Plasmids containing DNA-sequences that cause changes in the...

Multicellular living organisms and unmodified parts thereof and – Method of introducing a polynucleotide molecule into or... – The polynucleotide alters carbohydrate production in the plant

Reexamination Certificate

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

C800S298000, C800S317200, C435S419000, C435S417000, C435S468000, C536S023600

Reexamination Certificate

active

06215042

ABSTRACT:

This application is a national stage application of PCT/EP92/00302 filed Feb. 11, 1992.
The present invention relates to plasmids containing DNA-sequences which contain information that, after insertion into a plant genome, cause changes in the carbohydrate concentration and the carbohydrate composition in regenerated plants, as well as plant cells and plants containing sequences from these plasmids.
Because of the continual growth in the world population, there is a continually growing demand for nutrient and raw materials. It is the task of biotechnological research to achieve a change in the content as well as the yield of crops. To do this the metabolism of plants has to be altered.
Of particular interest is the possibility of using plant ingredients as renewable sources of raw material sources e.g. for the chemical industry. Renewable sources are of great importance for two reasons. Firstly, up to now, mineral oil and coal deposits have been the main source of raw materials for the petrochemical industry. Such deposits are finite, however, so that alternative, renewable raw material sources must be developed.
Secondly, the present situation of agriculture in Europe and North America has lead to a surplus of crops grown for their nutritive properties. This causes obvious financial and political problems in agriculture. Alternative products for which there is a higher quantitative demand could be a solution to this problem.
Renewable raw materials can be divided into fats and oils, proteins and carbohydrates, such as mono-, di-, oligo- and polysaccharides. The most important polysaccharides are starch and cellulose. In the EEC, the total starch production in 1987-1988 comprised maize (60%), wheat (19%) and potato (21%).
For an increasing use of plant starch as an industrial raw material the quality of the starch must meet the demands of the processing industry. Important considerations include the amylose to amylopectin ratio, the chain length, the branching grade of the amylopectin as well as the size of the starch granules.
The main biochemical synthetic pathways for the production of starch in higher plants are well known. Starch consists of amylose and amylopectin, in which the amylose consists of a linear &agr;-1,4-glucan and amylopectin consists of &agr;-1,4-glucans, which are connected to each other via &agr;1,6-linkages and thus form a branched polyglucan. The so-called branching enzyme (Q-enzyme) is responsible for the introduction of the &agr;-1,6-linkage. One method for the production of starch which only has a linear &agr;-1,4-glucan structure is therefore by the inhibition of the enzymatic activity of the proteins and/or the inhibition of the biosynthesis of the branching enzyme. New biotechnology processes for the genetic alteration of dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous plants by transfer and stable installation of single isolated genes or groups of genes are known (Gasser and Fraley Science 244 1293-1299). The possibility of specific expression of foreign genes inserted in the plant by gene technology, primarily in potato tubers, is also known (EP 375092 and Rocha-Sosa et al., EMBO J. 8, 23-29 (1989)).
The present invention provides plasmids containing DNA-sequences which contain information that, after insertion into a plant genome, cause changes in the carbohydrate concentration and the carbohydrate composition in regenerated plants.
The invention further provides plant cells containing sequences from these plasmids which can be regenerated to whole plants, as well as plants containing sequences from these plasmids.
The term “plant” means a commercially useful plant, preferably maize, barley, wheat, rice, peas, soya beans, sugar cane, sugar beet, tomato, potato or tobacco.
Carbohydrates which can be altered by the DNA sequences are mono-, di-, oligo- or polysaccharides. Starch is an example of a polysaccharide which can be modified in plants and plant cells.
With the plasmids of the invention, it is possible to modify the amylose to amylopectin ratio of the starch in plant cells and in plants. This is possible through the presence of a branching enzyme, located on the plasmid, which has the following sequence: identified as SEQ ID NO:1
        10        20        30        40        50        60

1
TCAGGAGCGGTCTTGGGATATTTCTTCCACCCCAAAATCAAGAGTTAGAAAAGATGAAAG

61
GATGAAGCACAGTTCAGCTATTTCCGCTGTTTTGACCGATGACAATTCGACAATGGCACC

121
CCTAGAGGAAGATGTCAACACTGAAAATATTGGCCTCCTAAATTTGGATCCAACTTTGGA

181
ACCTTATCTAGATCACTTCAGACACAGAATGAAGAGATATGTGGATCAGAAAATGCTCAT

241
TGAAAAATATGAGGGACCCCTTGAGGAATTTGCTCAAGGTTATTTAAAATTTGGATTCAA

301
CAGGGAAGATGGTTGCATAGTCTATCGTGAATGGGCTCCTGCTGCTCAGGAAGCAGAAGT

361
TATTGGCGATTTCAATGGTAGGAACGGTTCTAACCACATGATGGAGAAGGACCAGTTTGG

421
TGTTTGGAGTATTAGAATTCCTGATGTTGACAGTAAGCCAGTCATTCCACACAACTCCAG

481
AGTTAAGTTTCGTTTCAAACATGGTAATGGAGTGTGGGTAGATCGTATCCCTGCTTGGAT

541
AAAGTATGCCACTGCAGACGCCACAAAGTTTGCAGCACCATATGATGGTGTCTACTGGGA

601
CCCACCACCTTCAGAAAGGTACCACTTCAAATACCCTCGCCCTCCCAAACCCCGAGCCCC

661
ACGAATCTACGAAGCACATGTCGGCATGAGCAGCTCTGAGCCACGTGTAAATTCGTATCG

721
TGAGTTTGCAGATGATGTTTTACCTCGGATTAAGGCAAATAACTATAATACTGTCCAGTT

781
GATGGCCATAATGGAACATTCTTACTATGGATCATTTGGATATCATGTTACAAACTTTTT

841
TGCTGTGAGCAATAGATATGGAAACCCGGAGGACCTAAAGTATCTGATAGATAAAGCACA

901
TAGCTTGGGTTTACAGGTTCTGGTGGATGTAGTTCACAGTCATGCAAGCAATAATGTCAC

961
TGATGGCCTCAATGGCTTTGATATTGGCCAAGGTTCTCAAGAATCCTACTTTCATGCTGG

1021
AGAGCGAGGGTACCATAAGTTGTGGGATAGCAGGCTGTTCAACTATGCCAATTGGGAGGT

1081
TCTTCGTTTCCTTCTTTCCAACTTGAGGTGGTGGCTAGAAGAGTATAACTTTGACGGATT

1141
TCGATTTGATGGAATAACTTCTATGCTGTATGTTCATCATGGAATCAATATGGGATTTAC

1201
AGGAAACTATAATGAGTATTTCAGCGAGGCTACAGATGTTGATGCTGTGGTCTATTTAAT

1261
GTTGGCCAATAATCTGATTCACAAGATTTTCCCAGACGCAACTGTTATTGCCGAAGATGT

1321
TTCTGGTATGCCGGGCCTTAGCCGGCCTGTTTCTGAGGGAGGAATTGGTTTTGATTACCG

1381
CCTGGCAATGGCAATCCCAGATAAGTGGATAGATTATTTAAAGAATAAGAATGATGAAGA

1441
TTGGTCCATGAAGGAAGTAACATCGAGTTTGACAAATAGGAGATATACAGAGAAGTGTAT

1501
AGCATATGCGGAGAGCCATGATCAGTCTATTGTCGGTGACAAGACCATTGCATTTCTCCT

1561
AATGAACAAAGAGATGTATTCTGGCATGTCTTGCTTGACAGATGCTTCTCCTGTTGTTGA

1621
TGCAGGAATTGCGCTTGACAAGATGATCCATTTTTTTCACAATGGCCTTGGGAGGAGAGG

1681
GGTACCTCAATTTCATGGGTAACGAGTTTGGCCATCCTGAGTGGATTGACTTCCCTAGTG

1741
AGGGCAATAATTGGAGTTATGACAAATGTAGACGCCAGTGGAACCTCGCAGATAGCGAAC

1801
ACTTGAGATACAAGTTTATGAATGCATTTGATAGAGCTATGAATTCGCTCGATGAAAAGT

1861
TCTCATTCCTCGCATCAGGAAAACAGATAGTAAGCAGCATGGATGATGATAATAAGGTTG

1921
TTGTGTTTGAACGTGGTGACCTGGTATTTGTATTCAACTTCCACCCAAATAACACATACG

1981
AAGGGTATAAAGTTGGATGTGACTTGCCAGGGAAGTACAGAGTTGCACTGGACAGTGATG

2041
CTTGGGAATTTGGTGGCCATGGAAGAGCTGGTCATGATGTTGACCATTTCACATCACCAG

2101
AAGGAATACCTGGAGTTCCAGAAACAAATTTCAATGGTCGTCCAAATTCCTTCAAAGTGC

2161
TGTCTCCTGCGCGAACATGTGTGGCTTATTACAGAGTTGATGAACGCATGTCATAAACTG

2221
AAGATTACCAGACAGACATTTGTAGTGAGCTACTACCAACAGCCAATATCGAGGAAAGTG

2281
ACGAGAAACTTAAAGATTCATCATCTACAAATATCAGTACATCATCTACAAAAAATGCTT

2341
ATTACAGAGTTGATGAACGCATGTCAGAAGCTGAAGATTACCAGACAGACATTTGTAGTG

2401
AGCTACTACTACCAACAGCCAATATCGAGGAGAGTGACGAGAAACTTGATGATTCATTAT

2461
CTACAAATATCAGTAACATTGGTCAGACTGTTGTAGTTTCTGTTGAGGAGAGAGACAAGG

2521
AACTTAAAGATTCACCATCTGTAAGCATCATTAGTGATGCTGTTCCAGCTGAATGGGCTG

2581
ATTCGGATGCAAACGTCTGGGGTGAGGACTAGTCAGATGATTGATCGATCCTTCTACGTT

2641
GGTGATCTCGGTCCGTGCATGATGTCTTCAGGGTGGTAGCATTGACTGATTGCATCATAG

2701
TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAAGTATTTCCTCTATGCATATTATTAGCATCCAATAAATTTAC

2761
TGGTTGTTGTACATAGAAAAAGTGCATTTGCATGTATGTGTTTCTCTGAAATTTTCCCCA

2821
GTTTTGGTGCTTTGCCTTTGGAGCCAAGTCTCTATATGTAATAAGAAAACTAAGAACAAT

2881
CACATATATAAAATGTTAGTAGATTACCA.
The property of the branching enzyme to modify the amylose/amylopectin ratio in starch is not limited to a coding sequence exactly as it is shown here but can also be represented by slightly different nucleotide sequences. The property of the branching enzyme is also not changed when the plasmids containing the

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for the USA inventors and patents. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Plasmids containing DNA-sequences that cause changes in the... does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.

If you have personal experience with Plasmids containing DNA-sequences that cause changes in the..., we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Plasmids containing DNA-sequences that cause changes in the... will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-2551601

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.