Transplastomic tomatoes

Plastid genome engineering has created transgenic tomatoes, paving the way for the development of appetizing edible vaccines.

Written byJonathan Weitzman
| 1 min read

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Plants have three genomes, each contained in a separate cellular compartment; the nucleus, the mitochondrion and the plastid. The higher plant plastid genome is a double-stranded circle of 120-160 kb, encoding about 130 genes. The development of plastid transgene applications has been hampered by the technical limitations of tissue culture and regeneration protocols.

In the September issue of Nature Biotechnology, Stephanie Ruf and colleagues report the development of a plastid transformation system for tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum, and generation of the first edible transplastomic fruits (Nature Biotechnology 2001, 19:870-875).

Ruf et al. developed new transformation vectors for efficient delivery of foreign genes to chlororoplasts. They then created tomato plants expressing a selectable spectinomycin-resistance marker gene, aadA. Transformation procedures were modified by using low-light conditions and an extended selection phase, to optimize success. Ruf et al. found that the AadA protein was expressed at high levels in the tomato fruit, comprising about ...

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