Type II fish antifreeze protein accumulation in transgenic tobacco does not confer frost resistance |
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Authors: | Kenward Kimberly D. Brandle James McPherson Joan Davies Peter L. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biochemistry, Queen's University, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada;(2) Southern Crop Protection and Food Research Centre, Agriculture and AgriFood Canada, 1391, Sandford St., London, ON, N5V 4T3, Canada;(3) Department of Plant Science, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C, V6T 1Z4, Canada |
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Abstract: | Type II fish antifreeze protein (AFP) is active in both freezing point depression and the inhibition of ice recrystallization. This extensively disulfidebonded 14 kDa protein was targeted for accumulation in its pro and mature forms in the cytosol and apoplast of transgenic tobacco plants. Type II AFP gene constructs under control of a duplicate cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter, both with and without a native plant transit peptide sequence, were introduced into tobacco by Agrobacterium tumefaciensmediated transformation. AFP did not accumulate in the cytosol of transgenic plants, but active AFP was present as 2% of the total protein present in the apoplast. Plantproduced AFP was the same size as mature Type II AFP isolated from fish, and was comparable to wildtype AFP in thermal hysteresis activity and its effect on ice crystal morphology. Field trials conducted in late summer on R1 generation transgenic plants showed similar AFP accumulation in plants under field conditions at levels suitable for largescale production: but no difference in frost resistance was observed between transgenic and wildtype plants during the onset of early fall frosts. |
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Keywords: | antifreeze protein apoplast field trials proprotein processing frost resistance. |
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