Transgenics 3 Flashcards
What is β-carotene = 4
1 *precursor of vitamin A
2 *found in yellow vegetables & greens
3 *vitamin A deficiency 400 million people
4 *skin disorders, blindness
β-carotene pathway
transformed into rice
*4 enzymes: 2 from daffodil,
2 from a bacterium
Daily requirement of vitamin
A in 300 g cooked rice
Golden Rice: follow up projects address
micronutrient malnutrition
1 * Iron deficiency (rice contains phytate, which binds iron - absorption in
gut inhibited)
2 * Rice also transformed with genes encoding:
- fungal enzyme that breaks down phytate
- iron storage protein (ferritin) from French bean
- metallothionen-like protein from basmati rice to facilitate
absorption in gut
3 * 7 introduced genes - 6 from 4 unrelated species, 1 from another
rice strain
4 * Others: Zinc, protein, vitamin E
Herbicide Resistant Crop Plants
1. weed destroy
2. Glyphospahte
3. EPSP synthase
- Weeds destroy ~10% of crops worldwide.
>100 different herbicides used:
* >10 billion dollars annually
* environmental damage & human health - Glyphosate
* non-toxic to humans
* broken down by soil bacteria
* effective at low concentrations - EPSP synthase – target of glyphosphate
* amino acid synthesis in bacteria & plants
* inhibited by the herbicide glyphosate
**Crop plants transformed with gene encoding
glyphosate-resistant EPSP* synthase
*EPSP = 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate
Edible Vaccines and Plants?
Edible parts of a plant that has been genetically modified to produce specific
components of a particular pathogen
Edible Vaccines - Subunit vaccines?
Subunit vaccines:
* fragment of a pathogen – eg surface proteins from virus or bacterium
- act as antigens & stimulate immune system to make antibodies against the
pathogen
Problem of Edible Vaccines vs SOLUTION?
PROBLEM: need refrigeration and sterile conditions
SOLUTION: transform plant with genes encoding surface proteins
Edible Vaccines - TOBACCO?
- Tobacco plant transformed with hepatitis B subunit - subunit detected in leaf tissue with commercial anti-hepB antibody & colour reaction
- Moved to edible plants, eg potato, lettuce
Edible Vaccines - Edible vaccines in clinical trials
1 *Cholera: leading cause of death in infants & children in developing countries
*E. coli enterotoxin - similar in structure to cholera enterotoxin
*inserted into potato - immunity conferred when raw potatoes eaten
2.* Rabies - transgenic spinach
Edible Vaccines -* more research needed: QUESTIONS =4
1 - necessary antigen conc?
- possible overstimulation of immune system after long
term consumption
- possible overstimulation of immune system after long
3 - how to overcome oral
tolerance acquisition
5 - convenient, but costs are
complex
New interest of edible vaccines?
New interest – ebola (antibodies that recognize Ebola virus surface
glycoproteins isolated from individuals who survived Ebola infections)
Edible vaccines: how to make?
- Gene from a human pathogen is inserted into bacterium that infects plants
- Bacteria infect potato leaf segments
- leaf segments sprout into whole plants carrying gene from human pathogen
- eating raw potato triggers immune response to pathogen
WHAT IS Gene therapy - Treatment of human
diseases
WHAT IS ITS GOAL?
1 * “Any procedure intended to treat or alleviate disease by genetically modifying the cells of a patient” Strachan and Read
- The general goal of gene therapy is to attack the genetic basis of disease at its source: to “ cure ” or correct an abnormal condition caused by a mutant allele by
introducing wild-type allele into cells
A boy is born with a disease
that makes his immune
system ineffective.
- Recessive genetic disorder
called severe combined
immunodeficieny disorder
(SCID) - Caused by mutation in the
gene coding for the blood enzyme adenosine deaminase (ADA) (can be Xlinked also - IL-2 deficiency). - Loss of protein = loss of precursor cells for various cells of the immune
system. - No ability to fight infections - live in completely sterile environment
- No conventional therapy available - bone marrow transplant would not work - graft vs host against precursor cell
Techniques have been developed - different kind of
transplantation
- A normal gene is “transplanted” into cells of
the body, thereby permitting their function and survival
To understand this approach consider:
- An example, how gene therapy corrected a growth-hormone deficiency in mice.
- Mice with recessive mutation little (lit) are dwarves because they lack a protein (growth-hormone-releasing hormone receptor, or GHRHR)
- Necessary to induce the pituitary to secrete mouse growth hormone into the circulatory system.