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School of Undergraduate Studies
1. Journal Articles
An episomal vector system for plastid transformation in higher plants
Min, Sung Ran
;
Davarpanah, Seyed Javad
;
Jung, Seo Hee
;
Park, Youn-il
;
Liu, Jang R.
;
Jeong, Won-Joong
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1. Journal Articles
School of Undergraduate Studies
1. Journal Articles
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Title
An episomal vector system for plastid transformation in higher plants
Issued Date
2015-11
Citation
Min, Sung Ran. (2015-11). An episomal vector system for plastid transformation in higher plants. Plant Biotechnology Reports, 9(6), 443–449. doi: 10.1007/s11816-015-0381-4
Type
Article
Author Keywords
Episome
;
Heterocapsa triquetra
;
Plastid transformation
;
Tobacco
Keywords
CHLOROPLAST GENOMES
;
DINofLAGELLATE
;
ELemENTS
;
Episome
;
EXPRESSION
;
Gene
;
Heterocapsa Triquetra
;
Heterocapsatriquetra
;
Plastid Transformation
;
PROTEIN
;
REPLICATION
;
RNAS
;
SELECTION
;
Tobacco
;
TRANSPLASTOMIC TOBACCO
ISSN
1863-5466
Abstract
We developed a new plastid transformation vector system using the putative replication origin of a minicircular chromosome from the marine dinoflagellate Heterocapsatriquetra. Transplastomic tobacco plants generated with this vector properly expressed the green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene without incorporating it into the plastid genome. To construct the episomal vector, a 610-bp DNA fragment containing the putative replication origin was fused to a dicistronic expression cassette encoding the aminoglycoside 3′-adenyltransferase (aadA) and gfp genes under control of the plastid rrn promoter. The vector was delivered to plastids of tobacco leaf explants by biolistic bombardment. After 8weeks of bombardment, episomal transformant shoots were generated from leaf explants cultured on selection media containing 500mg/L spectinomycin. Fluorescence microscopy and northern blot analysis demonstrated GFP expression in episomal transformant plants. PCR, Southern blot analysis, recovery of episomes, and sequencing analysis showed the vector to be maintained as self-replicating extrachromosomal circular DNA molecules for at least 6months. Using a single construct for all plants, our episomal vector system may offer an advantage over the conventional plastid vector systems, which require species-specific constructs. © 2015, Korean Society for Plant Biotechnology and Springer Japan.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/2584
DOI
10.1007/s11816-015-0381-4
Publisher
SPRINGER
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