» Articles » PMID: 10999415

Plants As Bioreactors for Protein Production: Avoiding the Problem of Transgene Silencing

Overview
Journal Plant Mol Biol
Date 2000 Sep 22
PMID 10999415
Citations 32
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Plants are particularly attractive as large-scale production systems for proteins intended for therapeutical or industrial applications: they can be grown easily and inexpensively in large quantities that can be harvested and processed with the available agronomic infrastructures. The effective use of plants as bioreactors depends on the possibility of obtaining high protein accumulation levels that are stable during the life cycle of the transgenic plant and in subsequent generations. Silencing of the introduced transgenes has frequently been observed in plants, constituting a major commercial risk and hampering the general economic exploitation of plants as protein factories. Until now, the most efficient strategy to avoid transgene silencing involves careful design of the transgene construct and thorough analysis of transformants at the molecular level. Here, we focus on different aspects of the generation of transgenic plants intended for protein production and on their influence on the stability of heterologous gene expression.

Citing Articles

Building a pipeline to identify and engineer constitutive and repressible promoters.

Yang E, Nemhauser J Quant Plant Biol. 2023; 4:e12.

PMID: 37901686 PMC: 10600573. DOI: 10.1017/qpb.2023.10.


Benchmarking Intrinsic Promoters and Terminators for Plant Synthetic Biology Research.

Tian C, Zhang Y, Li J, Wang Y Biodes Res. 2023; 2022:9834989.

PMID: 37850139 PMC: 10521690. DOI: 10.34133/2022/9834989.


Energetic considerations for engineering novel biochemistries in photosynthetic organisms.

Strand D, Walker B Front Plant Sci. 2023; 14:1116812.

PMID: 36814754 PMC: 9939686. DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1116812.


Epigenomics as Potential Tools for Enhancing Magnitude of Breeding Approaches for Developing Climate Resilient Chickpea.

Chandana B, Mahto R, Singh R, Ford R, Vaghefi N, Gupta S Front Genet. 2022; 13:900253.

PMID: 35937986 PMC: 9355295. DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2022.900253.


Leaf layer-based transcriptome profiling for discovery of epidermal-selective promoters in Medicago truncatula.

Cui X, Jun J, Rao X, Bahr C, Chapman E, Temple S Planta. 2022; 256(2):31.

PMID: 35790623 DOI: 10.1007/s00425-022-03920-4.


References
1.
Meyer P, Saedler H . HOMOLOGY-DEPENDENT GENE SILENCING IN PLANTS. Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol. 1996; 47:23-48. DOI: 10.1146/annurev.arplant.47.1.23. View

2.
Stam M, Viterbo A, Mol J, Kooter J . Position-dependent methylation and transcriptional silencing of transgenes in inverted T-DNA repeats: implications for posttranscriptional silencing of homologous host genes in plants. Mol Cell Biol. 1998; 18(11):6165-77. PMC: 109204. DOI: 10.1128/MCB.18.11.6165. View

3.
Khoudi H, Laberge S, Ferullo J, Bazin R, Darveau A, Castonguay Y . Production of a diagnostic monoclonal antibody in perennial alfalfa plants. Biotechnol Bioeng. 1999; 64(2):135-43. DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0290(19990720)64:2<135::aid-bit2>3.0.co;2-q. View

4.
Mason H, Haq T, Clements J, Arntzen C . Edible vaccine protects mice against Escherichia coli heat-labile enterotoxin (LT): potatoes expressing a synthetic LT-B gene. Vaccine. 1998; 16(13):1336-43. DOI: 10.1016/s0264-410x(98)80020-0. View

5.
Mlynarova L, Keizer L, Stiekema W, Nap J . Approaching the Lower Limits of Transgene Variability. Plant Cell. 1996; 8(9):1589-1599. PMC: 161300. DOI: 10.1105/tpc.8.9.1589. View