Person: Veramendi Charola, Jon
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Veramendi Charola
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Jon
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Agronomía, Biotecnología y Alimentación
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IMAB. Research Institute for Multidisciplinary Applied Biology
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0000-0002-3214-213X
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539
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Publication Open Access Functional improvement of human cardiotrophin 1 produced in tobacco chloroplasts by co-expression with plastid thioredoxin m(MDPI, 2020) Ancín Rípodas, María; Sanz Barrio, Ruth; Santamaría, Eva; Fernández San Millán, Alicia; Larraya Reta, Luis María; Veramendi Charola, Jon; Farrán Blanch, Inmaculada; Institute for Multidisciplinary Research in Applied Biology - IMABHuman cardiotrophin 1 (CT1), a cytokine with excellent therapeutic potential, was previously expressed in tobacco chloroplasts. However, the growth conditions required to reach the highest expression levels resulted in an impairment of its bioactivity. In the present study, we have examined new strategies to modulate the expression of this recombinant protein in chloroplasts so as to enhance its production and bioactivity. In particular, we assessed the effect of both the fusion and co-expression of Trx m with CT1 on the production of a functional CT1 by using plastid transformation. Our data revealed that the Trx m fusion strategy was useful to increase the expression levels of CT1 inside the chloroplasts, although CT1 bioactivity was significantly impaired, and this was likely due to steric hindrance between both proteins. By contrast, the expression of functional CT1 was increased when co-expressed with Trx m, because we demonstrated that recombinant CT1 was functionally active during an in vitro signaling assay. While Trx m/CT1 co-expression did not increase the amount of CT1 in young leaves, our results revealed an increase in CT1 protein stability as the leaves aged in this genotype, which also improved the recombinant protein’s overall production. This strategy might be useful to produce other functional biopharmaceuticals in chloroplasts.Publication Open Access Post-harvest light treatment increases expression levels of recombinant proteins in transformed plastids of potato tubers(Wiley, 2015) Larraya Reta, Luis María; Fernández San Millán, Alicia; Ancín Rípodas, María; Farrán Blanch, Inmaculada; Veramendi Charola, Jon; IdAB. Instituto de Agrobiotecnología / Agrobioteknologiako InstitutuaPlastid genetic engineering represents an attractive system for the production of foreign proteins in plants. Although high expression levels can be achieved in leaf chloroplasts, the results for non-photosynthetic plastids are generally discouraging, mainly due to low transcriptional and translational rates in comparison with chloroplasts. Here, we report the expression of two thioredoxin genes (trx f and m) from the potato plastid genome to study transgene expression in amyloplasts. As expected, the highest transgene expression was detected in the leaf (up to 4.2% of TSP). The Trx protein content in the tuber was approximately 2-3 orders of magnitude lower than in the leaf. However, we demonstrate that a simple post-harvest light treatment of microtubers developed in vitro or soil-grown tubers induces up to 55 times higher accumulation of the recombinant protein in just 7-10 days. The promoter and 5’-UTR of the psbA gene displayed higher light induction than the rrn promoter. After the applied treatment, the Trx f levels in microtubers and soil-grown tubers increased to 0.14% and 0.11% of TSP, respectively. Moreover, tubers stored for 8 months maintained the capacity of increasing the foreign protein levels after the light treatment. Post-harvest cold induction (up to 5 times) at 4 ºC was also detected in microtubers. We conclude that plastid transformation and post-harvest light treatment could be an interesting approach for the production of foreign proteins in potato.