In order to get it to work in plants, you'd need to re-jig the entire
operon into plant-compatible code, then put that into the Ti plasmid,
and then transfect plant cells with Agrobacteria carrying the gene.
Have you got glowing E.coli yet though? Because really that's the first
step! If you've got pVib on hand, and E.coli to work with, and a
licensed lab to work *in*, go do that and get your first transformation
done. Plants are hard work!
On 10/02/12 15:14, Mega wrote:
> http://www.pgreen.ac.uk/a_pls_fr.htm - Agrobacterium disarmed Ti-
> Plasmid
> Kanamycin� Selektionsmarker (�nptI�)
> LacZ � Marker Blue-white screening
>
>
> Here is a plasmid, as I understood this is a fully functional
> Agrobacterium Ti-Plasmid.
>
>
> It has a restriction site "SalI".
> My pVIB has also SalI !!!
>
> So ligating them together makes a plasmid that induces bioluminescense
> in plants.
>
> A question: The promotor works for agrobacterium and coli too?? Will
> the bacteria glow too to mark them?
> Because also the amp part of lux could be inserted and those will too
> not make the X-Gal blue and be kanamycin resistant.
> -> take glowing bacterium colony, culture them, plasmid preparation,
> plasmid into void agrobacterium.
> ready.
>
>
> My plan is, going to a professor at mine, tell him and ask wheter I
> could possibly use the lab and university as shiping adress.
>
> Are my thoughts correct??
>
>
> Yours
>
--
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It's mostly due to the promoter structure being *entirely* different,
though the ribosome binding sites and codon bias will also be all wrong.
Plants are just not bacteria; they've been separated by eons of evolution.
If you can get the DNA into the chloroplasts, or even the mitochondria,
then you might have a more-than-1%-chance. But it'd still be a pretty
small chance of it working right away: Chloroplasts and Mitochondria are
pretty distantly related to Vibrio species.
Nice thing about transforming chloroplasts of lower plants, at least, is
that you can select for transformants with a range of normal antibiotics
such as ampicillin. Of course, an antibiotic-free method would be nice.
To enhance specificity for the chloroplasts, you could incorporate a
chloroplast-only promoter sequence to your DNA. For nuclear delivery,
adding a promoter region for a constitutive transcription factor
sometimes enhances transformation efficiency, presumably because
proteins assembled in the cytoplasm catch the DNA on their way toward
the nucleus.
For that to work, you'd have to find a chloroplast DNA-binding protein
that is coded for in the nucleus and transported to the chloroplast once
finished; that subset of proteins have a chance of pulling DNA in with them.
There's information in there on the PEG-mediated method; it's tricky by
the look of it. You have to make protoplasts, yes, but cells only
survive so long in the PEG medium before dying of it, so timing is
probably pretty important.
Also, because there are plenty of chloroplasts in the cell, and each has
plenty of genome copies, it's apparently challenging to make certain
you've got universally-transformed chloroplasts. I imagine to get
reliable transformation, you'd need a system that actively targets
non-transformed chromosomes for homologous recombination with the
transformed chromosomes, so that the chromosomes eventually all get a
copy of the new gene cassette.
For tidyness' sake, you'd also want this recombination system and any
selection genes in a self-excising cassette that you can trigger once
you're sure of your transformants' integrity.
I was surprised to see that protein yield from plastid transformants can
be very high; this would be very difficult to achieve, but probably
pretty rewarding!
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http://www.pgreen.ac.uk/a_pls_fr.htm - Agrobacterium disarmed Ti-
Plasmid
Kanamycin– Selektionsmarker (‘nptI’)
LacZ – Marker Blue-white screening
Here is a plasmid, as I understood this is a fully functional
Agrobacterium Ti-Plasmid.
It has a restriction site "SalI".
My pVIB has also SalI !!!
So ligating them together makes a plasmid that induces bioluminescense
in plants.
A question: The promotor works for agrobacterium and coli too?? Will
the bacteria glow too to mark them?
Because also the amp part of lux could be inserted and those will too
not make the X-Gal blue and be kanamycin resistant.
-> take glowing bacterium colony, culture them, plasmid preparation,
plasmid into void agrobacterium.
ready.
My plan is, going to a professor at mine, tell him and ask wheter I
could possibly use the lab and university as shiping adress.
Are my thoughts correct??
Yours
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Ok, well, but if the stuff gets codon-optimized by the company after your editing, you may get problems here...
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The chinese are synthesizing the regulatory sequences for me, and after some negotiation they even do a PCR of lux and kanR for quie little money.
As soon as they are ready, I get a ready to use pGlowroplast! As said, I will share it with anybody who is interrested. No IP issues with the version in the chinese vector. The version in pGreenII-0000 can't share without permission of JIC
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