Title: PLANTS AS BIOREACTORS
1 Lecture 3637 PLANTS AS BIOREACTORS
2WHAT IS A BIOREACTOR ?
- A device in which a substrate of low
value is utilised by living cells to
generate products of higher value. - Plants are exploited as bioreactors for
the production of biomolecules.
3WHY PLANTS ARE USED AS BIOREACTORS ?
- Post translational modifications
- Storage costs
- Ethical considerations
4COMPARISON WITH OTHER PRODUCTION SYSTEM
- Low cost alternative
- Post translational modifications
- Storage facilities
- Low upstream production cost
5PRODUCTION OF BIOMOLECULES
- Carbohydrates
- 1) Cyclodextrin biosynthesis
- Starch acts as the substrate
- Bacterial gene encoding cyclodextrin
glycosyl transferase (cgt ) -
Contd...
6Cyclodextrin glycosyl transferase
Contd...
7HOW GENE CONSTRUCT IS MADE FOR cgt?
(Cyclodextrin glycosyl transferase)
a) Patatin gene promoter (tuber specific) b)
Sequence encoding peptide of RUBP
carboxylase c) cgt gene from Klebsiella
pneumoniae d) 3' sequence of nos gene of
Agrobacterium
Contd...
8Gene construct of cgt gene
5'
3'
P c p
t
Patatin promoter cgt gene Sequence encoding
transit peptide of RuBP carboxylase nos
terminator
P c p
t
Contd...
9- Targeted to amyloplast
- Expressed in tubers
- Expression level 0.001-0.01
- (Goddijn and Janpen, 1995)
Amyloplast
10- 2) Increasing Starch accumulation
- ADP- Glucose pyrophosphorylase
- ADP- Glucose
Starch - A mutated bacterial gene (glgc16)
encoding ADP glucose pyrophosphorrylase - Expressed in potato tubers
- Targeted to amyloplasts
- 60 increase in starch than control
- ( Verisser and Jaciobsen, 1993 )
11 Rerouting the starch to produce fructan
- Fructosyl transferase gene from
Bacillus subtilis - Introduced in tobacco and potato
plants - Accumulation level
- 3-8 of dry
wt. In tobacco leaves - 1-30 in
potato leaves - 1-7 in potato
microtubers
12Metabolic Engineering of Carbohydrate Metabolism
(Goddijn and Janpen,1995)
13PRODUCTION OF PROTEINS FROM PLANTS
- Expression of peptide relies on
- a) Stable intergration of transgene
- b) By transient expression of
genetically - engineered viruses
14HUMAN THERAPEUTIC PROTEIN-SOMATOTROPIN (hST)
- Synthesis of hST and ubiquitin fusion
genes - Cloning of chimeric hST genes using pPRV
vectors - Introduction to tobacco leaf chloroplast
by biolistic process - Leaves with different ages show different
hST accumulation - ( Jeffrey et al., 2000 )
15SEEDS AS BIOREACTORS
Why seeds are used as bioreactors ?
- Storage facility
- Transportation
- Oral consumption
- Existing agricultural facilities in seed
handling -
(Sun et al., 2002)
Seeds
16Production of recombinant Hirudin from seeds
- Hirudin has antithrombin activity
- Isolated from Hirudo medicinalis
- Limited availability (1 leech head contains
20mg of hirudin) - Construction of synthetic gene with amino acid
sequence of hv2
3- D View of Hirudin
Contd...
17Oleosin - Hirudin fusion gene construct
5'
3'
P o X
H t
o x H
Oleosin gene Cleavage site Hirudin gene nos
terminator
t
Contd...
18- Fusion of gene with Arabidiopsis oleosin
gene - Introduction of fusion gene construct
into Brassica napus - Expression of seed specific oleosin hirudin
transcripts - Protein purified by oleosin partition
technology - ( Dana et al., 1996 )
Brassica napus
Contd...
19Oleosin based purification of heterologous
polypeptides
(Goddijn and Janpen, 1995)
20PRODUCTION OF BRYODIN IN TOBACCO PLANT
- Tobacco plants that are able to produce bryodin.
- This protein, which is produced in the roots of
bryonia, deactivates ribosomes and is being
tested for its effect against HIV infection.
21Plant Transformation
- The plant leaf disc is dipped in a solution of
bacteria. The bacterial "Trojan Horse" infects
the edges of the leaf disc and in the process
integrates the pharmaceutical protein gone into
the plant genome (pict 1). - After infection the discs are placed on selection
media that a flows only plant cells that carry
the protein gene to survive and regenerate into
plantlets. After about six weeks on selection
media, a large number of plantlets that carry the
pharmaceutical protein gene are visible at the
edges of the original leaf disc (pict 2 3).
22- The plantlets are removed from the leaf disc and
placed in clear plastic boxes that contain media
that allows them to form roots (pict 4). - The rooted plantlets are placed in pots and
plants are allowed to grow and produce seed. This
seed can then be used for large scale production
of the pharmaceutical protein (pict 5).
23Protein Trafficking
- Following translation of the molecular ring gene,
the protein will move through the endoplasmic
reticulum and Golgi apparatus for processing,
folding and glycosylation.
24PRODUCTION OF SPIDER SILK PROTEINS IN PLANTS
Production of transgenic plants
Spider silk protein
25Expression of spidroin-ELP-fusion proteins in the
ER of transgenic plants
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27Purification of spider silk-ELP fusion proteins
- From transgenic plants Spidroin-ELP-fusions could
be purified by addition of salt and by heat to
95 purity.
28BIOPHARMACEUTICALS FROM PLANTS
- Plants constructed to express proteins
like - a-interferon, human serum albumin etc.
-
- Two expensive drugs are produced from
plants - A) Glucocerebrosidase
- B) Granulocyte macrophage colony
stimulating factor
29GLUCOCEREBROSIDASE
- Lysosomal hydrolase
- Cause Gauchers disease
- Earlier this enzyme was purified from human
placentas - Now synthesized from tobacco plants
- (Giddings et
al., 2000)
30Production of human lysosomal enzymes in
Nicotiana tabacum
- Gluco cerebrosidase- gaucher disease
- Alpha-hexosaminidase- Tay-Sachs disease
- Alpha-L-iduronidase- Hurler syndrome
31INDUSTRIAL ENZYMES
- Cellulase
- Isolated from bacterial and fungal organisms
- Expressed in potato plants
- Enzymes produced in foliage and vines
32- Phytase
- Isolated from Aspergillus niger
- Expressed in seeds
- Replace feed supplements for broiler chicken
33PRODUCTION OF BIOMOLECULES FROM PLANTS
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37PLANT CELL SUSPENSION CULTURE AS BIOREACTORS
- Secondary metabolites recombinant
proteins - production - Antitumour agents like taxol can be
produced - Taxol from Taxus sp - treatment of breast
and ovarian cancers - (Seki et al., 1997)
38ADVANTAGES OF PLANTS AS BIOREACTORS
- Can produce high level of safe homogenous
functional biomolecules - Modern agriculture practice - easy scale up
and processing - Easy storage
39ADVANTAGES OF PLANTS AS BIOREACTORS
- Chimeric plant virus can be used to produce
vaccines - Administration safe and painless
- Long shelf life (seeds)
- Low cost
40LIMITATIONS AND REMEDIES
41FUTURE CHALLENGES
- Engineering challenges like maximization of
expression levels - Environmental safety
- Stability of product under storage
- Evaluation of dosage requirement
- Regulatory considerations and legal standards