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Key Applications of Plant Metabolic Engineering Mirza Faisal Qaseem 08-arid-876 PhD scholar (Bot) PMAS- Arid Agriculture University Rawalpindi, Pakistan
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Page 1: key application of plant metabolic engineering

Key Applications of Plant Metabolic Engineering

Mirza Faisal Qaseem

08-arid-876

PhD scholar (Bot)

PMAS- Arid Agriculture University

Rawalpindi, Pakistan

Page 2: key application of plant metabolic engineering

Contents

• Challenges in plant metabolic engineering

• Plants That Can Fix Their Own Nitrogen

• Crop Plants with Altered Nutrient Content

• Enhancing Photosynthetic Efficiency

• TALENs

• CRISPRs

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Plants

• Derive energy entirely from the sun

• Carbon from CO2

• Defend themselves from pests and predators

• Complex symbioses

• Can survive extremes of

– temperature

– nutrient

– water availability

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Page 5: key application of plant metabolic engineering

Challenges in plantmetabolic engineering

• Four long-standing grand challenges in plant metabolic engineering

• Two deal with important applications in food and energy

• Two are of general utility in improving plant fitness

• Solution

– Subjecting plant genome to deletion editing and insertions

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Plants That Can Fix Their OwnNitrogen

• 180 million tons of nitrogen fertilizer is used every year in industrial farming

• Disadvantages – Substantial cost– Deleterious effects

• Soil • Surrounding environment• Water

• Plants able to make their own nitrogenTransform agriculture by reducing or eliminating

this enormous dependence on fertilizer

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Plant engineering using Bacteria

• First method takes advantage of the fact that some bacteria carry out their own version of the Haber-Bosch process—reducing atmospheric N2 into a more bio available form, NH3—using the enzyme nitrogenase

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Nitrogenase

• Complex enzyme

– multiple metalloclusters

• Require

– large quantity of biochemical energy

• Transfer the electrons needed to activate the exceptionally stable N2 triple bond.

• By expressing nitrogenase, plants would be able to fix their own nitrogen.

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• Nitrogen fixed by a plant could be used immediately to generate amino acid and nucleic acid monomers

• Transport them to neighboring cells

• Disadvantage

– Process induce a metabolic cost

• Can be regulated by the endogenous level of nitrogen to maximize its efficiency

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Challenges

• Eighteen gene products (in Klebsiella oxytoca)are necessary and sufficient for theproduction of nitrogenase and its complexiron-molybdenum cofactor.

• Biosynthetic gene cluster for nitrogenase has been refactored—taken apart, recoded, and put back together using known components—and shown to be active in its new host

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The successful transfer of other large geneclusters from one microbe to another suggeststhat the process of functionalizing microbes isundergoing a dramatic improvement

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Challenges

• 18 components of the nitrogenasebiosynthetic apparatus would need to beexpressed simultaneously in plants andfunction in concert

• Since plants are eukaryotic and multicellular,where in the plant cell should the genes beexpressed and in which cell types of the plant

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• Nitrogenase which is poisoned by oxygen and must therefore be expressed under anaerobic conditions.

• Tools that enable organelle and cell-type specific expression will be of great utility here and in other plant engineering efforts.

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Second method of increasing N uptake

• Engineer a rhizosphere symbiosis between a nitrogen-fixing microorganism and a plant host

• Primary advantages

i. It uncouples the difficulties of utilizingnitrogenase from the biology of the plant host

ii. Outsources the demanding chemistry involvedto a bacterial strain better suited to the task.

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ii. The well-studied symbioses between legumesand their nitrogen-fixing, rootnodulatingbacterial symbionts prove that a bacterialmutualist can satisfy the nitrogen needs of aplant host

• Nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the rhizosphere opensthe possibility that symbioses of this sort are amuch more widely distributed phenomenon

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Challenges

• Enabling efficient nutrient exchange

• Maintaining specificity of the host-microbepair– Both could take years to develop and are likely to

require not just plant but also microbial metabolicengineering.

– Advanced molecular breeding tools that enableaccess to natural variation in a plant’s wildancestors are a promising alternative approach toincreasing crop plant yields

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Crop Plants with AlteredNutrient Content

• Golden rice proves the concept that the nutrient content of a crop plant can be improved by metabolic engineering

• Nutrient levels of certain plants was enhancedusing breeding – rice

– maize

– wheat

– Tomatoes

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• Golden rice

– adding the beta-carotene pathway to rice, to produce rice with higher levels of vitamin A

• Targets for nutrient engineering

– Metabolic pathways

– alter the level of a nutrient in its native host

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Engineering of Metabolic pathways

• Those pathways that produce

– Phytoalexins

– Flavonoids and other molecules

• Play a role in the chemopreventive properties of vegetables and fruits.

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Alteration of a nutrient level

• Not require knowing the genes in its biosynthetic pathway

• Example

• Expressing two transcription factors

from snapdragon in tomato

• Levels of the flavonoid anthocyanin have been increased 3-fold

• Flavonoid confer improved chemopreventiveproperties in cancer susceptible mice

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Expression of Health promoting molecule in a new host.

• Golden rice is example of this strategy

• Only two genes were required for the production of beta-carotene

• A more ambitious prospect would be to transfer the 13-gene glucoraphanin pathway to a widely consumed crop such as rice, wheat, or maize

• Require

– New approaches for discovering the genes

– new tools for site-selective genome editing

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Page 24: key application of plant metabolic engineering

• Introducing or increasing the level of anutrient compound could also alter the tasteof a plant, potentially impacting itspalatability.

– since small molecule metabolites make an important contribution to flavor.

• Notable targets in this area include the steviolglycosides and the mixed esters that givestrawberry plants their distinctive flavor

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Engineering Crops for BiofuelProduction

• Plants are ideal invention• Combat the dual challenges

– Rising greenhouse gases– Used for green energy

• They capture CO2 from the air and turn it into sugar, the ideal substrate for biofuel production.

• Plants protect this energy rich polymer• Most of the carbon is stored as dehydrated

crystalline cellulose, wrapped in a meshwork of crosslinked phenylpropanoids, lignin

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• Cellulose presents a challenge in itself.

• The beta-1,4-linked chains of cellulose can pack tightly together, excluding water in a way that prevents glycosidic enzymes from releasing its constituent sugar monomers

• Cellulose co purifies with lignin which inhabit the action of cellulases

• So there is need for costly and energy intensive pretreatment to separate the cellulose from lignin

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• Lignin could be degraded into valuable aromatic monomers either

• Chemically

• Enzymes found in

– White rot fungi

– Microorganisms

• Neither has been shown to work in a real-world setting

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• Lignin biosynthesis can be geneticallymodified to change its chemical compositionor to reduce its content in plant tissues toimprove the processing of polysaccharides.

• Arabidopsis thaliana knockout mutant of caffeoyl shikimate esterase

– Gave a 4-fold increase in the efficiency ofsaccharification

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• In Lignin modified plants Discernible effects on plant growth and development

– Transgenics contained 25% less cellulose content

– 40% lighter and smaller than wild-type

• Protein engineering and expression of a 4-O-methyltransferase in A. thaliana substantially reduced lignin content

• Interestingly, no significant changes in growth phenotype were observed and saccharification yields improved by 25%.

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• Ideal scenario would be for plants to degrade their own lignin, releasing pure cellulose that could be more easily degraded into glucose

• For that matter, the plant could be engineered to break down its own cellulose on demand, releasing fermentation- ready sugars for biofuel production.

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Challenges

• Feasibility of enzymatically degrading lignin toliberate cellulose

• Although this would undoubtedly be a difficulttask, the ability of white rot fungi to degradelignin proves the concept that there existenzymes (e.g., lignin peroxidases) that cancleave the lignin meshwork into monomersand smaller polymers

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• Heavily crosslink (and consolidate) the lignin

– causing it to precipitate and making it easier to separate from cellulose.

• Process likely to be carried out by suites of degrading enzymes in rot fungi, a critical step would be to first identify sets of enzymes that could be coexpressed to make the necessary modifications to lignin.

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Enhancing PhotosyntheticEfficiency

• Rubisco is the enzyme that catalyzes the firstkey step in CO2 fixation as part of the CalvinCycle

• Its low turnover rate and ability to also use oxygen as a substrate in photorespiration make it notoriously inefficient.

• Plants make more Rubisco than any other protein

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Alternative carbon fixation systems

• Improve the efficiency of photosynthesis by actively concentrating CO2 and reducing the oxygenase activity of Rubisco

• Plants have evolved two systems to improve photosynthesis efficiency

• C4

• Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM)

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C3, C4 and CAM plants

• C3

• the process of fixing carbon into C3 acids occurs in the same cell type

• C4

• Evolved to separate the Calvin cycle and carbon capture into different cell types.

– CO2 is first captured within mesophyll cells to produce C4 acids

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– Which diffuse to bundle sheath cells where theyare decarboxylated and concentrated to maximizeRubisco’s carboxylating efficiency.

• CAM plants

• Photosynthesis and carbon capture are separated temporally– capture CO2 at night

– Close their stomata during the day

– C4 acids generated by CAM photosynthesis are decarboxylated and concentrated to enhance Rubisco’s efficiency

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• All the enzymes of the C4 cycle are known andalready exist in C3 plants.

• However, expressing the enzymes of the C4 cyclealone will not be enough, as the plant’s anatomyis crucial for the success of the pathway

• Genes that are responsible for controlling C4 leafanatomy remain largely unknown and are beingidentified by mutant populations of model C4plants like Sorghum

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• Cell-specific promoters will need to be identified to enable cell-type-specific expression in bundle-sheath or mesophyllcells.

• > 20 genes needed for the installation of C4 photosynthesis in C3 plant

• Sophisticated transformation

• Genome editing technologies

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Technologies

• Transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses

• Genome editing tools– TALENs

– CRISPR/Cas9

• Synthetic biology parts list specific to plants– tissue-specific promoters,

– Transporters

– multi-gene expression constructs

– biosynthetic enzymes

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Transcription activator-like effectornucleases TALENs

• Artificial restriction enzymes

• Generated by fusing a

• TAL effector DNA binding domain

• DNA cleavage domain.

• TAL effectors

– are proteins secreted by Xanthomonas bacteriawhen they infect various plant species.

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• TALEs can be quickly engineered to bind practically any desired DNA sequence

• Combining such an engineered TALE with a DNA cleavage domain (which cuts DNA strands), one can engineer restriction enzymes that are specific for any desired DNA sequence.

• When these restriction enzymes are introduced into cells, they can be used for genome editing in situ

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Applications

– Elucidating basic function and regulating a gene

– Study of metabolic pathways

– Embryonic stem cell research

– Research on disease model

– Provide therapeutic avenues for genetic disorders including monogenic diseases

– Method of the Year” for 2011 by Nature Methods

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Problems

• Non specific

• off-target cleavage may result

• lead to the production of enough double-strand breaks to overwhelm the repair machinery.

• consequently yield chromosomal rearrangements and/or cell death.

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Page 45: key application of plant metabolic engineering

CRISPRs (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats)

• DNA loci containing short repetitions of base sequences

• Repetition is followed by short segments of "spacer DNA“

• CRISPR loci range in size from 24 to 48 base pairs

• Spacer DNA are regions of non-coding DNA between tandemly repeated genes.

• CRISPRs are found in approximately 40% of sequenced bacteria genomes and 90% of sequenced archaea

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• CRISPR/Cas system is a prokaryotic immune system

• Confers resistance to foreign genetic elements such as plasmid and phages and provides a form of acquired immunity.

• CRISPR spacers recognize and cut these exogenous genetic elements

• Since 2013, the CRISPR/Cas system has been used for gene editing and gene regulation

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Applications

• Artificial immunization against phage by introductionof engineered CRISPR loci in industrially importantbacteria, including those used in food production andlarge-scale fermentation

• Genome engineering at cellular or organismic level byreprogramming a CRISPR/Cas system to achieve RNA-guided genome engineering.

• Discrimination of bacterial strains by comparison ofspacer sequences

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Page 49: key application of plant metabolic engineering
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Reference

• Lau W, Fischbach MA, Osbourn A, Sattely ES (2014) Key Applications of Plant Metabolic Engineering. PLoS Biol 12(6): e1001879. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001879