Top Banner
32
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture
Page 2: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Group Members

Khushbkht Khan Sehrish Khan Huma Iqbal Maryum Batool Muryum Farooq

Page 3: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Biotransformation In Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Page 4: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Biotransformation

"Biotransformation is the process whereby a substance is changed from one chemical to another (transformed) by a chemical reaction within the body”.

Page 5: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

HOW???

Chemical reaction: Hydroxylation. Oxidation (of hydroxyl group), Reduction (of carbonyl group), Hydrogenation, Glycosyl conjugation, Hydrolysis.

Page 6: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Hydroxylation

By hydroxylases.

Page 7: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Oxidation

By oxidases

Page 8: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Reduction

By Reductase

Page 9: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Hydrogenation

Transferases Isomerases Reductases

Page 10: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Hydrolysis

Page 11: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Glycosyl conjugation

By transferases

Page 12: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Biotransformation in Plant tissue culture

Page 13: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Plants

cellulose, wood, and rubber.

terpenoids, cardenolides, coumarins,anthraquinonesflavonoids, glucosinolates, alkaloids

drugs, flavors, pigments (food ingredients), agrochemicals

Basic

materials

Secondary metabolites

Page 14: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

PROBLEM

the formation and the accumulation of some secondary metabolites does not normally occur in the cultured cells of higher plants.

Page 15: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

SOLUTION

The biotransformation of exogenous substrates by the plant cultured cells.

Page 16: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Case StudyLavandula angustifolia

Page 17: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Lavandula angustifolia Mill.

a shrub with a well-developed woody base,

growing to a height of about 2 ft, A native of the West Mediterranean

region

Page 18: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Oil Of Lavender Anti-inflammatory, anxiolytic, mutagenic activities analgesic property natural repellant, pharmaceutical and industrial auxiliaries

Page 19: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Cell suspension culturing MS media MT media SH media

Main Growth Regulators: 2,4-D IAA Kinetin Sucrose Coconut water Vitamin complexes

Page 20: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Study of biotransformation Exogenous Compounds:

octanal, citronellal, linalyl acetate, bornyl acetate, geranyl acetate, linalool, borneol, citronellol menthol.

Page 21: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

ester hydrolysis and oxidation were the main reactions which occurred in

biotransformation process.

Page 22: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture
Page 23: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

The data in this work indicates that the natural metabolite

monoterpenoids such as linalool were not converted but linalool with

added functional groups (linalyl acetate) was efficiently transformed

using cells.

Page 24: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Biotransformation in animal cell cultures

A Case Study

Page 25: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

2-hydroxyethyl-methacrylate(HEMA)

Greatly found on unsterilized dental material.

Hazards: I. Contact dermatitis in dentists.II. Inhalation has potential effects on

lung cells.

Page 26: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

The main CYP-metabolizing capacity of the lungs is found in the bronchiolar Clara cells and alveolar type 2 cells.

Lung diseases such as lung cancer caused by chemical pollutants are often suggested to originate from these cells.

Page 27: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Biotransformation

Beneficial as toxic compounds are inactivated and removed from the body.

However, biotransformation of xenobiotics sometimes results in the formation of reactive metabolites that may cause severe damage to cellular molecules.

Page 28: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Biotransformation enzymes which results in HEMA toxicity in lungs is

tested.

Page 29: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Culture and media

Alveolar type 2 cells are cultured on Williams E medium epidermal growth factor Insulin Hydrocortisone

Page 30: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Analysis through

Immunofluorescence RT-PCR microscopy

Page 31: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

HEMA induces apoptotic like morphology in primary cultures of rat alveolar type 2 cells by a different mechanism.

the increased toxicity could be expressed via metabolic activation by the CYP2E1 enzyme.

Page 32: Biotransformation in Plant Tissue Culture and Animal Cell Culture

Conclusion