong Xu; Christopher S Zalewski; June I Medford; Ashok Prasad
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7.  A BioBrick compatible strategy for genetic modification of plants.

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8.  Engineering key components in a synthetic eukaryotic signal transduction pathway.

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Review 9.  Eukaryotic systems broaden the scope of synthetic biology.

Authors:  Karmella A Haynes; Pamela A Silver
Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  2009-11-23       Impact factor: 10.539

10.  RNA Viral Vectors for Accelerating Plant Synthetic Biology.

Authors:  Arjun Khakhar; Daniel F Voytas
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2021-06-23       Impact factor: 5.753

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