首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Generation of transgenic tobacco plants, producing double-stranded RNA with no homology to tobacco genome sequences is reported. The RNA synthesis is mediated by a construct containing an inverted repeat of the pBR322 tetracycline-resistance gene fragment under control of the 35S CaMV promoter. Analysis of the resistance of transgenic plants to the tobacco mosaic virus revealed the changes in the protein spectra of the infected plants. The 25- and 30-kDa proteins found were not detected in the extracts of normal plants. Amino acid sequencing of the 30-kDa peptide with subsequent computer database search revealed the homology of this protein to the hydrolases belonging to the group of plant beta-glucanases. The role of the novel polypeptides in an increase of the resistance of transgenic plants to TMV, and also the possibility of the regulation of their expression by nonhomologous dsRNA are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
A procedure for the fast production of homozygotic transgenic plants was developed. Leaf discs of haploid tobacco plants from anther cultures were transformed with a chimaeric vector containing coat protein (CP) and satellite RNA (Sat-RNA) genes from cucumber mosaic virus (CMV). One-hundred-and-twelve Kanamycin-resistant transformed haploid plants were subjected to selection based on the expression of both CP and Sat-RNA. Eighty-nine transgenic plants expressing both genes were selected and tested for their resistance to CMV by inoculation with high concentration of CMV (200 g ml–1). Only five plants showed no symptoms of viral infection 30 days after inoculation. These plants were then diploidized by colchicine treatment. Three homozygous diploid lines with high levels of resistance to CMV were obtained after only one generation. The three transgenic lines were further tested under field conditions. The results showed that the progenies of these transgenic lines were homozygous and were highly resistant to CMV under natural field infection and manual inoculation conditions.  相似文献   

3.
MxA is a key component in the interferon-induced antiviral defense in humans. After viral infections, MxA is rapidly induced and accumulates in the cytoplasm. The multiplication of many RNA viruses,including all bunyaviruses tested so far, is inhibited by MxA. These findings prompted us to express MxA in plants in an attempt to create resistance to tospoviruses. Here, we report the generation of transgenic tobacco plants that constitutively express MxA under the control of the 35S cauliflower mosaic virus promotor. Northern and western blot analysis confirmed the expression of MxA in several transgenic plant lines. MxA expression had no obvious detrimental effects on plant growth and fertility. However, challenge experiments with tomato spotted wilt virus, tomato chlorotic spot virus, and groundnut ringspot virus revealed no increased resistance of MxA-transgenic tobacco plants to tospovirus infections. Neither was the multiplicationof tobacco mosaic virus, cucumber mosaic virus and potato virus Y inhibited in MxA-transgenic plants. The results indicate that the expression of human MxA alone does not enhance virus resistance in planta.  相似文献   

4.
5.
This study generated transgenic tobacco plants expressing trehalose phosphorylase of Pleurotus sajor-caju (PsTP) constitutively under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter. Sixteen transgenic lines were selected by genomic Southern blot analysis for further study. Unlike yeast TPS1-transformed or Escherichia coli TPS1-transformed tobacco or potato, all of the PsTP transgenic tobacco lines showed normal growth phenotypes both in the culture tubes and soil mixture. The study measured the trehalose contents of PsTP-transformed tobacco plants as well as the wild type and empty vector-transformed control plants. Results showed that the PsTP transformant contained 6.3molg–1 of plant tissues, while the wild type and the control plants had only minimal levels of trehalose. Because this study detected a significant amount of trehalose in PsTP transgenic tobacco plants, it decided to carry out a bioanalysis of the PsTP transgenic tobacco plants by drought treatment by not watering the plants for over 10days. A significant difference in drought resistance was observed from the second nonwatering day between the transgenic and the control tobacco plants. The transgenic tobacco plants had normal growth and did not wither, while the wild type and the only empty vector-transformed control plants withered severely. Among all the transgenic lines, line 10-4 showed the strongest resistance to drought stress. It did not wither even after 10days without watering. In addition, when the drought resistance of PsTP transgenic tobacco plants was tested using detached leaves, most transgenic plants, except one line, showed better capacity to retain water than the empty vector-transformed transgenic plant.  相似文献   

6.
Expression of fish antifreeze protein (AFP) genes in plants is a possible means of increasing their frost resistance and freeze tolerance. Initial work involved transfer into tobacco of an AFP gene from winter flounder which codes for the alanine-rich, -helical Type I AFP. Plants were transformed with a gene construct in which the preproAFP cDNA was inserted between the cauliflower mosaic virus 19S RNA promoter and the nopaline synthetase polyadenylation site. Although transgenic plants produced AFP mRNA, no AFP was detected on western blots. Re-evaluation of AFP expression in these transgenic plants showed that AFP accumulated to detectable levels only after exposure of the plant to cold. Extracts of plants incubated at 4°C for 24 h contained a protein which co-migrated with winter flounder proAFP and was cross-reactive to Type I AFP antisera. Two other minor protein bands of slightly higher apparent M r also cross-reacted with the antisera and are thought to represent processing intermediates. The proAFP was unique to the transgenic plants and was absent in extracts taken prior to cold exposure. AFP levels increased over the first 48 h of cold incubation then remained stable. Since the -helix content of Type I AFP has been shown to decrease markedly at warmer temperatures, we postulate that Type I AFP stability in transgenic plants is dependent on its secondary structure.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Grapevine fanleaf nepovirus (GFLV) is responsible for the economically significant court-noué disease in vineyards. Its genome is made up of two single-stranded RNA molecules (RNA1 and RNA2) which direct the synthesis of polyproteins P1 and P2 respectively. A chimeric coat protein gene derived from the C-terminal part of P2 was constructed and subsequently introduced into a binary transformation vector. Transgenic Nicotiana benthamiana plants expressing the coat protein under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter were engineered by Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation. Protection against infection with virions or viral RNA was tested in coat protein-expressing plants. A significant delay of systemic invasion was observed in transgenic plants inoculated with virus compared to control plants. This effect was also observed when plants were inoculated with viral RNA. No coat protein-mediated cross-protection was observed when transgenic plants were infected with arabis mosaic virus (ArMV), a closely related nepovirus also responsible for a court-noué disease.Abbreviations GFLV-F13 grapevine fanleaf virus F13 isolate - ArMV arabis mosaic virus - CP coat protein - MS Murashige and Skoog - NPTII neomycin phosphotransferase II - CaMV cauliflower mosaic virus - ELISA enzyme linked immunosorbent assay - VPg genome linked viral protein - TMV tobacco mosaic virus - PVX potato virus X - PVY potato virus Y - TRV tobacco rattle virus - +CP CP expressing - -CP control plant, not expressing CP - CPMP coat protein-mediated protection - CPMCP coat crotein-mediated cross protection  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
We have developed a new strategy for engineering resistance to multipleviruses in plants. The strategy exploits the human double stranded (ds)RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR). PKR is one of theinterferon-induced enzymes. It confers viral resistance in mammals byinhibitingviral replication through the inactivation of the translational initiationfactor, eIF-2, upon activation by dsRNA. The humanPKR gene was fused to the promoter of theArabidopsis blue copper binding protein gene(BCB) that is induced rapidly in response to wounding. Thechimeric gene cassette was introduced into tobacco plants. Expression of thePKR gene in transgenic tobacco plants was demonstrated byRNA gel blot analysis and autophosphorylation assay of anM r 68,000 protein. The transgenic plantsexpressing the PKR gene showed significantly reduced viralsymptoms or no viral symptoms at all, when challenged by different plant RNAviruses, such as Cucumber mosaic virus, Tobaccoetch virus, or Potato virus Y. Thus, expressionof a single component in the human interferon pathway, thePKR gene, can effectively confer resistance to multipleviruses in transgenic plants.  相似文献   

11.
To obtain transgenic tobacco plants expressing recombinant analogs of spider dragline silk spidroin 1, artificial 1f5 and 1f9 coding for spidroin 1 analogs were 3"-fused in-frame with the reporter lichenase gene. The Tr2" weak constitutive promoter of Agrobacterium tumefaciens T-DNA and the strong constitutive promoter of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S RNA gene were used as regulatory elements. The expression cassettes were used to transform agrobacteria and then introduced in tobacco leaf disks. On evidence of Southern hybridization, transgenic plants each carried a single copy of a hybrid gene, which corresponded in size to the constructed one. Zymography and Western blotting revealed full-length hybrid proteins in leaf extracts of transgenic plants. The results testified that plants can maintain and express synthetic genes for spider silks and, consequently, may be used as a convenient producer of recombinant silk analogs.  相似文献   

12.
The protein and gene sequences of the cowpea Bowman-Birk type trypsin inhibitor which confers enhanced insect resistance to transgenic tobacco plants, and of cowpea trypsin/chymotrypsin inhibitors are presented. There are regions of high conservation and high divergence within the 5 leader, mature protein and 3 non-coding regions of the Bowman-Birk inhibitors and in the genes which encode them in different members of this family within the Leguminosae. The practical implications of this finding for studies on the evolution of plants and the utilization of these genes for enhancing insect resistance is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Nitrite reductase (NiR) is the second enzyme in the nitrate assimilatory pathway reducing nitrite to ammonium. The expression of the NiR gene is induced upon the addition of nitrate. In an earlier study, a 130 bp upstream region of the spinach NiR gene promoter, located between –330 to –200, was shown to be necessary for nitrate induction of -glucuronidase (GUS) expression in tissue-specific manner in transgenic tobacco plant [28]. To further delineate the cis-acting elements involved in nitrate regulation of NiR gene expression, transgenic tobacco plants were generated with 5 deletions in the–330 to –200 region of the spinach NiR gene promoter fused to the GUS gene. Plants with the NiR promoter deleted to –230 showed a considerable increase in GUS activity in the presence of nitrate, indicating that the 30 bp region between –230 to –200 is crucial for nitrate-regulated expression of NiR. In vivo DMS footprinting of the –300 to –130 region of the NiR promoter in leaf tissues from two independent transgenic lines revealed several nitrate-inducible footprints. Footprinting within the –230 to –181 region revealed factor binding to two adjacent GATA elements separated by 24 bp. This arrangement of GATA elements is analogous to cis-regulatory sequences found in the promoters of nitrate-inducible genes of Neurospora crassa, regulated by the NIT2 Zn-finger protein. The –240 to –110 fragment of the NiR promoter, which contains two NIT2 consensus core elements, bound in vitro to a fusion protein comprising the zinc finger domain of the N. crassa NIT2 protein. The data presented here show that nitrate-inducible expression of the NiR gene is mediated by nitrate-specific binding of trans-acting factors to sequences preserved between fungi and higher plants.  相似文献   

14.
Lignin is a complex aromatic polymer of vascular plants that provides mechanical strength to the stem and protects cellulose fibres from chemical and biological degradation. 4-Coumarate:CoA ligases (EC 6.2.1.12) are key enzymes for the biosynthetic pathway of monolignols which is an important complex aromatic polymer for lignin biosynthesis and tree growth. Recently, 4-coumarate:CoA ligase has been used as exogenous gene in transgenic plants to genetically modify the lignin biosynthesis pathway. Since most lignin is produced in the vascular cells, a tissue-specific-expressed promoter in the vascular cell would be important and useful to change and modify the content of lignin. Here we report the existence of a promoter of GRP1.8 (the glycine-rich protein 1.8) in Sopho japonica L. (GenBank accession number AF250149) and studies on its function in transgenic tobacco. The promoter activity was analyzed in transgenic tobacco plants by histochemical staining of GUS gene expression driven by a 613-bp sjGRP1.8p promoter sequence. In sjGRP1.8p-GUS transgenic plants, intense GUS staining was detected in the xylem of the stem. To further investigate the regulation of the tissue-specific expression of the 4CL1 gene, we analyzed the activity of the 4CL1 gene which is sense orientated with the sjGRP1.8p promoter in transgenic tobacco. The Pto4CL1 gene was expressed in the stem of transgenic tobacco. The activity of the 4CL1 enzyme was increased 1–2-fold in the stem but not increased in the leaves of transgenic tobacco. In comparison with the control plants, the content of lignin was increased 25% in the stem but there was no increase in the leaves of transgenic tobacco.  相似文献   

15.
H Weber  S Schultze    A J Pfitzner 《Journal of virology》1993,67(11):6432-6438
The Tm-2(2) resistance gene is used in most commercial tomato cultivars for protection against infection with tobacco mosaic virus and its close relative tomato mosaic virus (ToMV). To study the mechanism of this resistance gene, cDNA clones encompassing the complete genome of a ToMV strain (ToMV-2(2)) that was able to break the Tm-2(2) resistance were generated. Chimeric full-length viral cDNA clones were constructed under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S RNA promoter, combining parts of the wild-type virus and ToMV-2(2). Using these clones in cDNA infection experiments, we showed that the 30-kDa movement protein of ToMV-2(2) is responsible for overcoming the Tm-2(2) resistance gene in the tomato. DNA sequence analysis revealed four amino acid exchanges between the 30-kDa proteins from wild-type ToMV and ToMV-2(2), Lys-130 to Glu, Gly-184 to Glu, Ser-238 to Arg, and Lys-244 to Glu. To clarify the involvement of the altered amino acid residues in the resistance-breaking properties of the ToMV-2(2) movement protein, different combinations of these amino acid exchanges were introduced in the genome of wild-type ToMV. Only one mutant strain which contained two amino acid substitutions, Arg-238 and Glu-244, was able to multiply in Tm-2(2) tomato plants. Both amino acid exchanges are found within the carboxy-terminal region of the movement protein, which displays a high variability among different tobamoviruses and has been shown to be dispensable for virus transport in tobacco plants. These observations suggest that the resistance conferred by the Tm-2(2) gene against ToMV depends on specific recognition events in this host-pathogen interaction rather than interfering with fundamental functions of the 30-kDa protein.  相似文献   

16.
The xylose isomerase gene (xylA) from Thermoanaerobacterium thermosulfurogenes (formerly Clostridium thermosulfurogenes) has been expressed in three plant species (potato, tobacco, and tomato) and transgenic plants have been selected on xylose-containing medium. The xylose isomerase gene was transferred to the target plant by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. The xylose isomerase gene was expressed using the enhanced cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter and the translation enhancer sequence from tobacco mosaic virus. Unoptimized selection studies showed that, in potato and tomato, the xylose isomerase selection was more efficient than the established kanamycin resistance selection, whereas in tobacco the opposite was observed. Efficiency may be increased by optimization. The xylose isomerase system enables the transgenic cells to utilize xylose as a carbohydrate source. It is an example of a positive selection system because transgenic cells proliferate while non-transgenic cells are starved but still survive. This contrasts to antibiotic or herbicide resistance where transgenic cells survive on a selective medium but non-transgenic cells are killed. The results give access to a new selection method which is devoid of the disadvantages of antibiotic or herbicide selection.  相似文献   

17.
18.
A non-antibiotic based selection system using l-lysine as selection agent and the lysine racemase (lyr) as selectable marker gene for plant transformation was established in this study. l-lysine was toxic to plants, and converted by Lyr into d-lysine which would subsequently be used by the transgenic plants as nitrogen source. Transgenic tobacco and Arabidopsis plants were successfully recovered on l-lysine medium at efficiencies of 23 and 2.4%, respectively. Phenotypic characterization of transgenic plants clearly revealed the expression of normal growth and developmental characteristics as that of wild-type plants, suggesting no pleiotropic effects associated with the lyr gene. The specific activity of Lyr in transgenic tobacco plants selected on l-lysine ranged from 0.77 to 1.06 mU/mg protein, whereas no activity was virtually detectable in the wild-type plants. In addition, the composition of the free amino acids, except aspartic acid, was not affected by the expression of the lyr gene in the transgenic tobacco plants suggesting very limited interference with endogenous amino acid metabolism. Interestingly, our findings also suggested that the plant aspartate kinases may possess an ability to distinguish the enantiomers of lysine for feedback regulation. To our knowledge, this is the first report to demonstrate that the lysine racemase selectable marker system is novel, less controversial and inexpensive than the traditional selection systems.  相似文献   

19.
The antiviral activity of the type-2 ribosome-inactivating protein (RIP) IRAb from Iris was analyzed by expressing IRAb in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Samsun NN) plants and challenging the transgenic plants with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). Although constitutive expression of IRAb resulted in an aberrant phenotype, the plants were fertile. Transgenic tobacco lines expressing IRAb showed a dose-dependent enhanced resistance against TMV infection but the level of protection was markedly lower than in plants expressing IRIP, the type-1 RIP from Iris that closely resembles the A-chain of IRAb. To verify whether IRIP or IRAb can also confer systemic protection against viruses, transgenic RIP-expressing scions were grafted onto control rootstocks and leaves of the rootstocks challenged with tobacco etch virus (TEV). In spite of the strong local antiviral effect of IRIP and IRAb the RIPs could not provide systemic protection against TEV. Hence our results demonstrate that expression of the type-1 and type-2 RIPs from Iris confers tobacco plants local protection against two unrelated viruses. The antiviral activity of both RIPs was not accompanied by an induction of pathogenesis-related proteins. It is suggested that the observed antiviral activity of both Iris RIPs relies on their RNA N-glycohydrolase activity towards TMV RNA and plant rRNA.Abbreviations GUS -Glucuronidase - IRAb Iris agglutinin b - IRIP Iris type-1 RIP - PAG Polynucleotide:adenosine glycosylase - PAP Phytolacca americana antiviral protein - PR Pathogenesis-related - RIP Ribosome-inactivating protein - TCS Trichosanthin - TEV Tobacco etch virus - TMV Tobacco mosaic virus  相似文献   

20.
We tested the hypothesis that membrane-anchored anti-viral antibodies can confer viral resistance to transgenic plants. A heterologous expression system was developed for plasma membrane targeting of anti-viral antibodies using mammalian transmembrane domains. A tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) neutralizing single-chain Fv antibody fragment (scFv24) was targeted to the endoplasmic reticulum and integrated into the plasma membrane of tobacco cells, using mammalian signal peptides and membrane receptor transmembrane domains. The human platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) transmembrane domain or the T-cell receptor -domain (TcR) transmembrane domain was fused to the C-terminus of TMV-specific scFv24 to target expression of scFv24 as an extracellularly facing plasma membrane protein. Western blot and ELISA analyses were carried out to confirm functional expression of the recombinant fusion proteins scFv24-PDGFR and scFv24-TcR in transgenic tobacco suspension cultures and transgenic plants. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy showed that the TcR transmembrane domain targeted scFv24 to the tobacco plasma membrane. Bioassays of viral infection showed that transgenic tobacco plants expressing scFv24-TcR were resistant to TMV infection. These results demonstrated that membrane anchored anti-viral antibody fragments are functional, can be targeted to the plasma membrane in planta and are a novel approach for engineering disease-resistant crops.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号