9 results on '"Pierluigi Barone"'
Search Results
2. Tobacco plastid transformation using the feedback-insensitive anthranilate synthase [ ]-subunit of tobacco (ASA2) as a new selectable marker
- Author
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Jack M. Widholm, Xing-Hai Zhang, and Pierluigi Barone
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Physiology ,4-methylindole-tryptophan ,Plant Science ,Genetically modified crops ,selectable marker ,7-methyl-DL-tryptophan ,Transformation, Genetic ,Anthranilate synthase ,Tobacco ,Plastids ,Plastid ,Gene ,Selectable marker ,Plant Proteins ,biology ,Tryptophan ,food and beverages ,Research Papers ,Protein Subunits ,non-antibiotic selection ,Transformation (genetics) ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Expression cassette ,plastid transformation ,Transplastomic plant - Abstract
Genetic engineering of chloroplasts normally requires the stable introduction of bacterial derived antibiotic or herbicide-resistance genes as selective markers. Ecological and health concerns have been raised due to the presence of such genes within the environment or the food supply. One way to overcome this issue is the use of plant genes able to confer a metabolic or developmental advantage to the transformed cells manipulating the plant's biosynthetic pathways. We explored the feasibility of using, for plastid transformation, the selection system based on the feedback-insensitive anthranilate synthase (AS) alpha-subunit gene of tobacco (ASA2) as a new selective marker and the indole analogue 4-methylindole (4MI) or the tryptophan analogue 7-methyl-DL-tryptophan (7MT) as the selection agents. An expression cassette containing Prrn-ASA2 was effectively integrated into the region between accD and ycf4 of the tobacco plastome by the biolistic process. Plastid transgenic plants were obtained on medium supplemented with 300 microM 7MT or 4MI. Transplastomic plants showed normal phenotype and fertility and the resistance to the selection agents 7MT and 4MI was transmitted maternally. The plastid transformed lines also exhibited a higher level of AS enzyme activity that was less sensitive to Trp-feedback inhibition and, consequently, increased free Trp levels in leaves about 7-fold.
- Published
- 2009
3. Expression of female sterility in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.)
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Daniele Rosellini, Pierluigi Barone, Fabio Veronesi, and Francesco Ferranti
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Gynoecium ,Sterility ,fungi ,Callose ,Callose · Medicago sativa L. · Megasporogenesis · Ovule development · Ovule sterility ,food and beverages ,Cell Biology ,Plant Science ,Meiocyte ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Sporogenesis ,Botany ,Primordium ,Megaspore ,Ovule - Abstract
Female sterility associated with the presence of callose in the nucellus at anthesis was studied in an F1 progeny of two alfalfa plants displaying 5 and 81% ovule sterility. Transgressive segregation was observed and 100% sterile plants were obtained. Two of the sterile plants were used for cytological analyses on sectioned and stain-cleared whole ovules, in comparison to a 100% fertile full sib plant. The first sign of sterility was callose deposition in the nucellus cell walls surrounding the sporogenous cells of the young ovules. At the same stage, no trace of callose was present in ovule primordia of the fertile plant. Megaspore mother cells differentiated in both fertile and sterile ovules and meiosis was initiated, as indicated by chromatin patterning typical of a zygotene stage. However, meiosis was never completed in the sterile plants. In the control, callose was deposited around the meiocyte and as sects between the cells of the dyads and tetrads during meiosis, and disappeared after the completion of meiosis; an embryo sac developed and female fertility was normal. In the sterile ovules, some nucellus cells enlarged and callose accumulation continued forming thick deposits. At anthesis, the sterile ovules lacked an embryo sac and showed massive callose accumulation in the nucellus. Male fertility was normal in female-sterile plants, thus a female-specific arrest of sporogenesis appears to be the cause of sterility. Pistil development was aberrant in some sterile genotypes, even with arrested pistil growth in early flower buds.
- Published
- 2003
4. Tryptophan and Indole Analog Mediated Plastid Transformation
- Author
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Jack M. Widholm, Xing-Hai Zhang, and Pierluigi Barone
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Indole test ,biology ,Chemistry ,Nicotiana tabacum ,fungi ,Tryptophan ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,Transformation (genetics) ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Anthranilate synthase ,Plastid ,Gene ,Transplastomic plant - Abstract
A nonantibiotic/herbicide-resistance selection system for plastid transformation is described here in technical detail. This system is based on the feedback-insensitive anthranilate synthase (AS) α-subunit gene of tobacco (ASA2) as a selective marker and tryptophan (Trp) or indole analogs as selection agents. AS catalyzes the first reaction in the Trp biosynthetic pathway, naturally compartmentalized in the plastids, by converting chorismate to anthranilate and is subjected to feedback inhibition by Trp. In addition to Trp, various Trp analogs and indole compounds that can be converted to Trp analogs can also inhibit AS activity and therefore are toxic to cells. When cells are made to express the feedback-insensitive ASA2, they acquire resistance to these analogs and can be selected for during transformation process. We have demonstrated the feasibility of this selection system in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Petit Havana). ASA2-expressing transplastomic plants were obtained on medium supplemented with either 7-methyl-DL-tryptophan (7-MT) or 4-methylindole (4-MI). These plants show normal phenotype and fertility and transmit the resistance to the selection agents strictly maternally.
- Published
- 2014
5. Isolation of genes from female sterile flowers in Medicago sativa
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Lara Reale, Daniele Rosellini, Pierluigi Barone, Fabio Veronesi, and Stefano Capomaccio
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Candidate gene ,Plant Infertility ,Megasporogenesis ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Plant Science ,Flowers ,Megasporogenesis , cDNA-AFLP , Alfalfa, Candidate gene ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Gene Expression Regulation, Plant ,Sporogenesis ,Botany ,Arabidopsis thaliana ,Translation factor ,Ovule ,cDNA-AFLP ,Gene ,Plant Proteins ,Genetics ,Differential display ,biology ,Alfalfa ,fungi ,Callose ,Bulked segregant analysis ,food and beverages ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry ,Medicago sativa - Abstract
A better knowledge of female sporogenesis and gametogenesis could have several practical applications, from commercial hybrid seed production to gene containment in GM crops. With the purpose of isolating genes involved in the megasporogenesis process, the cDNA-AFLP technique was employed to isolate transcript-derived fragments (TDF) differentially expressed between female-fertile and female-sterile full-sib alfalfa plants. This female sterility trait involves female-specific arrest of sporogenesis at early prophase associated with ectopic, massive callose deposition within the nucellus. Ninety-six TDFs were generated and BLAST analyses revealed similarities with genes involved in different Gene Ontology categories. Three TDFs were selected based on their putative functions: showing high similarity to a soybean flower-expressed beta 1,3-glucanase, to an Arabidopsis thaliana MAPKKK, and to an A. thaliana eukaryotic initiation translation factor eIF4G III, respectively. The full length mRNA sequences were obtained. RT-PCR and in situ hybridizations were performed to confirm differential expression during flower development. The genomic organization of the three genes was assessed through sequencing and Southern experiments. Sequence polymorphisms were found between sterile and fertile plants. Our approach based on differential display and bulked segregant analysis was successful in isolating genes that were differentially expressed between fertile and sterile alfalfa plants.
- Published
- 2008
6. Bacterial citrate synthase expression and soil aluminum tolerance in transgenic alfalfa
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Wayne A. Parrott, Peter R. LaFayette, Joseph H. Bouton, Fabio Veronesi, Pierluigi Barone, and Daniele Rosellini
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Citrate synthase ,Transgene ,Acid soils , Aluminum toxicity, Citrate synthase, Genetic engineering, Medicago sativa L., Transformation ,Plant Science ,Genetically modified crops ,Citrate (si)-Synthase ,complex mixtures ,Plant Roots ,Transformation ,Bacterial Proteins ,Medicago sativa L ,Gene Expression Regulation, Plant ,Soil pH ,Botany ,Plant breeding ,Citrates ,Acid soils ,biology ,Models, Genetic ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Hydroponics ,Plants, Genetically Modified ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Transformation (genetics) ,Horticulture ,Blotting, Southern ,Shoot ,Genetic engineering ,biology.protein ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Aluminum toxicity ,Aluminum ,Medicago sativa - Abstract
Alfalfa is very sensitive to soil acidity and its yield and stand duration are compromised due to inhibited root growth and reduced nitrogen fixation caused by Al toxicity. Soil improvement by liming is expensive and only partially effective, and conventional plant breeding for Al tolerance has had limited success. Because tobacco and papaya plants overexpressing Pseudomonas aeruginosa citrate synthase (CS) have been reported to exhibit enhanced tolerance to Al, alfalfa was engineered by introducing the CS gene controlled by the Arabidopsis Act2 constitutive promoter or the tobacco RB7 root-specific promoter. Fifteen transgenic plants were assayed for exclusion of Al from the root tip, for internal citrate content, for growth in in vitro assays, or for shoot and root growth in either hydroponics or in soil assays. Overall, only the soil assays yielded consistent results. Based on the soil assays, two transgenic events were identified that were more aluminum-tolerant than the non-transgenic control, confirming that citrate synthase overexpression can be a useful tool to help achieve aluminum tolerance.
- Published
- 2007
7. In planta production of two peptides of the Classical Swine Fever Virus (CSFV) E2 glycoprotein fused to the coat protein of potato virus X
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Carla Marusic, Fabio Veronesi, Chiara Lico, Francesca De Marchis, Gianpiero Marconi, Emidio Albertini, Pierluigi Barone, Domenico Rutili, and Andrea Porceddu
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lcsh:Biotechnology ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Coat protein ,Protein Engineering ,Virus ,Viral Proteins ,Wild boar ,biology.animal ,lcsh:TP248.13-248.65 ,Tobacco ,Animals ,Glycoproteins ,biology ,Transmission (medicine) ,Classical swine fever virus CSFV ,E2 glycoprotein ,fungi ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,Potato virus X ,Plants, Genetically Modified ,Virology ,Potexvirus ,Classical swine fever ,Classical Swine Fever Virus ,Capsid Proteins ,Rabbits ,Peptides ,Biotechnology ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Classical Swine Fever (CSFV) is one of the most important viral infectious diseases affecting wild boars and domestic pigs. The etiological agent of the disease is the CSF virus, a single stranded RNA virus belonging to the family Flaviviridae. All preventive measures in domestic pigs have been focused in interrupting the chain of infection and in avoiding the spread of CSFV within wild boars as well as interrupting transmission from wild boars to domestic pigs. The use of plant based vaccine against CSFV would be advantageous as plant organs can be distributed without the need of particular treatments such as refrigeration and therefore large areas, populated by wild animals, could be easily covered. Results We report the in planta production of peptides of the classical swine fever (CSF) E2 glycoprotein fused to the coat protein of potato virus X. RT-PCR studies demonstrated that the peptide encoding sequences are correctly retained in the PVX construct after three sequential passage in Nicotiana benthamiana plants. Sequence analysis of RT-PCR products confirmed that the epitope coding sequences are replicated with high fidelity during PVX infection. Partially purified virions were able to induce an immune response in rabbits. Conclusion Previous reports have demonstrated that E2 synthetic peptides can efficiently induce an immunoprotective response in immunogenized animals. In this work we have showed that E2 peptides can be expressed in planta by using a modified PVX vector. These results are particularly promising for designing strategies for disease containment in areas inhabited by wild boars.
- Published
- 2005
8. Kanamycin-resistant alfalfa has a point mutation in 16S plastid rDNA
- Author
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Pierluigi Barone, Wayne A. Parrott, Fabio Veronesi, Peter R. LaFayette, and Daniele Rosellini
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Kanamycin Resistance ,Somatic embryogenesis ,Mutant ,Genetic Vectors ,Plant Science ,Genetically modified crops ,Biology ,Kanamycin ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,medicine ,Plastid ribosome ,Point Mutation ,Plastids ,Plastid ,Genetics ,fungi ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Culture Media ,Transformation (genetics) ,Phenotype ,Seeds ,Aminoglycoside antibiotics · Plastid ribosome · Medicago sativa L. · Somatic embryogenesis ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,medicine.drug ,Medicago sativa - Abstract
Genes conferring resistance to kanamycin are frequently used to obtain transgenic plants as spontaneous resistance to kanamycin is not known to exist in higher plants. Nevertheless, mutations conferring kanamycin resistance have been identified in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, raising the question as to why kanamycin-resistant mutants have not been found in higher plants. While attempting plastid transformation of alfalfa, we obtained non-transgenic but kanamycin-resistant somatic embryos following 2 months of culture in the presence of 50 mg l(-1) kanamycin. Sequencing of the plastid DNA region corresponding to the decoding site of the 16S rRNA in ten independent resistant events revealed an A to C transversion at position 1357 of the 16S plastid rDNA, the same site at which an A to G conversion confers kanamycin resistance to C. reinhardtii by reducing the ability of the antibiotic to bind to its target site. All plants derived from the resistant embryos through additional cycles of somatic embryogenesis in the absence of kanamycin retained the mutant phenotype, suggesting that the mutation was homoplastomic. Resistant plants produced 85% less biomass than controls; their leaves were chlorotic during early development and over time slowly turned green. The absence of kanamycin- resistant mutants in higher plants might be explained by the requirement for a regeneration system capable of resulting in homoplastomic individuals, or it may be the result of the detrimental effect of the mutation on the phenotype.
- Published
- 2004
9. Gene targeting and transgene stacking using intra genomic homologous recombination in plants
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Michelle Smith, Pierluigi Barone, and Sandeep Kumar
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Intra genomic homologous recombination ,Transgene ,Review ,Plant Science ,Designed nuclease ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Genome engineering ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Genetics ,Somatic recombination ,fungi ,Gene targeting ,food and beverages ,Transgene stacking ,Transformation (genetics) ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Plant transformation ,Homologous recombination ,DNA ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Modern agriculture has created a demand for plant biotechnology products that provide durable resistance to insect pests, tolerance of herbicide applications for weed control, and agronomic traits tailored for specific geographies. These transgenic trait products require a modular and sequential multigene stacking platform that is supported by precise genome engineering technology. Designed nucleases have emerged as potent tools for creating targeted DNA double strand breaks (DSBs). Exogenously supplied donor DNA can repair the targeted DSB by a process known as gene targeting (GT), resulting in a desired modification of the target genome. The potential of GT technology has not been fully realized for trait deployment in agriculture, mainly because of inefficient transformation and plant regeneration systems in a majority of crop plants and genotypes. This challenge of transgene stacking in plants could be overcome by Intra-Genomic Homologous Recombination (IGHR) that converts independently segregating unlinked donor and target transgenic loci into a genetically linked molecular stack. The method requires stable integration of the donor DNA into the plant genome followed by intra-genomic mobilization. IGHR complements conventional breeding with genetic transformation and designed nucleases to provide a flexible transgene stacking and trait deployment platform.
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