Systemin, an octadecapeptide isolated from tomato, is a primary signal molecule involved in the local and systemic responses to pest attack, elicited by activation of a set of defence genes. It derives from processing of prosystemin, a prohormone of almost 200 amino acids. Prosystemin orthologues ha
Expression of bacterial biphenyl-chlorobiphenyl dioxygenase genes in tobacco plants
✍ Scribed by Mahmood Mohammadi; Vida Chalavi; Martina Novakova-Sura; Jean-François Laliberté; Michel Sylvestre
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 295 KB
- Volume
- 97
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Optimized plant–microbe bioremediation processes in which the plant initiates the metabolism of xenobiotics and releases the metabolites in the rhizosphere to be further degraded by the rhizobacteria is a promising alternative to restore contaminated sites in situ. However, such processes require that plants produce the metabolites that bacteria can readily oxidize. The biphenyl dioxygenase is the first enzyme of the bacterial catabolic pathway involved in the degradation of polychlorinated biphenyls. This enzyme consists of three components: the two sub‐unit oxygenase (BphAE) containing a Rieske‐type iron–sulfur cluster and a mononuclear iron center, the Rieske‐type ferredoxin (BphF), and the FAD‐containing ferredoxin reductase (BphG). In this work, based on analyses with Nicotiana benthamiana plants transiently expressing the biphenyl dioxygenase genes from Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 and transgenic Nicotiana tabacum plants transformed with each of these four genes, we have shown that each of the three biphenyl dioxygenase components can be produced individually as active protein in tobacco plants. Therefore, when BphAE, BphF, and BphG purified from plant were used to catalyze the oxygenation of 4‐chlorobiphenyl, detectable amounts of 2,3‐dihydro‐2, 3‐dihydroxy‐4′‐chlorobiphenyl were produced. This suggests that creating transgenic plants expressing simultaneously all four genes required to produce active biphenyl dioxygenase is feasible. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2007;97: 496–505. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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