Author:
Boyle Patrick M,Burrill Devin R,Inniss Mara C,Agapakis Christina M,Deardon Aaron,DeWerd Jonathan G,Gedeon Michael A,Quinn Jacqueline Y,Paull Morgan L,Raman Anugraha M,Theilmann Mark R,Wang Lu,Winn Julia C,Medvedik Oliver,Schellenberg Kurt,Haynes Karmella A,Viel Alain,Brenner Tamara J,Church George M,Shah Jagesh V,Silver Pamela A
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Plant biotechnology can be leveraged to produce food, fuel, medicine, and materials. Standardized methods advocated by the synthetic biology community can accelerate the plant design cycle, ultimately making plant engineering more widely accessible to bioengineers who can contribute diverse creative input to the design process.
Results
This paper presents work done largely by undergraduate students participating in the 2010 International Genetically Engineered Machines (iGEM) competition. Described here is a framework for engineering the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana with standardized, BioBrick compatible vectors and parts available through the Registry of Standard Biological Parts (http://www.partsregistry.org). This system was used to engineer a proof-of-concept plant that exogenously expresses the taste-inverting protein miraculin.
Conclusions
Our work is intended to encourage future iGEM teams and other synthetic biologists to use plants as a genetic chassis. Our workflow simplifies the use of standardized parts in plant systems, allowing the construction and expression of heterologous genes in plants within the timeframe allotted for typical iGEM projects.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biomedical Engineering,Environmental Engineering
Cited by
20 articles.
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