Genetically engineered chloroplasts have an extraordinary capacity to accumulate recombinant proteins. We have investigated in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) the possible consequences of such additional products on several parameters of plant development and composition. Plastid transformants were analyzed that express abundantly either bacterial enzymes, alkaline phosphatase (PhoA-S and PhoA-L) and 4-hydroxyphenyl pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), or a green fluorescent protein (GFP). In leaves, the HPPD and GFP recombinant proteins are the major polypeptides and accumulate to higher levels than Rubisco. Nevertheless, these engineered metabolic sinks do not cause a measurable difference in growth rate or photosynthetic parameters. The total amino acid content of transgenic leaves is also not significantly affected, showing that plant cells have a limited protein biosynthetic capacity. Recombinant products are made at the expense of resident proteins. Rubisco, which constitutes the major leaf amino acid store, is the most clearly and strongly down-regulated plant protein. This reduction is even more dramatic under conditions of limited nitrogen supply, whereas recombinant proteins accumulate to even higher relative levels. These changes are regulated posttranscriptionally since transcript levels of resident plastid genes are not affected. Our results show that plants are able to produce massive amounts of recombinant proteins in chloroplasts without profound metabolic perturbation and that Rubisco, acting as a nitrogen buffer, is a key player in maintaining homeostasis and limiting pleiotropic effects.
We have produced human alpha1-antitrypsin (A1AT), a major therapeutic protein, in genetically engineered tobacco plastids. Four different expression vectors have been evaluated which encode A1AT under the control of various 5' and 3' plastid expression elements. The use of heterologous promoter and terminator sequences derived from the corn and soybean plastid genomes leads to simpler and predictable recombinant genome patterns, avoiding unwanted recombination products between introduced and resident tobacco sequences. High level expression of unglycosylated A1AT, representing up to 2% of total soluble proteins, has been measured in leaves of transgenic tobacco lines. Some heterogeneity in the recombinant A1AT is detected after 2D protein separation, but the chloroplast-made protease inhibitors are fully active and bind to porcine pancreatic elastase.
RNAi mediated by small-interfering RNAs (siRNAs) operates via transcriptional (TGS) and posttranscriptional gene silencing (PTGS). In Arabidopsis thaliana, TGS relies on DICER-LIKE-3 (DCL3)-dependent 24-nt siRNAs loaded into AGO4-clade ARGONAUTE effector proteins. PTGS operates via DCL4-dependent 21-nt siRNAs loaded into AGO1-clade proteins. We set up and validated a medium-throughput, semi-automatized procedure enabling chemical screening, in a 96-well in vitro format, of Arabidopsis transgenic seedlings expressing an inverted-repeat construct from the phloem companion cells. The ensuing quantitative PTGS phenotype was exploited to identify molecules, which, upon topical application, either inhibit or enhance siRNA biogenesis/activities. The vast majority of identified modifiers were enhancers, among which Sortin1, Isoxazolone, and [5-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)furan-2-yl]-piperidine-1-ylmethanethione (DFPM) provided the most robust and consistent results, including upon their application onto soil-grown plants in which their effect was nonautonomous and long lasting. The three molecules increased the RNAi potency of the inverted-repeat construct, in large part by enhancing 21-nt siRNA accumulation and loading into AGO1, and concomitantly reducing AGO4 and DCL3 levels in planta. A similar, albeit not identical effect, was observed on 22-nt siRNAs produced from a naturally occurring inverted-repeat locus, demonstrating that the molecules also enhance endogenous PTGS. In standardized assays conducted in seedling extracts, the three enhancers selectively increased DCL4-mediated processing of in vitro-synthesized double-stranded RNAs, indicating the targeting of a hitherto unknown PTGS component probably independent of the DCL4-cofactor DOUBLE-STRANDED RNA-BINDING 4 (DRB4). This study establishes the proof-of-concept that RNAi efficacy can be modulated by chemicals in a whole organism. Their potential applications and the associated future research are discussed.
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