AU2931300A - Genetically modified plants with altered starch - Google Patents

Genetically modified plants with altered starch Download PDF

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AU2931300A
AU2931300A AU29313/00A AU2931300A AU2931300A AU 2931300 A AU2931300 A AU 2931300A AU 29313/00 A AU29313/00 A AU 29313/00A AU 2931300 A AU2931300 A AU 2931300A AU 2931300 A AU2931300 A AU 2931300A
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starch
plant
plants
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seed
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Michael Meyrick Burrell
Clare Hedley
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Advanced Technologies Cambridge Ltd
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    • C12N15/00Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
    • C12N15/09Recombinant DNA-technology
    • C12N15/63Introduction of foreign genetic material using vectors; Vectors; Use of hosts therefor; Regulation of expression
    • C12N15/79Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts
    • C12N15/82Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts for plant cells, e.g. plant artificial chromosomes (PACs)
    • C12N15/8241Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology
    • C12N15/8242Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with non-agronomic quality (output) traits, e.g. for industrial processing; Value added, non-agronomic traits
    • C12N15/8243Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with non-agronomic quality (output) traits, e.g. for industrial processing; Value added, non-agronomic traits involving biosynthetic or metabolic pathways, i.e. metabolic engineering, e.g. nicotine, caffeine
    • C12N15/8245Phenotypically and genetically modified plants via recombinant DNA technology with non-agronomic quality (output) traits, e.g. for industrial processing; Value added, non-agronomic traits involving biosynthetic or metabolic pathways, i.e. metabolic engineering, e.g. nicotine, caffeine involving modified carbohydrate or sugar alcohol metabolism, e.g. starch biosynthesis
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    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N9/00Enzymes; Proenzymes; Compositions thereof; Processes for preparing, activating, inhibiting, separating or purifying enzymes
    • C12N9/10Transferases (2.)
    • C12N9/1048Glycosyltransferases (2.4)
    • C12N9/1051Hexosyltransferases (2.4.1)

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Description

WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 1 Genetically Modified Plants with altered Starch This invention relates to genetically modified plants, and in particular to genetically modified maize and wheat. The genetically modified plants have an altered starch synthesising ability following the introduction, by recombinant DNA techniques, of one or more gene sequences coding for enzymes in the starch or glycogen biosynthetic pathway into the plant. Starch is a complex polymer of glucosyl residues. It is the major form in which carbohydrate is stored in the tissues and cells of most species of higher plants. It is accumulated in the leaves of plants during the day as a result of photosynthesis and is used to supply the needs of the plant for energy and biosynthesis during the night. Starch is also accumulated in non-photosynthetic cells, especially those involved in reproduction such as in seeds, fruits and tubers. Therefore, starch is of great importance to the productivity of the plant and its survival. Starch is also highly significant to man. Firstly, it forms a major component of animal diets, supplying man and his domestic animals with a large portion of their carbohydrate intake. Secondly, the type of starch in a plant affects the quality of the processed plant product. Thirdly, starch is used industrially in the production of paper, textiles, plastics and WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 2 adhesives, as well as providing the raw material for some bio reactors. Starch from different species have preferred uses. On a world scale, starch producing crops are agriculturally and economically by far the most important, and these crops include wheat, maize, rice and potatoes. The type of starch will affect the quality of a processed product and the profitability of the processed crop. In addition, the quantity and quality of starch present in the harvested organ of a plant will affect the gross yield and the processing efficiency. It is also known that some starch producing crops produce a lower yield of starch when grown under higher temperature conditions. This reduction in yield is undesirable in terms of gross yield and processing efficiency of the crop. Starch yield may be measured in terms of the number of seeds harvested or the weight of the seeds harvested. In plants, i.e. vascular plants, the starch consists of linear chain and branched chain glucans known as amylose and amylopectin respectively. Starch with various amounts of amylose and amylopectin are found in different plants. Typically, plant starch contains 10-25% amylose, the remainder being amylopectin, the branched chain glucan. Amylopectin contains short chains and long chains, the short chains ranging from 5-30 glucose units and the long chains ranging from 30-100 glucose units, or more. It is thought that the ratio of amylose to amylopectin and the distribution of short to long chains in WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 3 the amylopectin fraction affect the physical properties of starch, e.g. thermal stabilisation, retrogradation and viscosity. These properties also affect the utility of starch, as mentioned above. Starches from different plants have different properties, which also affects their suitability for processing under certain conditions and for certain uses. It can be seen, therefore, that modifying the starch generated in a plant can have particular utility in the downstream processing or the yield of the starch in the plant storage organ. It can also be seen that providing a plant having an improved starch yield when grown under higher temperature conditions compared with unmodified plants is also desirable. Waxy corn starch lacks amylose and this starch has unique properties. Also, most mutations in the waxy locus of maize, which encodes starch granule bound synthase I (GBSSI), result in plants which produce much reduced amylose. When no functioning GBSSI is synthesised in the homozygous waxy mutant it also lacks amylose (Echt & Schwartz, 1981). The genetic modifications of the present invention produce altered starch composition and properties, which properties are ideally beneficial in terms of starch processing. The genetic modifications surprisingly also affected starch yields under more stringent growing conditions. In the last few years this concept of modifying starch properties has been postulated and put into practice in varying WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 4 degrees. In the patent literature International Patent Application, Publication No. WO 94/11520 (Zeneca) described constructs having a target gene which encodes an enzyme involved in the starch or glycogen biosynthetic pathway under control of a gene switch, for example, a chemical or temperature controlled on-off mechanism. Various crops were postulated as being suitable for use in the method but no plant transformation was actually carried out. Some constructs were made but no examples or results were given. International Patent Application, Publication No. WO 94/09144 (Zeneca) was very similar to the just described application. Only the first steps in the transformation process were demonstrated. No results are given for any plant, and only the transformation of tomato is described with reference to the exemplary methodology, although other plants are mentioned. International Patent Application, Publication No. WO 92/11376 (Amylogene) described introducing antisense genes for GBSSI in to potatoes to down-regulate amylose production with the intention of producing a potato with practically no amylose-type starch. Whilst great detail is given of methodology, no actual results from transformed plants are given and no plant transformations other than potato are postulated. Only a small number of constructs are actually produced to enable one to carry out the invention. The results for potato were eventually published in the scientific literature by Visser et al in 1991. Increases in the WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 5 amylopectin content of the starch was seen. Further scientific papers on altering GBSSI in potato using antisense GBSSI constructs, e.g. Visser et al (1991a) and Kuipers et al (1994), have shown actual transformation and alteration of starch composition. In terms of successful transformation using non-plant derived starch-related genes, in International Patent Application, Publication No. WO 92/11382 (Calgene) and their later publication (Shewmaker et al, 1994) potato was actually transformed with E.coli glgA (Glycogen synthase) and E.coli glgC (ADPG pyrophosphorylase). Higher specific gravity measurements were obtained from transformed potato plants compared with two control events, as well as altered starch characteristics. It can be seen, therefore, that work to date has involved introducing certain genes involved in glycogen biosynthesis specifically into potato. The effects and their potential usefulness for other plants and other non-plant derived starch related genes has only been postulated. This invention seeks to transform cereal crops and specifically wheat and maize with an enzyme involved in the synthesis of microbial glycogen, namely glycogen synthase (E.C. 2.4.1.21). This invention also seeks to identify properties of the starch in these transformed plants which are particularly useful WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 6 and/or advantageous in the downstream processing of starch or the plant itself. The present invention provides transgenic wheat or maize plants, said plants having therein a chimaeric gene comprising a promoter, a coding sequence for glycogen synthase, which coding sequence is derived from a microorganism, and a terminator. As used herein, the term chimaeric gene refers to a combination of nucleic acid sequences for each part of the chimaeric gene, which sequences have been engineered into relationship by recombinant DNA techniques, which sequences may also be in their separate parts endogenous or exogenous to the plant into which the chimaeric gene is to be introduced. A construct and a chimaeric gene comprising nucleic acid causing the expression of the sequences above mentioned are also aspects of the invention. Plant cells containing a chimaeric gene comprising a nucleic acid sequence encoding glycogen synthase are also an aspect of this invention, as are other plant parts, such as for example, seed of the transformed plant containing a chimaeric gene according to the invention. Seed of the transformed plants grown on average at more than 20 0 C can exhibit a higher weight than seed of the control plants grown on average at more than 20 0 C. Seed of the transformed plants can in addition or alternatively exhibit less of a loss in yield compared with WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 7 control plants when both are grown on average at a higher temperature of more than 20 0 C. The present invention also provides a method of altering the starch in maize or wheat plants, the method comprising the steps of stably introducing into the plant genome a nucleic acid sequence encoding glycogen synthase under the direction of a suitable promoter and a suitable terminator, and regenerating a plant having an altered genome. The present invention also provides a starch obtained from transformed wheat or maize, said starch having an altered chain length and/or processing property compared with control starch from a non-transformed plant. The present invention also provides a method of reducing the loss of starch yield in wheat or maize grown under high temperature conditions, the method comprising the steps of stably introducing into the plant genome a nucleic acid sequence encoding glycogen synthase under the direction of a suitable promoter and a suitable terminator, and regenerating a plant having an altered genome. The chain length and/or branching of the starch may be increased or decreased. Other parameters which may be altered include the degree of retrogradation, the viscosity, the pasting temperature, the gelling temperature, each of which may be increased or decreased. The starch may also have modified properties for chemical derivitisation. The yield of starch in WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 8 seed may also be less affected under more stringent growing conditions, and in particular under growing conditions where the temperature on average is greater than 23 0 C, and more preferably on average greater than 25 0 C and even more preferably is on average about 27 0 C, 30 0 C, 33 0 C or 36 0 C, or more, or incrementally in full degrees from 23 0 C upwards to 36 0 C. Using the inventive method a greater than normal starch yield in seeds can be achieved at higher temperatures during seed growth compared with control seed grown at 20 0 C. The turnover of starch in leaves is of central importance to the growth of the plant. A change in the structure of the starch in the granule without a complementary change in other enzymes of starch breakdown might be expected to restrict the export of carbon from the leaf at night. This might be expected to cause an altered ratio of source to sink with a subsequent effect on yield. Preferably the promoter is capable of directing expression in a particular tissue of the plant and/or at particular stages of development of the plant. The promoter may be heterologous or homologous to the plant. Preferably the promoter directs expression to the endosperm of the plant seed. A preferred promoter is the high molecular weight glutenin (HMWG) gene of wheat. Other suitable promoters will be known to the skilled man, such as the promoters of gliadin, branching enzyme, ADPG pyrophosphorylase, starch synthase and actin, for example.
WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 9 Preferably the chimaeric gene also contains a sequence that encodes a transit peptide which provides for translocation of the glycogen synthase and/or a marker gene to the plant plastid. Suitable transit peptides include those from the small sub-unit of the ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase enzyme (ssu of Rubisco) from pea, maize or sunflower, for example. Combinations of transit peptides may also be used. Other suitable transit peptides for transporting to the amyloplast will be known to those skilled in the art, such as the transit peptide for the plant plastid acyl carrier protein (ACP) or for GBSSI. The coding sequence encoding glycogen synthase is a sequence obtained from a microorganism, such as a unicellular organism, for example, bacteria, which sequence has the necessary ability to encode glycogen synthase. Suitably the glycogen synthase is derived from a bacterial source such as E.coli (for example, Baecker, P.A. et al, 1983 or Kumar, A. et al 1986), Agrobacterium (Uttaro, A.D., & Ugalde, R.A. 1994), Salmonella (Leung, P.S.C. & Preiss, J. 1987), or Bacillus (Kiel, J.A. et al 1994). Standard methods of cloning by hybridisation or polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques may be used to isolate the sequences from such organisms: for example, molecular cloning techniques such as those described by Sambrook, J. et al 1989 and the PCR techniques described by Innis, M.A., et al 1990. Other microbial sequences may be obtained in a similar manner.
WO00/55331 PCT/GB0O/00848 10 Depending on the homology of the nucleotide sequences encoding glycogen synthases, different conditions of stringencies may be used in the hybridisation procedures. By way of example and not limitation, hybridisation procedures using such conditions of high stringency are as follows: hybridisation to filter-bound DNA in 0.5 M NaHPO 4 , 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 1 mM EDTA at 65 0 C, and washing in 0.1xSSC/0.1%SDS at 68 0 C (Ausubel F.M. et al, eds., 1989, Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, Vol. I, Green Publishing Associates, Inc., and John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, at p. 2.10.3). Other conditions of high stringency which may be used are well known in the art. Hybridisation procedures using conditions of moderate stringency that may be used are as follows: hybridisation to filter-bound DNA in 0.5 M NaHPO 4 , 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 1 mM EDTA at 65 0 C, and washing in 0.2xSSC/0.1% SDS at 42 0 C (Ausubel et al, 1989, supra). Other conditions of moderate stringency which may be used are well known in the art. The chimaeric gene may comprise one or more additional coding sequences from the starch or glycogen biosynthetic pathway, such as, for example, branching enzyme (EC 2.4.1.18). The transformation techniques for the method of the invention are advantageously direct DNA transfer techniques, such as electroporation, microinjection or DNA bombardment (the biolistic approach). Alternatively, plant cell transformation WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 11 using plant vectors introduced into plant pathogenic bacteria, such as Agrobacterium-mediated transfer (Cheng, M. et al (1997)), may be used. In any transformation method positive or negative selectable markers may be used, at least initially, in order to determine whether transformation has actually occurred. Useful negative selectable markers include enzymes which confer resistance to an antibiotic, such as gentamycin, hygromycin, kanamycin and the like, or resistance to a herbicide, such as asulam or basta. Alternatively, markers which provide a compound identifiable by a colour change, such as GUS, or luminescence, such as luciferase, may be used. The chimaeric gene may also comprise a gene switch mechanism which determines under what conditions or when the coding sequence is to be expressed. The gene switch may be a chemically induced promoter or a temperature controlled promoter, for example. In order that the invention may be easily understood and readily carried into effect, reference will now be had, by way of example, to the following diagrammatic drawings in which: Figure 1 shows a map of the plasmid pJIT117 used in the preparation of the plamid of Figure 2; Figure 2 shows a map of the plasmid pBS17R used in the sticky-feet polymerase chain reaction; Figure 3 shows a diagrammatic representation of the steps in the sticky-feet polymerase chain reaction; WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 12 Figure 4 shows a map of the plasmid pBSHMWGP used in the preparation of the plasmid of Figure 6; Figure 5 shows a map of the plasmid pDVO2000 used in the preparation of the plasmid of Figure 6; Figure 6 shows a map of the plasmid pDVO3000 used in the preparation of the plasmid of Figure 7; Figure 7 shows a map of the plasmid pDVO3191 according to one aspect of the invention and used in the transformation process of the invention; Figure 8 shows a standard chromatogram of glucose at 1mM concentration; Figure 9 shows a standard chromatogram of maltose at 1mM concentration; Figure 10 shows a standard chromatogram of maltotriose at 1mM concentration; Figure 11 shows a standard chromatogram of maltohexaose at 1mM concentration; Figure 12 shows a standard chromatogram of a mixture of maltotriose, maltotetraose, maltopentaose, maltohexaose and maltoheptaose each at 1mM concentration; Figure 13 shows a chromatogram of an isoamylase digest of wheat starch from wheat plants according to the invention; Figure 14 shows a graph of starch branch chain lengths for starch from the seed of a single transgenic wheat plant compared with starch from the seed of a control wheat plant; WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 13 Figure 15 shows a graph of starch branch chain lengths for starch from the seed of a further single transgenic wheat plant compared with starch from the seed from a control wheat plant; Figure 16 shows a comparison of branch chain length for a family of starches from the seed of transgenic lines against a family of starches from the seed of control wheat plants; Figure 17 shows a western blot of proteins extracted from the seed of transgenic maize plants according to the invention. Figure 18 shows the differences in two lines of wheat in a dry weight of seed at two different temperatures; and Figure 19 shows the effect of temperature on the rate of starch synthesis in two transgenic lines of wheat compared to a control. The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to an embodiment for incorporating glgA from E.coli strain LCB618 into wheat and maize. EXAMPLE 1 Construction of qc1qA plasmids used for particle bombardment of wheat embryos. Isolation of E.coli chromosomal DNA The coding sequence for glgA was originally isolated by PCR using chromosomal DNA from the E.coli strain LCB618 as WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 14 template. E.coli LCB618 was obtained from E.coli Genetic Stock Center, Yale University, U.S.A. E.coli LCB618 was grown up in 100ml LB o/n at 37 0 C. Cells were pelleted and re-suspended in 9.5ml 10mM Tris-HCl, 1mM EDTA (TE) pH8.0 and 0.5ml 10% w/v Sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) and 50Ail proteinase K 20mg/ml were added. The mixture was incubated at 37 0 C for 1 hour to lyse cells. l.8ml of 5M NaCl followed by 1.5ml of CTAB (cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide)/NaCl solution (10% w/v CTAB in 0.7M NaCI) were added and the mixture incubated at 65 0 C for 20 minutes. The lysate was extracted with an equal volume of chloroform and centrifuged at 6000g to separate the layers. The upper layer was removed to a fresh tube and DNA was precipitated by the addition of 0.6 volumes isopropanol. The DNA was removed from the solution with a sealed pasteur pipette, placed into a fresh tube and washed with 70% ethanol. The DNA was dried in vacuo and re-suspended in TE pH8.0. The DNA was purified on a CsCl gradient. Sticky-feet PCR In order for the E.coli glycogen synthase to function in plants the protein has to be transported into the amyloplast. This transport can be facilitated by attachment of a plastid transit peptide to the amino terminus of the E.coli polypeptide.
WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 15 The coding sequence for the transit peptide (TP) from the small subunit of the ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase enzyme (ssu of Rubisco) pea has been cloned and the TP shown to target P-glucuronidase (GUS) protein to chloroplasts (Guerineau et al, 1988). The plasmid pJIT117 (Guerineau et al, 1988), the map of which is shown in Figure 1, has several restriction sites downstream of the ssuTP which can be used for subcloning of coding sequences, however, the subcloning must create a translational fusion between the transit peptide and the coding sequence, and the Cys-Met amino acid sequence at the junction must be maintained. We have previously used pJITll7 to attach the ssu transit peptide to the coding sequence for E.coli ADPG PPase glgCl6 using restriction digestion and PCR. The TP-glgC16 DNA, herein known as SEQ.ID. No.1, was subsequently transferred to the vector pBluescript (Stratagene Ltd., Cambridge, UK) to create pBS17R (the map for which is shown in Figure 2) and this plasmid was useful in generating a similar construct for glgA. The glgA coding sequence has no convenient restriction sites at the 5' end. Therefore, to ensure that the open reading frame was in a translational fusion with the ssu transit peptide and to maintain the integrity of the Cys-Met cleavage site, plasmid pBS17R was used to substitute the glgA sequence for the WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 16 glgCl6 sequence with a technique called sticky-feet PCR (Clackson and Winter, 1989). This technique is explained diagrammatically with reference to Figure 3. In this technique, PCR primers are designed to the 5' and 3' ends of the acceptor sequence of chromosomal or genomic DNA and the sequences which are to be attached to the acceptor from a donator plasmid. In Step A, PCR is used to amplify the sequences which are to be inserted in the donator. In Step B the amplified acceptor DNA fragment is annealed to the donator plasmid which has been made single-stranded and carries uracil residues instead of thymidine residues by using a specific type of E.coli host. In Step C, a new strand is synthesised, using the donator plasmid as template and the acceptor fragment as primer, with a combination of Taq polymerase, T7 DNA polymerase (Sequenase) and T4 DNA ligase. The new double-stranded plasmid is a hybrid with one strand of the uracil-containing donator and one strand incorporating the acceptor fragment. This hybrid plasmid is then transferred into a normal E.coli host where the uracil-containing strand is degraded and the acceptor strand replicated. A double-stranded plasmid incorporating the acceptor DNA can then be recovered. As an alternative, in Step D (not shown), the hybrid plasmid can be used in a PCR reaction with primers which will amplify out the WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 17 acceptor DNA with the required fragments from the donator attached. In this particular example, glgA sticky-feet primers were designed as follows: SEQ. ID. No. 4 GLGASF5 (Pl) TGGTGGAAGAGTAAAGTGCATGCAGGTTTTACATGTATGTTCA <- ssu TP 3'end I glgA 5' end -+ SEQ. ID. No. 5 GLGASF3 (P2) TCGCTCCTGTTTATGCCCTAGATCTCTATTTCGAGCGATAGTAAAGCTCACGGT <-glgC 3'end I glgA 3' end-+ The PCR primers are designed to the 5' and 3' ends of the glgA cDNA sequence. The 5' end primer (SEQ. ID. No. 4) also has sequences which are homologous to the ssu-TP. The 3' end primer (SEQ. ID. No. 5) also incorporates sequences which are homologous to the 3' end of the glgC coding sequence. These primers are used in a PCR process to amplify a glgA fragment with extensions which will overlap onto the sequences in pBS17R. This is represented by Step A of Figure 3. Plasmid pBS17R is made into a template for sticky-feet PCR by transferring the plasmid into the E.coli host CJ236 (Raleigh et al, 1989). This host is deficient in the enzyme dUTPase, (i.e. dut-) which results in deoxyuridine being incorporated into the DNA instead of thymidine. The absence of another enzyme WO00/55331 PCT/GB0/00848 18 uracyl N-glycosylase (ung-) means that the deoxyuridines cannot then be removed from the DNA. In Step B of Figure 3, the extended glgA DNA (2) is annealed to the uracil-containing template which has been isolated as single-stranded DNA (3), and a new strand is synthesised as per Step C above. The new double-stranded plasmid is a hybrid (5) with one strand of the uracil-containing template (3) and the other strand consisting of the plasmid backbone and the glgA fragment now with ssu-TP and a 3' glgC fragment attached at 5' and 3' ends respectively (4). In Step D (not shown), the hybrid plasmid is used in a PCR reaction with primers (SEQ. ID. No. 6) (P3) (see below) and SEQ. ID. No. 5 (P2) which will amplify out the extended glgA. With reference to Figure 3, the experimental details are as follows: The primers GLGASF5 (Pl) (SEQ. ID. No. 4) vs GLGASF3 (P2) (SEQ. ID. No. 5) were kinased and used to amplify the glgA open reading frame with extension sequences using E.coli LCB618 genomic DNA (1) as template. The DNA (2) was purified with GeneClean (BIO 101, Ltd.). The sticky-feet template DNA, single-stranded uracil pBS17R DNA (3), was isolated from 5ml overnight cultures of the dut- ung E.coli strain CJ236. The sticky-feet PCR reaction was carried out in 1OIl volume containing 20ng ss uracil pBS17R (3); 200ng glgA DNA (2), 1pl x 10 Taq polymerase buffer, 1.04l 2mM mixture of dATP, dTTP, dCTP, WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 19 dGTP (2mM dNTPs); 2.5 units Taq polymerase. The mix was overlaid with 30~Il mineral oil and cycled once at 94oC, 3 min; 720C, 2 min; 400C, 2 min. and then cooled to room temperature. 10 il of a solution containing 2.0l x5 Sequenase buffer (200mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5; 100mM MgC1 2 , 250mM NaCl), 1.5Al 0.1mM Dithiothreitol (DTT); 2.0il 10mM Adenosine 5' triphosphate (ATP); 4 units T4 DNA ligase; 6.5 units Sequenase was then added and the reaction incubated at room temperature for 30 minutes. Generation of TP-glgA DNA 1.0l of the reaction containing the hybrid plasmid (3 + 4) was taken and diluted to 10l with 10mM TE at pH8.0. 1.Oil of the diluted sample was used in a PCR reaction in order to obtain the TP-glgA coding sequence (Step C of Figure 3). The primers used were TPSSU5 (P3) (SEQ. ID. No. 6) vs GLGASF3 (P2) (SEQ. ID. No. 5). SEQ. ID. No. 6 TPSSU5 (P3) ACGTAGATCTATGGCTTCTATGATATCCTCTTC The primers both have restriction sites for BglII, therefore after purification, the amplified DNA was digested with BglII and subcloned into the BamHI site of pDVO3000 (see below).
WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 20 Construction of pDVO3000 vector Transgenic wheat and maize plants are generated by particle bombardment of embryos and it is not necessary to use binary vectors. For expression of the glgA protein the coding sequence is placed under the control of an endosperm-specific promoter. One such suitable promoter is that from the High Molecular Weight Glutenin (HMWG) gene of wheat (Bartels and Thompson, 1986). Primers (P4) and (P5) (SEQ. ID. Nos. 7 and 8 respectively) were designed so that the 430bp HMWG promoter, (the nucleotide sequence of which is given in SEQ. ID. No. 3) could be isolated by PCR and subcloned via EcoRI and ClaI restriction sites into pBluescript to generate the plasmid pBSHMWGP (Figure 4). A second set of PCR primers were designed to obtain the nopaline synthase terminator from plasmid pDVO2000, the map of which is shown in Figure 5. This plasmid was previously constructed in our laboratory as an intermediate vector for the sub-cloning of coding sequences. The 5' primer, NTPRIME5 (P6) (SEQ. ID. No. 9), has a BamHI restriction site, while the 3' primer NTP3NXS2 (P7) (SEQ. ID. No. 10), has restriction sites for NotI, XhoI and SacIIT. The amplified DNA was digested with BamHI and SacII and ligated into the pBSHMWGP plasmid to generate pDVO3000 (the map of which is shown in Figure 6).
WO 00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 21 SEQ. ID. No. 7 HMWGPRO5 (P4) GACATCGATCCCAGCTTTGAGTGGCCGTAGATTTGC SEQ. ID. No. 8 HMWGPRO3 (P5) GACGAATTCGGATCTCTAGTTTGTGGTGCTCGGTGTTGT SEQ. ID. No. 9 NTPRIME5 I(P6) CAGGATCCGAATTTCACCCGATCGTTCAAACA SEQ. ID. No. 10 NTP3NXS2 (P7) GACCCGCGGCTCGAGGCGGCCGCCCGATCTAGTAACATAGATGACACCGC pDVO3000 vector has the HMWG promoter-nos terminator sequences separated by unique restriction sites for EcoRI, PstI, SmaI and BamHI. Construction of pDVO3191 TP-glgA DNA amplified from the sticky-feet PCR sample with primers TPSSU5 vs GLGASF3 (Step D, Figure 3) was digested with BglII, purified and ligated into the BamHI site of pDVO3000. Plasmid pDVO3191 (the map of which is shown in Figure 7) was confirmed by restriction enzyme digestion and by sequencing of the junctions between promoter and coding sequence. E.coli XL1 Blue (Stratagene Ltd., UK) harbouring pDVO3191 was deposited by Advanced Technologies (Cambridge) Limited of 210 Cambridge WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 22 Science Park, Cambridge CB4 OWA, under the Budapest Treaty on the International Recognition of the Deposit of Micro-organisms for the purposes. of Patent Procedures at the National Collection of Industrial and Marine Bacteria (NCIMB), 23 Machar Street, Aberdeen,Scotland GB on 4 August 1998 under accession number NCIMB 40962. The micro-organism is E.coli XL1 Blue: strain LCB618 containing PDVO3191. The DNA for E.coli glgA was inserted as described above into pBluescript with the ssu transit peptide, the HMWG promoter and nos terminator. The vector is useful for altering starch properties. Transformation of wheat Methods for the transformation of wheat by particle bombardment are well known in the art, for example see Vasil et al, 1992. Immature embryos of wheat are used to initiate embryogenic callus. The callus is subcultured and used for particle bombardment with gold particles coated with plasmid DNA. Two plasmids are used per bombardment, one plasmid carries the construct of interest, in this case pDVO3191. The second plasmid carries the selectable marker which expresses the gene responsible for resistance to the herbicide Basta. Plants resistant to Basta are generally found to also have the recombinant gene of interest present.
WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 23 Bombarded calli are grown on Basta selection media and surviving calli are transferred to regeneration medium. Rooted plants are transferred to soil and grown to maturity in a growth room. Primary transformant wheat plants (To) are selfed to produce transgenic seed. Seed are extracted for protein and the protein analysed by western blotting for the presence of E.coli glgA polypeptide. EXAMPLE 2 Biochemical Analysis of qIqA transformed maize 1. Expression of glgA protein Soluble protein samples were prepared from individual maize grain derived from transformed maize plants. Each grain was pulverised in a pestle and mortar until a fine powder was obtained. A portion of this powder (100-200mg) was placed in an Eppendorf tube and 5004l of ice cold extraction buffer (50mM HEPES, pH 8.0; 10mM DTT; 10mM EDTA) added. The powder was homogenised with a micropestle to release soluble proteins. The extract was centrifuged at 13000 rpm for 1 minute and the supernatant decanted into a fresh Eppendorf tube and stored on ice. The total protein content in the soluble protein sample was assayed using The Bradford dye binding method (Bradford, M. 1976).
WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 24 An aliquot of the soluble protein sample containing 100mg total protein was placed into an Eppendorf tube and excess acetone (ca 1.5ml) was added to precipitate the proteins. The proteins were collected by centrifuging the sample at 13000 rpm for 5 minutes. The acetone was decanted off and the samples were air-dried until all the residual acetone had evaporated. SDS PAGE loading buffer (4% (w/v) SDS; 12% (w/v) glycerol; 50mM Tris-HCl pH 6.8; 2% (v/v) P-mercaptoethanol; 0.01% Serva blue G) in an amount of 100pil was added to the protein sample contained in the Eppendorf tube. Samples were boiled for 1 minute before loading onto a polyacrylamide gel. Electrophoresis was carried out according to the method of Schigger and Von Jagow (1987). The resolving gel composition was 10% acrylamide, 3% bis-acrylamide. Gels were run at 50 V constant for 16 hours. Separated proteins were transferred from the acrylamide gel onto PVDF membrane by electroblotting (Transfer buffer: 20% methanol; 25mM Tris-HCl pH 8.3; 190mM glycine. Run in a Biorad blotting apparatus at 50 V for 3 hours). To detect expression of glgA the membrane was challenged with a rabbit anti-glgA antiserum (raised glgA-GST fusion protein purified from E.coli). Specific cross-reacting proteins were detected using an anti-rabbit IgG-alkaline phosphatase conjugate secondary antibody and visualised by the NBT/BCIP reaction.
WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 25 NuPageTM Electrophoresis Alternatively, an aliquot of the soluble protein sample, containing 100mg total protein was placed into an Eppendorf tube and excess acetone (ca 1.5ml) was added to precipitate the proteins. The proteins were collected by centrifuging the sample at 13000 rpm for 5 minutes. The acetone was decanted off and the samples were air-dried until all the residual acetone had evaporated. NuPage TM loading buffer (2% (w/v) SDS; 10% (w/v) sucrose; 25 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.5; 1% (v/v) P-mercaptoethanol; 0.5 mM EDTA; 0.02% Serva blue G250; 0.006% Phenol Red) 100 [Il, was added to the protein sample contained in the Eppendorf tube. Samples were heated at 100 0 C for 1 minute before loading onto a polyacrylamide gel. Electrophoresis was carried out on NuPage TM precast gels according to the manufacturer's instructions (Novex, San Diego CA). Gels were run at 200 V constant for 60 minutes using MES SDS running buffer (20 mM MES/20 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.3; 1% (w/v) SDS; 1 mM EDTA). Separated proteins were transferred from the acrylamide gel onto PVDF membrane by electroblotting (Transfer buffer: 20% methanol; 25 mM Bis-Tris/25 mM Bicine pH 8.3; 1 mM EDTA. Run in a Novex electroblotting apparatus at 25 V for 1.5 hours). To detect expression of glgA the membrane was challenged with a rabbit anti-glgA antiserum (raised against glgA-GST fusion protein purified from E. coli). Specific cross-reacting WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 26 proteins were detected using an anti-rabbit IgG-horse Radish Peroxidase conjugate secondary antibody and visualised using enhanced chemiluminesence (ECL) as supplied by Amersham International. Several transformed lines were found to express a 50 kDa protein in their grain, which was not present in control grain derived from non-transformed maize plants. 2. Preparation of wheat starch Starch was extracted from grain of separate field grown samples of two of the glgA expressing lines and a control line. Wheat grains of each sample (3-4g) were placed in a mortar, 30ml of 1% sodium bisulphite was added and placed on ice for 30 minutes. The grains were then gently pulverised using a pestle. The solution was filtered through a nylon filter sieve and collected in a centrifuge tube. The pulverised wheat grains were re-extracted with a further 30ml of 1% sodium bisulphite and the filtrates were combined. The filtrate was centrifuged at 6000 rpm for 5 minutes. After decanting off the supernatant, the pellet of extracted starch was re-suspended in water and centrifuged at 6000 rpm for 5 minutes. This was repeated once. The resulting starch pellet was re-suspended in acetone, centrifuged at 6000 rpm for 5 minutes and the supernatant decanted away. This was repeated once and the starch left to air dry. Once dried the starch was stored at -20 0
C.
WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 27 3. Branch chain length analysis of wheat starch Portions of the starch samples were digested with isoamylase and the resulting unbranched linear glucan chains were analysed by HPLC. 75mg of isolated wheat starch was placed in a 15ml Pyrex boiling tube and suspended in 3.0ml of water. The sample was placed in a boiling water bath for 6 minutes, occasionally removed and vortex mixed. The sample was cooled to room temperature and 250A1 of 200mM sodium acetate, pH 3.5 and 180 units of isoamylase enzyme added. The samples were made up to a final volume of 3.8ml with water. After mixing, the sample was placed in a 37 0 C water bath for 4 hours. The samples were occasionally vortex mixed throughout this incubation period. At the end of the incubation the sample was placed in a boiling water bath for 2 minutes, and then allowed to cool to 4 0 C. The sample was centrifuged at 3,400 rpm for 20 minutes. The resulting supernatant was transferred to Eppendorf tubes and centrifuged at 13000 rpm for 15 minutes. Finally, the sample was filtered through a 0.2mm syringe filter and stored at 4 0 C until required. Separate isoamylase digest samples were normalised to a constant total glucan content by digesting a portion of the sample to glucose using a-amylase and amyloglucosidase.
WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 28 Two 100il aliquots of isoamylase digested starch were placed in two separate Eppendorf tubes (one is to be used as a blank). To one aliquot was added: 500l of 200mM sodium acetate pH 4.8; 50ul of x-amylase solution containing 10 units of a amylase; 100ipl of amyloglucosidase solution containing 10 units of amyloglucosidase and water to a final volume of 1.0m1. To the second (blank) aliquot was added: 500il of 200mM sodium acetate pH 4.8 and 400pl of water. The samples were left to digest at 25 0 C for 16 hours. The glucose content of the digest and blanks was assayed spectrophotometrically using a coupled enzyme assay. An aliquot of the total glucose digest or the blank was added to a cuvette containing in a final volume of 990 Al 100mM HEPES, pH 8.0; 5mM MgC1 2 ; 4mM NAD; 1mM ATP and 1 unit of hexokinase. The optical density (OD) of the reaction mixture at 340nm was measured prior to the addition of 1Opl containing 1 unit of glucose-6 phosphate dehydrogenase. The OD at 340nm was monitored until there was no further change and the difference in OD after the addition of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase compared to before the addition of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was determined. This figure was used to determine the total glucose amounts in the original isoamylase digests. These samples were diluted with water to a standard concentration of 8mM total glucose and stored at 4 0 C until required for HPLC analysis.
WO 00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 29 The samples were then analysed by Dionex HPLC using a Dionex PA 100 column and PED-Integrated Amperometric detection. The solvent flow rate was 1.0ml/min and a gradient system was developed. Solvent 1 consisted of 100mM NaOH and Solvent 2 was 100mM NaOH, 0.60M sodium acetate. The gradient profile was as shown in Table 1, with the pulsed electrochemical detection (PED) parameters shown in Tables 2.1 and 2.2. Table 1 Gradient Profile Event Start Solvent 1 (%) Solvent 2 (%) Time (min) 0 100 0 1 100 0 2 100 0 30 0 100 30.1 100 0 35 100 0 Table 2.1 Waveform Table Time (sec) Potential (V) 0 0.1 0.5 0.1 0.51 0.6 0.59 0.6 0.6 -0.6 0.65 -0.6 WO00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 30 Table 2.2 Integration Begin (sec) End (sec) 0.3 0.5 Three isoamylase digestions were performed for each sample and three aliquots of each isoamylase digest were analysed by the HPLC system. Separate chromatogram peaks were assigned to specific linear glucan sizes by reference to standard mixtures containing linear glucans of known numbers of glucose molecules (see Figures 8-12). Peak areas were abstracted from the primary data and averaged for the replicate chromatograms. Figures 8 to 12 are HPLC traces of standards for various sugars. The standards in Figures 8-12 allow the peak area for each peak of the inventive sample of Figure 13 to be converted to a quantitative representation of the number of glucan chains in each peak, and the position (on the x-axis) of each peak to the number of glucose residues in each chain, i.e. the chain length. In Figures 14 and 15 this conversion has been done for wheat starch extracted from a single transgenic line and its paired control. In Figure 16, a family of starches from transgenic lines are compared with a family of controls. Figure 16 clearly shows that the transgenic starches have a different chain length distribution from the control starches. The starch has therefore been altered, which alteration affects its processing capabilities.
WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 31 EXAMPLE 3 Maize plants transformed with qclqA recombinant crene In the transformation step, immature maize embryos are used instead of wheat and are subject to particle bombardment with gold particles coated with plasmid DNA. Methods for the transformation of maize are well known in the art, for example see Gordon-Kamm et al (1990) and Fromm et al (1990). After rooted primary transformant plants (To) are transferred to soil and grown to maturity, maize plants are back-crossed to produce transgenic seed which can be extracted and analysed according to Example 2. Further back-crossing is performed to introgres the transgene into elite varieties and selfing of transgenic plants is performed to obtain plants and seed which are homozygous for the transgene. Seed from these generations can also be extracted and analysed according to method 2. Seed from a number of back-crossed primary transformants were shown to be expressing the glgA protein. The plants grown up from the remaining seeds were subsequently selfed and progeny seed were extracted for protein and western blotting according to Example 2. Figure 17 shows the presence of glgA polypeptide in seed from two of these second generation lines 2-AM4-5'-2 and 2-AM4-6'-1.
WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 32 EXAMPLE 4 Viscometry measurements of transgenic wheat seed extracts. Flour was extracted from T2 and T3 progeny seed of primary transformant wheat line 72.11B which was shown to be expressing the glgA polypeptide by western blots. 4g of ground sample (14% moisture) was mixed with 25ml water or with 24.5ml water + 0.5ml 10% AgNO 3 solution. The presence of silver nitrate will inhibit any amylase activity in the slurry and allows the true viscosity developed by the flour to be assessed. The slurry was subject to rapid viscometric analysis (RVA) using standard profile 1 (Table 3). Results of the RVA are tabulated in Table 4 and Table 5 below. Standard 1: Idle temperature : 50 + 1 0 C End Test (HH:MM:SS) : 00:13:00 Table 3 Time Type Value (HH:MM: SS) 00:00:00 Speed 960 rpm 00:01:00 Speed 160 rpm 00:01:00 Temp. 50 0 C 00:04:45 Temp. 95 0 C 00:07:15 Temp. 95 0 C 00:11:00 Temp. 50 0 c WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 33 Table 4 RVA STD without AqcrNO 3 Pasting Peak BKD Final temperature viscosity viscosity CYMMIT control 87.2 191 61 222 72.11B/62 87.2 181 57 208 72.11B/39/4 88.1 182 53 223 72.11B/49/11 86.3 184 53 230 72.11B/41/22 88.1 185 52 226 Table 5 RVA Modified with AqNO 3 Pasting Peak BKD Final Peak Final temp. visc. visc. AgNO 3 - visc. Peak AgNO 3 standard FV std CYMMIT ctrl 86.4 251 98 267 60 45 72.11B/62 87.2 251 99 259 70 51 72.11B/39/4 87.3 238 86 265 56 42 72.11B/49/11 87.2 234 80 267 50 37 72.11B/41/22 86.5 244 87 273 59 47 The RVA method is described in Edwards et al (1999). EXAMPLE 5 Differential scanning calorimetry of glgA transgenic wheat seed extracts Wheat kernels were cleaned and water was added to the sample (90mg). The sample was allowed to condition in the analysis chamber at ambient temperature for 24 hours before cycling using the following conditions: Stabilisation: lh 25min at 25 0
C
WO 00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 34 Raise temperature to 110 0 C at 1.2oC/minute Cool to 25 0 C at 1.2oC/minute. The DSC results are shown in Table 6. The DSC method is described in the book of Frazier et al (1997). Table 6 Peak 1 Peak 2 (amylopectin) (amylose-lipid complex) Onset Temp. Enthalpy Onset Temp. Enthalpy Point peak Point Peak CYMMIT ctrl. 52 60 6.9 80.2 92.5 1.9 72.11B/62 52 59 6.7 82 93 1.4 72.11B/39/4 52 60 6.8 80 93 1.9 72.11B/49/11 52.3 59.6 6.4 80 93 1.8 72.11B/41/22 51.7 59.4 6.8 80.2 92 1.8 Example 6 Growth of plants and plant seed under high temperature conditions Seeds were planted in 6-inch pots in M2 compost (5-6 seeds per pot). They were grown to anthesis in a greenhouse at 15 25 0 C under a 16hr photoperiod in daylight supplemented with sodium light (photosynthetically active radiation = 160mol.m -2
S
- Plants were watered regularly (every day in summer) and were fed weekly with Phostrogen (Phostrogen, Corwne, Clwyd, UK) at a concentration of 1.7 gl
-
1. On the day of anthesis plants were tagged. 5 days post anthesis (p.a.) plants were repotted to 1 plant per pot. Plants from each line were moved at 5 days p.a. into controlled environment cabinets set at either 20 0 C or WO00/55331 PCT/GBO/00848 35 27 0 C for a 16 hr day length. Plants were grown in cabinets until seed maturity (approx. 70 days p.a.). Mature seeds were harvested and then weighed and average seed weight calculated. The results are given in Table 7 below. Table 7 27 0 C 20 0 C Line Dry Weight Dry Weight Change in % loss wt in wt Control 0.036±0.0028 0.045±0.0097 0.0087 19 (Cimmyt 101) 72.11b 0.037±0.0045 0.040±0.0068 0.0034 8.4 79.42a 0.038±0.0024 0.043±0.009 0.0045 10.6 Where % loss in weight = ((wt at 20 0 C - wt at 27*C)/wt at 200C) * 100% As plants were grown under identical conditions with temperatures from 5 days p.a. being the only variable, it is statistically relevant to compare changes in seed weight within lines and not just with controls. It is clear that lines 72.11b and 79.42a are markedly less sensitive to temperatures above 25 0 C than controls, losing 10.6% and 8.4% less dry weight respectively, than the cimmyt 101 control This reduction in seed weight loss is advantageous in countries with hotter climates and increases the starch yield, in seeds at least, of transformed plants compared with control plants. The results were similar when the experiment was repeated (see Table 8).
WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 36 Table 8 27 0 C 20 0 C Line Seed weight (g) Seed weight(g) Change % in change weight (g) Control 0.032 + 0.0002 0.039 ± 0.0004 0.007 17.9 Cimmyt 101 72.11b 0.033 + 0.0015 0.038 + 0.0003 0.005 13.2 79.42a 0.028 + 0.0009 0.031 + 0.0004 0.003 9.7 Example 7 Measurement of rate of starch synthesis Starch synthesis The rate of starch synthesis was measured by following incorporation of [U- 14 C] sucrose into starch. Sixty wheat endosperm were placed in a manometer flask containing a centre well and sidearm. The centre well contained 10% KOH and a piece of fluted filter paper to aid absorbtion of CO 2 . The endosperm were placed in incubation medium (10mM Mes-NaOH, 319mM sorbitol, 60mM KC1, 6mM MgC1 2 , pH5.6). After equilibration for 30 minutes 20mM (U- 14 C] sucrose 37KBq (final concentration) was added from the sidearm and the flasks incubated for a further 3 hours. At the end of the incubation the medium and KOH paper were removed from the flask and the radioactivity determined. The endosperm were removed from the flask and placed into a screw top eppendorf. The tissue was washed 5 times with 1 ml incubation medium (as above) per wash and then frozen in liquid WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 37 nitrogen. TCA (iml) was added to a final concentration of 10% and the tissue allowed to thaw. The endosperm were ground using a micropestle and then centrifuged for 5 minutes at 10,000g. The supernatant was removed and the pellet washed in iml methanol:KCl (75%:1% v:w) by re-suspension and centrifuged (10,000g, 5 minutes) (MSE microcentaur) five times. The radioactivity was determined in all of the washes from the above steps. 0.5ml 50mM acetic acid-NaOH buffer (pH4.8) was added to the tissue and boiled for 30 minutes. After cooling, starch present in the sample was digested by adding 40 units amyloglucosidase and 40 units a-amylase and incubating at 37 0 C for 12-16 hours. Digests were centrifuged for 10 minutes at 10,000g. The supernatant (degraded starch) was then added to 4ml scintillation fluid (Ecoscint A) and the radioactive counts were determined using a liquid scintillation counter (Tri-carb 300C). Controls contained a) boiled tissue and b) tissue stopped at zero time. The amount of 14C label present in the degraded starch was calculated by subtracting the values for the control samples from the digests. The nmoles of hexose incorporated into starch was then derived from the amount of 14C label incorporated into starch. The rate of starch synthesis may therefore be derived from the time of incubation. The results are shown in Figure 19.
WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 38 References: Baecker, P.A., Preston, A., Furlong, C.E. and Preiss J. (1983) Biosynthesis of bacterial glycogen. Primary Structure of E.coli ADPG glucose synthetase as deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the glgC gene. J. Biol. Chem. 258 (8), 5084-5088. Bartels, D. and Thompson, R.D. (1986). Synthesis of messenger RNAs coding for abundant endosperm proteins during wheat-grain development. Plant Sci., 46 (2) 117-125. Bradford, M. (1976) A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein dye binding. Anal. Biochem. 72, (1-2), 248 254. Cheng, M., Fry, J.E., Pan, S.Z., Zhou H.P., Hironaka C.M., Duncan D.R., Conner, T.W., and Wan, Y.C. (1997) Genetic transformation of wheat mediated by Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Plant Physiology, 115 (3), 971-980. Clackson, T. and Winter, G. (1989). "Sticky-Feet"-directed mutagenesis and its application to swapping antibody domains. Nucl. Acids Res., 17, 10163-10170. Echt, C.S. and Schwarz, D. (1981) Evidence for the inclusion of controlling elements within the structural gene at the waxy locus in maize. Genetics, 99, 275-284. Edwards, E., Fulton, D.C., Hylton, C.M., Jobling, S.A., Gidley, M., Rossner, U., Martin, C. and Smith, A.M. (1999). A combined WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 39 reduction in activity of starch synthases II and III of potato has novel effects on the starch of tubers. Plant J. 17:251-161. Frazier, P.J., Donal, A.M. and Richmond, P. Starch: Structure and Functionality (1997). Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, UK. Fromm, M.E., Morrish, F., Armstrong, C., Williams, R., Thomas, J. and Klein, T.M. (1990) Inheritance and expression of chimeric genes in the progeny of transgenic maize plants. Bio/Technology, 8 (9), 833-839. Geurineau, F., Woolston, S., Brooks, L. and Mullineaux, P. (1988). An expression cassette for targeting foreign proteins into chloroplasts. Nucl. Acids Res., 16 (23), 11380. Gordon-Kamm, W.J., Spencer, T.M., Mangans, M.L., Adams, R.T., Daines, R.J., Start, W.G., O'Brien, J.V., Chambers, S.A., Adams, W.J. et al. (1990) Transformation of maize cells and regeneration of fertile transgenic plants. Plant Cell, 2 (7), 603-618. Innis, M.A., Gelfand, D.H., Sninsky, J.J. and White, T.J. (1990). PCR Protocols. A Guide to Methods and Applications. Published Academic Press. Kiel, J.A., Boels, J.M., Beldman, G. and Venema, G. (1994) Glycogen in Bacillus subtilis: molecular characterisation of an operon encoding enzymes involved in glycogen biosynthesis and degradation. Mol. Microbiol., 11(1), 203-218.
WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 40 Kuipers, A.G.J; Jacobsen, E; Visser, R.G.F., (1994). Formation and deposition of amylose in the potato tuber starch granule are affected by the reduction of granule-bound starch synthase gene expression. Plant Cell, 6 (1), 43-52. Kumar, A., Larsen, C.E., Preiss, J. (1986) Biosynthesis of bacterial glycogen primary structure of E. coli ADP-glucose a 1,4-glucan, 4-glucosyltransferase as deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the glgA gene. J. Biol. Chem., 261 (34), 16256 16259. Leung, P., and Preiss J. (1987) Cloning ADP glucose pyrophosphorylase glgC with glycogen synthase glgA structural genes from Salmonella-typhimurium. J. Bacteriol., 169 (9), 4349 4354. Raleigh, E.A., Lech, K., and Brent, R. (1989) Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, Eds. Ausubel F.M. et al. Publishing Associates and Wiley Interscience, New York, Unit 1.4 Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E.F. and Maniatis, T. (1989) Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual. Publd. Cold Spring Harbor, U.S.A. Schigger and Von Jagow (1987). Tricine-SDS-Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis for the separation of proteins in the range from 1-100 kDA. Analy. Biochem., 166(2), 368-379. Shewmaker, C.K; Boyer, C.D; Wiesenborn, D.P; Thompson, D.B; Boersig, M.R; Oakes, J.V. (1994). Expression of Escherichia coli glycogen synthase in the tubers of transgenic potatoes WO 00/55331 PCT/GBOO/00848 41 (Solanum tuberosum) results in a highly branched starch. Pl. Physiol, 104(4), 1159-1166. Uttaro, A.D. and Ugaide, R.A. (1994) A chromosomal cluster of genes encoding ADP-glucose synthetase, glycogen synthase and phosphoglucomutase in Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Gene, 150 (1), 117-122. Vasil, V., Castillo, A.M., Fromm, M.E. and Vasil, I.K. (1992). Herbicide-resistant transgenic wheat plants obtained by microprojectile bombardment of regenerable embryogenic callus. Bio/Technology, 10(6), 667-674 Visser, G.F.; Stolte, A; Jacobsen, E, (1991) Expression of a chimaeric granule bound starch synthase-GUS gene in transgenic potato plants. Pl. Mol. Biol, 17 (4), 691-699. Visser, R.G.F.; Somhorst, I.; Kuipers, G.J.; Ruys, N.J.; Feenstra, W.J.; Jacobsen, (1991a). Inhibition of the expression of the gene for granule bound starch synthase in potato by antisense constructs. Mol. Gen Genet., 225 (2), 289-296. Materials Abbreviations LB - Luria broth TF - Tris-HCl, 1mM EDTA SDS - sodium dodecyl sulphate CTAB - cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide dATP - 2' - deoxy adenosine 5' triphosphate WO 00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 42 dTTP - 2' - deoxy thymidine 5' triphosphate dCTP - 2' - deoxy cytosine 5' triphosphate dGTP - 2' - deoxy guanosine DTT - dithiothreitol ATP - adenosine 5' triphosphate HEPES N-[2-hydroxyethyl] piperazine-N'-[2-ethanesulfonic acid] NBT - nitroblue tetrazolium BCIP - 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate GST - glutathione S transferase NAD - nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide IgG - immunoglobulin G Mes - 2-[N-morpholino]ethane sulfonic acid WO 00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 43 DUDAPEST TREATY ON THE INTERNATIONAL RECOGNII : OF THE DEPOSIT OF MICROORGANISMS FOR THE PURPOSES OF PATENT PROCEDURE INTERNATIONAL FORM Advanced Technologies (Cambridge) Ltd., 210 Cambridge Science Park, . RECEIPT IN THE CASE OF AN ORIGINAL DEPOSIT Cambridge. issued pursuant to Rule 7.1 by the CB4 4WA INTERNATIONAL DEPOSITARY AUTHORITY identified at the bottom of this page NAME AND ADDRESS OF DEPOSITOR I. IDENTIFICATION OF THE MICROORGANISM Identification reference given by the Accession number given by the DEPOSITOR: INTERNATIONAL DEPOSITARY AUTHORITY: Escherichia coli NCIMB 40962 (XLI Blue MRF pDVO3191) II. SCIENTIFIC DESCRIPTION AND/OR PROPOSED TAXONOMIC DESIGNATION The microorganism identified under I above was accompanied by: E] a scientific description I]i a proposed taxonomic designation (Mark with a cross where applicable) III. RECEIPT AND ACCEPTANCE This International Depositary Authority accepts the microorganism identified under I above, which was received by it on 4 August 1998 (date of the original deposit)l IV. RECEIPT OF REQUEST FOR CONVERSION The microorganism identified under I above was received by this International Depositary Authority on (date of the original deposit) and a request to convert the original deposit to a deposit under the Budapest Treaty was received by it on (date of receipt of request for conversion) V. INTERNATIONAL DEPOSITARY AUTHORITY Name: NCIMB Ltd., Signature(s) of person(s) having the power to represent the International Depositary Authority or of authorised official(s): Address:23 St Machar Drive., Aberdeen, Date: 19 August 1998 AB24 3RY. Scotl.and. S Where Rule 6/4(d) applies, such date is the date on which the status of International Depositary Authority was acquired. Form BP/4 (sole page) WO 00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 44 BUDAPEST TREATY ON THE INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION OF THE DEPOSIT OF MICROORGANISMS FOR THE PURPOSES OF PATENT PROCEDURE INTERNATIONAL FORM Advanced Technologies (Cambridge) Ltd., 210 Cambridge Science Park, VIABILITY STATEMENT Cambridge. issued pursuant to Rule 10.2 by the CB4 4WA INTERNATIONAL DEPOSITARY AUTHORITY identified on the following page NAME AND ADDRESS OF THE PARTY TO WHOM THE VIABILITY STATEMENT IS ISSUED I. DEPOSITOR II. IDENTIFICATION OF THE MICROORGANISM Name: Accession number given by the AS ABOVE INTERNATIONAL DEPOSITARY AUTHORITY: Address: NCIMB 40962 Date of the deposit or of the transfer: 4 August 1998 Ill. VIABILITY STATEMENT The viability of the microorganism identified under II above was tested on 8 August 1998 2. On that date, the said microorganism was: 3 S viable 3 D no longer viable 1 Indicate the date of the original deposit or, where a new deposit or a transfer has been made, the most recent relevant date (date of the new deposit or date of the transfer). 2 In the cases referred to in Rule 10.2(a)(ii) and (iii), refer to the most recent viability test. 3 Mark with a cross the applicable box. Form BP/9 (first page) WO 00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 45 IV. CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH THE VIABILITY EST HAS BEEN PERFORMED 4 V. INTERNATIONAL DEPOSITARY AUTHORITY Name: NCIMB Ltd., Signature(s) of person(s) having the power to represent the International Depositary Address: 23 St Machar Drive, Authority or of authorised official(s): Aberdeen, A24 3RY, Scotland. Date: 19 August 1998 4 Fill in if the information has been requested and if the results of the test were negative. Form BP/9 (second and last page)

Claims (22)

1. A method of reducing the loss of starch yield in wheat or maize grown under high temperature conditions, the method comprising the steps of stably introducing into the plant genome a nucleic acid sequence encoding glycogen synthase under the direction of a suitable promoter and a suitable terminator, and regenerating a plant having an altered genome.
2. A method according to Claim 1, wherein the temperature is greater than 23 0 C.
3. A method according to Claim 2, wherein the temperature is greater than 25 0 C.
4. A method according to Claim 3, wherein the temperature is greater than 27 0 C.
5. A method according to any one of Claims 1 to 4, wherein a greater than normal starch yield in seeds is achieved at higher temperatures during seed growth compared with control seed grown at 20 0 C.
6. A method according to any one of Claims 1 to 5, wherein said nucleic acid sequence encoding glycogen synthase is a sequence obtained from a unicellular organism, an alga or bacterium, which sequence has the necessary ability to encode glycogen synthase. WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 47
7. A method according to Claim 6, wherein said glycogen synthase is derived from E.coli, Agrobacterium, Salmonella or Bacillus.
8. A method according to any one of Claims 1 to 7, wherein said promoter is capable of directing expression in a particular tissue of the plant and/or at particular stages of development of the plant.
9. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said promoter is heterologous or homologous with respect to said plant.
10. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said promoter directs expression to the endosperm of the seed.
11. A method according to Claim 10, wherein said promoter is the high molecular weight glutenin (HMWG) gene of wheat.
12. A method according to Claim 8, wherein said promoter is one or more of the group consisting of the promoters of gliadin, branching enzyme, ADPG pyrophosphorylase, starch synthase and actin.
13. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said chimaeric gene also contains a sequence that encodes a transit peptide which provides for translocation of the glycogen synthase and/or a marker gene or other coding sequence to the plant plastid.
14. A method according to Claim 13, wherein said transit peptide is one or more of the group consisting of the small subunit of the ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase enzyme (ssu of Rubisco) from pea, maize or sunflower, the transit WO00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 48 peptide for the plant plastid acyl carrier protein (ACP) or the transit peptide for GBSSI.
15. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said chimaeric gene comprises one or more additional coding sequences from the starch or glycogen biosynthetic pathway.
16. A method according to Claim 15, wherein said additional coding sequence is the sequence for glycogen branching enzyme (EC 2.4.1.18).
17. A method according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said chimaeric gene also comprises a gene switch mechanism which determines under what conditions or when the coding sequence is to be expressed.
18. A method according to Claim 17, wherein said gene switch is a chemically induced promoter or a temperature controlled promoter.
19. Maize or wheat plants having a higher starch yield when grown under higher temperatures compared with control seed grown at 20 0 C, said plants comprising cells containing a chimaeric gene comprising a promoter, a coding sequence for glycogen synthase, and a terminator.
20. Maize or wheat plants according to Claim 19, said plants having been produced by the method of any one of Claims 1 18.
21. Maize or wheat plants according to Claim 19, wherein starch obtained from said plants has an altered chain length or processing property compared with control starch from a non-transformed plant. WO 00/55331 PCT/GB00/00848 49
22. Seed of a maize or wheat plant transformed in accordance with any one of Claims 1-18, said seed exhibiting a higher weight and/or less of a loss in yield than seed of control plants grown at 20 0 C.
AU29313/00A 1999-03-12 2000-03-09 Genetically modified plants with altered starch Abandoned AU2931300A (en)

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GB9905698 1999-03-12
GBGB9905698.8A GB9905698D0 (en) 1999-03-12 1999-03-12 Genetically modified plants with altered starch
PCT/GB2000/000848 WO2000055331A1 (en) 1999-03-12 2000-03-09 Genetically modified plants with altered starch

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FR2799205B1 (en) * 1999-09-30 2004-04-16 Meristem Therapeutics SYNTHETIC AND CHEMICAL PROMOTERS, EXPRESSION CASSETTES, PLASMIDS, VECTORS, TRANSGENIC SEED PLANTS CONTAINING THEM, AND PROCESS FOR OBTAINING THEM
CN107699582A (en) * 2017-10-25 2018-02-16 南京固山生物技术有限公司 A kind of starch quality improvement recombination GBSSIP:GlgC and its application

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US5349123A (en) * 1990-12-21 1994-09-20 Calgene, Inc. Glycogen biosynthetic enzymes in plants
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