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Transformation of Lotus corniculatus plants with Escherichia coli asparagines synthetase A: effect on nitrogen assimilation and plant development

Authors :
Stefania Pasqualini
Michele Bellucci
Sergio Arcioni
Francesca De Marchis
Luisa Ederli
Source :
Plant cell, tissue and organ culture, 78 (2004): 139–150. doi:10.1023/B:TICU.0000022554.27490.3d, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Bellucci M., Ederli L., De Marchis F., Pasqualini S., Arcioni S./titolo:Transformation of Lotus corniculatus plants with Escherichia coli asparagines synthetase A: effect on nitrogen assimilation and plant development/doi:10.1023%2FB:TICU.0000022554.27490.3d/rivista:Plant cell, tissue and organ culture (Print)/anno:2004/pagina_da:139/pagina_a:150/intervallo_pagine:139–150/volume:78
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Kluwer Academic, Dordrecht , Paesi Bassi, 2004.

Abstract

Asparagine and glutamine are major forms of nitrogen in the phloem sap of many higher plants. In vascular plants, glutamine-dependent asparagines synthetase (AS) is the primary source of asparagine. In Escherichia coli, asparagines is synthesized by the action of two distinct enzymes, AS-A which utilizes ammonia as a nitrogen donor, and AS-B which utilizes both glutamine and ammonia as substrates, but with a preference for glutamine. In this study, the possibility to endow plants with ammonia-dependent AS activity was investigated by heterologous expression of E. coli asnA gene with the aim to introduce a new ammonium assimilation pathway in plants. The bacterial gene is placed under the control of light-dependent promoters, and introduced by transformation into Lotus corniculatus plants. Analysis of transgenic plants has revealed a phenomenon of transgene silencing which has prevented asnA expression in several transgenics. The asnA-expressing plants are characterized by premature flowering and reduced growth. A significant reduction of the total free amino acid accumulation in transgenic plants is observed. Surprisingly, the content of asparagine in wild-type plants is about 2.5-fold higher that that of transgenic plants. While glutamine levels in transgenic plants are about 3-4-fold higher than those in wild-type plants, aspartate levels are significantly lower. Transformation with asnA also induced a significant reduction of photosynthesis when measured under saturated light and ambient CO2 conditions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant cell, tissue and organ culture, 78 (2004): 139–150. doi:10.1023/B:TICU.0000022554.27490.3d, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Bellucci M., Ederli L., De Marchis F., Pasqualini S., Arcioni S./titolo:Transformation of Lotus corniculatus plants with Escherichia coli asparagines synthetase A: effect on nitrogen assimilation and plant development/doi:10.1023%2FB:TICU.0000022554.27490.3d/rivista:Plant cell, tissue and organ culture (Print)/anno:2004/pagina_da:139/pagina_a:150/intervallo_pagine:139–150/volume:78
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3821c748092154a6384d04f914d5b326
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1023/B:TICU.0000022554.27490.3d