IIRC all of these viral transformations are for transient gene
expression. I have yet to find a retroviral vector for stable
transformation in plants. Been pondering about modifying a channel on
the plasma membrane of a plant cell to act as a phage anchor similar to
the motifs that bind coliphages. The real trick is the delivery and
assembly of yet another virus while inside the cell which will bind to
recombinant chloroplast membranes and actually deliver the target DNA.
You would still need to have a transplastomic line to modify in the
first place. Why not just use PEG-mediated naked DNA uptake in
protoplasts? Tougher to get right but way cheaper than a gene gun and
will produce stable transformants. Most successful transplastomic plant
species made using PEG was lettuce.
Also, engineering a virus that infects plants and directly,
permanently, alters their genome might be hard to contain and could
pose a scare to the EPA/USDA here in the states as well as elsewhere.
The thought of an HIV-like particle that can inadvertently infect
any/all crops may not be the best idea regardless of what the transgene
is. There are a few patents for universal chloroplast homologous
integration vectors already filed and there are a number of regions
homologous to many species/genera along the myriad genes of the
chloroplast genome so your single virus (if targeting natural surface
proteins) may infect non-discriminately.
An idea could be to transiently express a channel or membrane protein
ligand via agro which will be expressed in tandem with a visual marker
say anthocyanin and then the same tissue is treated with said
phage-like virus to deliver the DNA goods into the cell. If all goes
well, a mechanism that is not well understood will cause uptake of DNA
directly into chloroplast which will recombine, if properly built, to
form stable transgenic plastids.
After that, one would need to wait and wait for that one transformed
cell to gather enough chloroplasts resistant to spectinomycin so that
one single shoot forms. This shoot will be chimeric in nature and have
a decent amount of wild type chloroplasts still within so the leaf of
the shoot is chopped up and further cultured until more shoots form.
This purification process is done several times to ensure homoplastomy.
Last step would be to Cre-Lox out the resistance marker and viral
ligand sequence via transient agro just to be on the safe side. If all
goes well you'll have a STABLE virus-mediated transformation of
chloroplast genome. About a years worth of lab work but a worthwhile
endeavor.
The current hot topic in plant biotech is plants as biofactories. This
does not require stable transformants so do sift through the articles
and ensure that what you are reading is showing evidence of stable, not
transient, transformations. :)
Sebastian S. Cocioba
CEO & Founder
New York Botanics, LLC
Plant Biotech R&D From: Cathal Garvey
Sent: 7/18/2014 5:19 AM
To:
diy...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [DIYbio] Plant chloraplast viruses as vectors