Title

Chloroplast Genetic Engineering: Recent Advances And Future Perspectives

Keywords

Biopharmaceuticals; Bioreactors; Gene containment; GM crops; Plastid genomics; Recombinant proteins

Abstract

Chloroplast genetic engineering offers a number of unique advantages, including a high-level of transgene expression, multi-gene engineering in a single transformation event, transgene containment via maternal inheritance, lack of gene silencing, position and pleiotropic effects, and undesirable foreign DNA. Thus far, over forty transgenes have been stably integrated and expressed via the tobacco chloroplast genome to confer important agronomic traits, as well as express industrially valuable biomaterials and therapeutic proteins. The hyperexpression of recombinant proteins within plastid engineered systems offers a cost effective solution for using plants as bioreactors. Additionally, the presence of chaperones and enzymes within the chloroplast help to assemble complex multi-subunit proteins and correctly fold proteins containing disulflde bonds, thereby drastically reducing the costs of in vitro processing. Oral delivery of vaccine antigens against cholera, tetanus, anthrax, plague, and canine parvovirus are made possible because of the high expression levels and antibiotic-free selection systems available in plastid transformation systems. Plastid genetic engineering also has become a powerful tool for basic research in plastid biogenesis and function. This approach has helped to unveil a wealth of information about plastid DNA replication origins, intron maturases, translation elements and proteolysis, import of proteins and several other processes. Although many successful examples of plastid engineering have set a foundation for various future applications, this technology has not been extended to many of the major crops. Highly efficient plastid transformation has been recently accomplished via somatic embryogenesis using species-specific chloroplast vectors in soybean, carrot, and cotton. Transgenic carrots were able to withstand salt concentrations that only halophytes could tolerate; more than twice the effectiveness of other engineering attempts. Recent advances in plastid engineering provide an efficient platform for the production of therapeutic proteins, vaccines, and biomaterials using an environmentally friendly approach. This review takes an in-depth look into the state of the art in plastid engineering and offers directions for further research and development. Copyright © Taylor & Francis Inc.

Publication Date

7-12-2005

Publication Title

Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences

Volume

24

Issue

2

Number of Pages

83-107

Document Type

Review

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1080/07352680590935387

Socpus ID

21344474571 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/21344474571

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