A single cystein-enriched phaseolin expressed in transplastomic tobacco plants accumulates as a biopolymer
Abstract
Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
Recently, transformation of chloroplast genome has been used for the production of
heterologous proteins. We transformed tobacco chloroplasts with two different versions of the
storage protein of Phaseolus vulgaris, phaseolin (with or without signal peptide), in which
a cysteine residue has been added to its C-terminal region. This modification allows for the
formation of inter-chain disulfide bonds, as previously demonstrated in our lab. Our purpose
here is to demonstrate the different ability of chloroplast compartments (stroma and thylakoids)
in the formation of phaseolin polypeptides held together by disulfide bonds. We observed that
the presence of the signal peptide directs phaseolin into the thylakoid compartment, where the
protein is able to form disulfide bridges and high molecular weight polymers, which represent
about 0.05 % of the total soluble proteins. The formation of phaseolin polymers, not detected in
P. vulgaris, could be very interesting for industrial purposes. The chloroplast could be utilized
as a platform for the production of a biopolymer that derives from an edible protein. A possible
application is the production of biodegradable films.
Iris type:
04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
chloroplasts; disulfide bonds; biodegradable films
List of contributors: