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A minimal peach type II chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato

BACKGROUND: Promoters with tissue-specificity are desirable to drive expression of transgenes in crops to avoid accumulation of foreign proteins in edible tissues/organs. Several photosynthetic promoters have been shown to be strong regulators of expression of transgenes in light-responsive tissues...

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Autores principales: Bassett, Carole L, Callahan, Ann M, Artlip, Timothy S, Scorza, Ralph, Srinivasan, Chinnathambi
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1994676/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17697347
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-7-47
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author Bassett, Carole L
Callahan, Ann M
Artlip, Timothy S
Scorza, Ralph
Srinivasan, Chinnathambi
author_facet Bassett, Carole L
Callahan, Ann M
Artlip, Timothy S
Scorza, Ralph
Srinivasan, Chinnathambi
author_sort Bassett, Carole L
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Promoters with tissue-specificity are desirable to drive expression of transgenes in crops to avoid accumulation of foreign proteins in edible tissues/organs. Several photosynthetic promoters have been shown to be strong regulators of expression of transgenes in light-responsive tissues and would be good candidates for leaf and immature fruit tissue-specificity, if expression in the mature fruit were minimized. RESULTS: A minimal peach chlorophyll a/b-binding protein gene (Lhcb2*Pp1) promoter (Cab19) was isolated and fused to an uidA (β-glucuronidase [GUS]) gene containing the PIV2 intron. A control vector carrying an enhanced mas35S CaMV promoter fused to uidA was also constructed. Two different orientations of the Cab19::GUS fusion relative to the left T-DNA border of the binary vector were transformed into tomato. Ten independent regenerants of each construct and an untransformed control line were assessed both qualitatively and quantitatively for GUS expression in leaves, fruit and flowers, and quantitatively in roots. CONCLUSION: The minimal CAB19 promoter conferred GUS activity primarily in leaves and green fruit, as well as in response to light. GUS activity in the leaves of both Cab19 constructs averaged about 2/3 that observed with mas35S::GUS controls. Surprisingly, GUS activity in transgenic green fruit was considerably higher than leaves for all promoter constructs; however, in red, ripe fruit activities were much lower for the Cab19 promoter constructs than the mas35S::GUS. Although GUS activity was readily detectable in flowers and roots of mas35S::GUStransgenic plants, little activity was observed in plants carrying the Cab19 promoter constructs. In addition, the light-inducibility of the Cab19::GUS constructs indicated that all the requisite cis-elements for light responsiveness were contained on the Cab19 fragment. The minimal Cab19 promoter retains both tissue-specificity and light regulation and can be used to drive expression of foreign genes with minimal activity in mature, edible fruit.
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spelling pubmed-19946762007-09-27 A minimal peach type II chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato Bassett, Carole L Callahan, Ann M Artlip, Timothy S Scorza, Ralph Srinivasan, Chinnathambi BMC Biotechnol Methodology Article BACKGROUND: Promoters with tissue-specificity are desirable to drive expression of transgenes in crops to avoid accumulation of foreign proteins in edible tissues/organs. Several photosynthetic promoters have been shown to be strong regulators of expression of transgenes in light-responsive tissues and would be good candidates for leaf and immature fruit tissue-specificity, if expression in the mature fruit were minimized. RESULTS: A minimal peach chlorophyll a/b-binding protein gene (Lhcb2*Pp1) promoter (Cab19) was isolated and fused to an uidA (β-glucuronidase [GUS]) gene containing the PIV2 intron. A control vector carrying an enhanced mas35S CaMV promoter fused to uidA was also constructed. Two different orientations of the Cab19::GUS fusion relative to the left T-DNA border of the binary vector were transformed into tomato. Ten independent regenerants of each construct and an untransformed control line were assessed both qualitatively and quantitatively for GUS expression in leaves, fruit and flowers, and quantitatively in roots. CONCLUSION: The minimal CAB19 promoter conferred GUS activity primarily in leaves and green fruit, as well as in response to light. GUS activity in the leaves of both Cab19 constructs averaged about 2/3 that observed with mas35S::GUS controls. Surprisingly, GUS activity in transgenic green fruit was considerably higher than leaves for all promoter constructs; however, in red, ripe fruit activities were much lower for the Cab19 promoter constructs than the mas35S::GUS. Although GUS activity was readily detectable in flowers and roots of mas35S::GUStransgenic plants, little activity was observed in plants carrying the Cab19 promoter constructs. In addition, the light-inducibility of the Cab19::GUS constructs indicated that all the requisite cis-elements for light responsiveness were contained on the Cab19 fragment. The minimal Cab19 promoter retains both tissue-specificity and light regulation and can be used to drive expression of foreign genes with minimal activity in mature, edible fruit. BioMed Central 2007-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC1994676/ /pubmed/17697347 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-7-47 Text en Copyright © 2007 Bassett et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology Article
Bassett, Carole L
Callahan, Ann M
Artlip, Timothy S
Scorza, Ralph
Srinivasan, Chinnathambi
A minimal peach type II chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato
title A minimal peach type II chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato
title_full A minimal peach type II chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato
title_fullStr A minimal peach type II chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato
title_full_unstemmed A minimal peach type II chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato
title_short A minimal peach type II chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato
title_sort minimal peach type ii chlorophyll a/b-binding protein promoter retains tissue-specificity and light regulation in tomato
topic Methodology Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1994676/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17697347
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-7-47
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