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RESEARCH
Science
Agriculture
CROP
SCIENCES
Moving gene in plant results in increased production
of amino acid
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
10/1/2001
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. By
placing a nuclear gene in another location its original home
in a plant researchers have successfully enhanced the production
of an essential amino acid.
The work, which was detailed in the September issue of Plant Physiology,
suggests that alterations of biosynthetic pathways could guide plants
to produce more of a desired dietary component. In this case, tobacco
produced 10 times its usual amount of tryptophan an amino acid
often in short supply in the human diet and vital for the production
of serotonin in the brain.
Scientists inserted the gene, known to produce the control enzyme involved
in tryptophan production, into the chloroplast genome. Chloroplasts
are the chlorophyll containing plastids where photosynthesis occurs.
The approach essentially is a reversal of evolution.
"The biosynthesis of tryptophan and other essential amino acids
occurs in these plastids," said Archie R. Portis Jr., a University
of Illinois crop scientist and researcher in the USDA-Agricultural Research
Service Photosynthesis Research Unit at the UI. "However, the genes
encoding these enzymes are located in the nucleus and the proteins are
imported into the plastids."
Plastids in todays plants are believed to have evolved some 2
billion years ago from a unicellular, photosynthetic cyanobacteria containing
its own set of genes that was engulfed by non-photosynthetic cells.
"Most of the genes originally located in these early plastids moved
to the nucleus," Portis said. "It is likely that those required
for tryptophan biosynthesis were among these."
The gene the researchers inserted had been isolated previously from
a tobacco suspension culture that had been selected for resistance to
an inhibitor of tryptophan biosynthesis. That work was done in the laboratory
of co-author Jack M. Widholm, a UI professor of crop sciences.
The genetically transformed tobacco plants appeared normal, but they
contained a four-fold increase of anthranilate synthase, the control
enzyme of tryptophan biosynthesis. The leaves, in turn, had a 10-fold
increase in tryptophan compared to non-altered plants.
"The work demonstrates the feasibility of modifying the biosynthetic
pathways of important metabolites through transformation of the DNA
located in the plastids and relocating native genes in the nucleus,"
Portis said. "Plastid transformation is advantageous over nuclear
DNA modifications, because it generally allows higher expression of
the desired enzymes and restricts unwanted gene movement via pollen,
which in most plants does not contain any plastid DNA."
The technology provides another tool, besides nuclear transformation,
for improving yield and value. It could also be used to engineer plants
to produce pharmaceuticals such as edible vaccines
.
Other co-authors with Portis and Widholm were UI crop scientists Xing-Hai
Zhang and Jeffery E. Brotherton. Zhang also is with the USDA-ARS. The
Illinois Soybean Program Operating Board, the Illinois Agricultural
Experiment Station and the U.S. Department of Agriculture funded the
research.
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