WO1994016089A1 - Viral amplification of recombinant messenger rna in transgenic plants - Google Patents

Viral amplification of recombinant messenger rna in transgenic plants Download PDF

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WO1994016089A1
WO1994016089A1 PCT/US1993/012636 US9312636W WO9416089A1 WO 1994016089 A1 WO1994016089 A1 WO 1994016089A1 US 9312636 W US9312636 W US 9312636W WO 9416089 A1 WO9416089 A1 WO 9416089A1
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replicon
gene
protein
plant
virus
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PCT/US1993/012636
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French (fr)
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Thomas H. Turpen
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Biosource Genetics Corporation
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Priority to KR1019950702767A priority Critical patent/KR960700344A/en
Priority to AT94905969T priority patent/ATE234361T1/en
Priority to EP94905969A priority patent/EP0677113B1/en
Priority to DE69332763T priority patent/DE69332763T2/en
Priority to JP6516080A priority patent/JPH08505289A/en
Priority to AU59871/94A priority patent/AU694102B2/en
Publication of WO1994016089A1 publication Critical patent/WO1994016089A1/en

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    • C12N15/09Recombinant DNA-technology
    • C12N15/63Introduction of foreign genetic material using vectors; Vectors; Use of hosts therefor; Regulation of expression
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    • 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)
    • C12N15/8201Methods for introducing genetic material into plant cells, e.g. DNA, RNA, stable or transient incorporation, tissue culture methods adapted for transformation
    • C12N15/8202Methods for introducing genetic material into plant cells, e.g. DNA, RNA, stable or transient incorporation, tissue culture methods adapted for transformation by biological means, e.g. cell mediated or natural vector
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    • C12N15/09Recombinant DNA-technology
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    • C12N15/82Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts for plant cells, e.g. plant artificial chromosomes (PACs)
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    • C12N2770/00011Details
    • C12N2770/00022New viral proteins or individual genes, new structural or functional aspects of known viral proteins or genes
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
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    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S47/00Plant husbandry
    • Y10S47/01Methods of plant-breeding and including chromosome multiplication
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
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    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S977/00Nanotechnology
    • Y10S977/70Nanostructure
    • Y10S977/788Of specified organic or carbon-based composition
    • Y10S977/802Virus-based particle
    • Y10S977/803Containing biological material in its interior
    • Y10S977/804Containing nucleic acid
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
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    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S977/00Nanotechnology
    • Y10S977/902Specified use of nanostructure
    • Y10S977/904Specified use of nanostructure for medical, immunological, body treatment, or diagnosis
    • Y10S977/915Therapeutic or pharmaceutical composition
    • Y10S977/916Gene therapy
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S977/00Nanotechnology
    • Y10S977/902Specified use of nanostructure
    • Y10S977/904Specified use of nanostructure for medical, immunological, body treatment, or diagnosis
    • Y10S977/92Detection of biochemical

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the field of genetically engineering transgenic plants. More specifically, the invention relates to the use of viral RNA to achieve high level expression of foreign genes in plants.
  • transgenic plants for high level expression of foreign genes has been targeted as an inexpensive means for mass producing desired products. All higher plants are photoautotrophic, requiring only C0 2 , H 2 0, N0 3 _1 , S0 4 "2 , PO ⁇ "3 and trace amounts of other elements for growth. From these inexpensive starting materials, plants are capable of synthesizing a variety of valuable products. Progress in utilizing transgenic plants as low cost factories will depend on both the characterization of biosynthetic pathways and on the further development of gene expression technologies.
  • RNA messenger RNA polarity
  • Plus sense plant viruses are a very versatile class of viruses to develop as gene expression vectors since there are a large number of strains from some 22 plus sense viral groups which are compatible with a wide number of host plant species. (Martelli, G. P., Plant Disease 26_:436 (1992)) .
  • an evolutionarily related RNA-dependent RNA polymerase is encoded by each of these strains. This enzyme is responsible for genome replication and mRNA synthesis resulting in some of the highest levels of gene expression known in plants.
  • RNA virus In order to develop a plant virus as a gene vector, one must be able to manipulate molecular clones of viral genomes and retain the ability to generate infectious recombinants. The techniques required to genetically engineer RNA viruses have progressed rapidly. If the virus is an RNA virus, the virus is generally cloned as a cDNA and inserted into a plasmid. The plasmid is used to make all of the constructions. The genome of many plus sense RNA viruses can be manipulated as plasmid DNA copies and then transcribed in vitro to produce infectious RNA molecules (reviewed in Turpen and Dawson, Transgenic Plants, Fundamentals and Applications, Marcel Dekker, New York, pp 195-217 (1992)) .
  • TMV is a member of the tobamovirus group.
  • TMV virions are 300 nm X 18 nm tubes with a 4 nm-diameter hollow canal, and consist of 2140 units of a single structural protein helically wound around a single RNA molecule.
  • the genome is a 6395 base plus-sense RNA.
  • the 5' -end is capped and the 3' -end contains a series of pseudoknots and a tRNA-like structure that will specifically accept histidine.
  • the genomic RNA functions as mRNA for the production of proteins involved in viral replication: a 126-kDa protein that initiates 68 nucleotides from the 5'-terminus and a 183-kDa protein synthesized by readthrough of an amber termination codon approximately 10% of the time (Fig. 1) .
  • Only the 183-kDa and 126-kDa viral proteins are required for TMV replication in trans. (Ogawa, T., Watanabe, Y., Meshi, T., and Okada, Y., Virology 185:580-584 (1991)).
  • Additional proteins are translated from subgenomic size mRNA produced during replication (reviewed in Dawson, W.O., Adv. Virus Res. 3_8 . :307-342 (1990)).
  • the 30-kDa protein is required for eell-to-cell movement; the 17.5-kDa capsid protein is the single viral structural protein.
  • the minimal sequences required in cis for TMV replication are located at the extreme 5' and 3' noncoding regions (replication origins) , as determined by analysis of deletion mutants in plant protoplasts (Takamatsu, N., et al. , J. Virol. 64:3686-3693 (1990), Takamatsu, N. , et al. , J. Virol. 65:1619-1622 (1991)) .
  • helper- dependent RNA replicons constructed by deletion of most of the 126/183-kDa replication protein sequence and most of the 30-kDa movement protein sequence, are replicated and spread systemically in the presence of wild type TMV (Raffo A.J., and Dawson .O., Virology 184:277-289 (1991) ) .
  • Turpen, et al. discloses a simple and reliable gene transfer method wherein cDNA of TMV is engineered into A . tumefaciens for expression in plant cells (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-105 (1992) ) .
  • This method provides an alternative to the use of synthetic infectious transcripts to inoculate plants based on host transcription of viral cDNA in vivo.
  • Turpen showed successful transfection of tobacco (N. tabacum cv. Xanthi and Xanthi/nc) with wild type and defective viral genomes using this methodology.
  • Transfection also occurs spontaneously in transgenic lines containing defective or wild type cDNA of TMV integrated chromosomally (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106-132 (1992), Yamaya, J., et al. , Mol. Gen. Genet. 211:520-525 (1988)) .
  • viral replication can be derived from the process of host cell transcription.
  • Plant virus infections are initiated by mechanical damage to the plant cell wall. Following replication in the initially wounded cells, progeny viruses spread over short distances (cell-to-cell movement) before entering vascular tissue for long distance movement. Studies with chimeric tobamoviruses indicate that the coat protein is required for efficient long distance movement.
  • 30-kDa movement protein is absolutely required for cell-to-cell movement in whole plants, but can be deleted or inactivated without affecting replication in protoplasts or inoculated leaves (reviewed in
  • a sequence located within the 30kDa movement protein gene of the Ul strain of TMV serves as the origin of assembly. It is at this origin of assembly that the TMV RNA and the viral capsid protein spontaneously aggregate to initiate the assembly of virions (Butler, P.J.G., Mayo, M.A., Molecular architecture and assembly of tobacco mosaic virus particles, The molecular biology of the positive strand RNA viruses. (D.J. Rowlands, M.A. Mayo, and B.W.J. Mahy, eds. ) , Academic Press, London, pp. 237- 257 (1987) ) .
  • a functional origin of assembly is also required for efficient long distance movement (Saito, T., Yamanaka, K., and Okada, Y., Virology 176:329- 336 (1990) ) . There does not appear to be any additional requirements for packaging.
  • a variety of heterologous sequences can be encapsidated yielding rod-shaped virions whose lengths are proportional to the size of the RNA molecule containing the origin of assembly (Dawson, W.O. et al . , Virology 172 :285-292 (1989) ) .
  • the present invention relates to a replicon transcribed from a transgene integrated into the chromosome of a plant cell.
  • the replicon encodes for replication origins possessing substantial sequence identity to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus and at least one gene non-native to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus.
  • the replicon does not encode for at least one protein necessary for replication.
  • expression of the non-native gene is regulated by a helper virus encoding for a protein needed by the replicon for replication.
  • the sequence encoding the non-native gene be located 5' to the 3' replication origin of the replicon. It is further preferred that the replicon encode for a gene needed by the helper virus for systemic infection, most preferably a viral movement protein located 3' to the 5' replication origin of the replicon.
  • the present invention also relates to a protein expressed in a plant cell using a replicon of the present invention.
  • the present invention also relates to an RNA sequence expressed in a plant cell using the replicon of the present invention.
  • the present invention also relates to a primary or secondary metabolite accumulated in the tissues of a transfected plant as a result of the expression of the non-native gene encoded by a replicon of the present invention.
  • the present invention also relates to a transgenic plant comprising a transgene integrated into the chromosome of a plant cell wherein the transgene encodes for a replicon of the present invention.
  • the present invention also relates to a method of expressing a gene in a plant by integrating a transgene into a chromosome of a plant cell, the transgene encoding for a replicon of the present invention.
  • the transgenic plant is then infected with a helper virus encoding for the protein needed by the replicon for replication.
  • FIG. 1 depicts the genome of wild type TMV.
  • FIG. 2a, b and c depict the essential features of the instantly claimed viral replicons.
  • FIG. 3 depicts an embodiment where the replicon and helper virus are mutually dependent.
  • FIG. 4 depicts a preferred replicon gene arrangement where the foreign gene is situated at the 3' end of the genome 5' to the 3' replication origin.
  • FIG. 5 depicts the construction of a transgene for the synthesis of a replicon encoding Chloramphenicol Acetyltransferase (CAT) in an Agrobacterium transformation vector.
  • CAT Chloramphenicol Acetyltransferase
  • FIG. 6 provides a restriction map of the transgene portion of pBGC272.
  • FIG. 7 depicts an autoradiograph showing the separation and identification of pBGC272 and pBGC273. Definitions
  • Foreign gene refers to any sequence that is not native to the virus.
  • In cis indicates that two sequences are positioned on the same strand of RNA or DNA.
  • In trans indicates that two sequences are positioned on different strands of RNA or DNA.
  • Movement protein is a noncapsid protein required for cell to cell movement of replicons or viruses in plants.
  • An "origin of assembly” is a sequence where self-assembly of the viral RNA and the viral capsid protein initiates to form virions.
  • Replication origin refers to the minimal terminal sequences in linear viruses that are necessary for viral replication.
  • a "replicon" is an arrangement of RNA sequences generated by transcription of a transgene that is integrated into the host DNA that is capable of replication in the presence of a helper virus.
  • a replicon may require sequences in addition to the replication origins for efficient replication and stability.
  • Transcription termination region is a sequence that controls formation of the 3' end of the transcript. Self- cleaving ribozymes and polyadenylation sequences are examples of transcription termination sequences.
  • Transgene refers to the DNA sequence coding for the replicon that is inserted into the host DNA.
  • Virion is a particle composed of viral RNA and viral capsid protein.
  • the instant invention provides high level expression of foreign genes in plants by viral replicons wherein the replicons possess improved genetic stability.
  • the replicons of the instant invention are produced in host plant cells by transcription of integrated transgenes.
  • the replicons of the instant invention are derived, in part, from single stranded plus sense plant RNA viruses.
  • the replicons of the instant invention code for at least one foreign gene and possess sequences required in cis for replication ("replication origins") .
  • Figure 2(c). The replicons are produced by host cell transcription of a chromosomally integrated transgene to form an RNA transcript.
  • the transgene is a DNA sequence that codes for the replicon and also contains a promoter and a transcription termination region.
  • Figure 2(a) The replicon is generated from an RNA transcript of the transgene by RNA processing and replication in the presence of a helper virus.
  • Figure 2(b) The replicons of the instant invention lack functional replication protein sequences.
  • the replicons of the instant invention lack replication protein sequences, they must rely on genetic complementation with helper viruses for replication.
  • the replicon's dependency on the helper virus for replication enables regulatable amplification of these replicons through the introduction of the helper virus.
  • Genetic complementation of the replicon with a helper virus provides many advantages over autonomous viral vectors for amplifying gene expression.
  • Each infected cell of a transgenic plant contains a correct master copy of the gene to be amplified. This reduces the effects of genetic drift in replicating RNA populations that can result in sequence instabilities and point mutations after prolonged replication of an RNA vector (Kearney, C. M. , et al. , Virology (in press) ) .
  • the replicon codes for at least one sequence upon which the helper virus is dependent.
  • the replicon and the helper virus are mutually dependent. [See Figure 3] . Helper virus dependence on the replicon insures amplified expression of the replicon sequences by the helper virus in whole plants.
  • the replicon codes for a functional movement protein such as the 30kDa TMV movement protein.
  • the helper virus used in this embodiment does not possess a functional movement protein.
  • the helper virus is dependent on the replicon for movement functionality. Movement proteins are necessary for cell to cell movement in plants.
  • This embodiment of the instant invention has the further advantage that the only virus released into the environment will be a debilitated helper virus.
  • the helper virus will not be able to spread in plants that do not already contain a functional copy of the viral movement protein.
  • This embodiment provides an option for more stringent levels of biological containment which may be desirable in some cases for large scale commercial production.
  • the replicon is formulated such that the sequences encoding the replication origins and the movement functions are linked to the foreign gene sequences.
  • the chromosomally integrated transgene that codes for the replicon is transcribed by host RNA polymerase II producing recombinant mRNAs. In the presence of a helper virus, these transcripts are replicated as additional replicon components in a mixed population.
  • subgenomic messenger RNA may be produced from replicon RNA resulting in amplified expression of foreign genes.
  • the most preferred replicon gene arrangement places the foreign gene at the extreme 3' end of the genome where the viral structural protein is normally encoded. See Figure 4.
  • Additional preferred embodiments of the replicon sequence include the use of regulatable promoters to control expression of the foreign gene and/or movement protein.
  • One promoter for expression of a fusion protein containing the foreign protein or a series of subgenomic promoters may be employed.
  • Self-cleaving ribozymes or a polyadenylation region may also be employed as the transcription termination regions.
  • the replicons are generated in vivo in plants through transcription of transgenes that are integrated into the host plant cell chromosome and through replication in the presence of a helper virus.
  • the transgenes can be introduced into the host plant cell chromosome by known transformation methods using a variety of promoters. After the replicon has been introduced into the host, the resulting transgenic plants are grown to an optimized stage at which point a helper virus strain is added. The replicons are then amplified by the introduced helper virus and the foreign gene is expressed.
  • the foreign gene product coded for and expressed by the replicon can be a very wide variety of RNA or proteins products and include, for example, antisense and ribozyme RNA, regulatory enzymes, and structural, regulatory and therapeutic proteins that may be expressed in their native form or as gene fusions.
  • Typical therapeutic proteins include members of the interleukin family of proteins and colony stimulating factors such as CSF-G, CSF-GM and CSF-M. It is understood, however, that any therapeutic protein can be coded for and expressed in the instant invention. If expression of the foreign gene results in the accumulation of a protein or other material in the plant tissues, that resulting product may be harvested once the desired concentration of that product is achieved.
  • RNA-based amplification is not critically dependent on initial transcript amounts. There is also no theoretical limit to the number of genes that can be amplified at the RNA level. The target gene remains "off” before amplification because subgenomic mRNA is only produced during viral replication. Therefore this approach might be particularly appropriate for controlling complex biochemical pathways or producing products that are toxic to the plant.
  • Example 1 The following examples further illustrate the present invention.
  • Example 1 The following examples further illustrate the present invention.
  • TMV transgene derived from TMV
  • the wild type TMV genome is set forth in Figure 1.
  • the construction of D ⁇ A plasmids containing the 5 ' replication origin fused to the CaMV 35S promoter are described in (Ow, D. W., et al., Science 234:856-859 (1986)) and the 3' replication origin fused to a ribozyme termination region are described by Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Disertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-105 (1992) .
  • plasmids pBGC43, pBGC44, pBGC75 (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Disertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-136 (1992)) and pTMVS3CAT28 (Dawson, et al . , Phvtopathol . 78:783-789 (1988) ) are used as precursors for the construction of the desired transgene for synthesis of replicon R ⁇ A ( Figure 5) . Construction of plasmids pBGC43, pBGC44, pBGC75 are described in Table 1 taken from Turpen, T. H. , Ph.D. Disertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 92, 112 (1992) . Construction of plasmids pBGC43, pBGC44, pBGC75 and pTMVS3CAT28 are also discussed below.
  • pTMVS3-CAT-28 containing a substitution of the chloramphenicol acetlytransferase (CAT) gene for the coat protein gene was constructed as follows .
  • the CAT gene was removed from pCMl (Pharmacia) with Sail and ligated into Xhol-cleaved pTMVS3-28.
  • pTMVS3-28 was constructed by cloning genomic length TMV cDNA (6.4 kb) in pBR322 as described in Dawson W., et al. , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 11:1832-36, (1986) .
  • the CAT construction produced pTMVS3-CAT-28 from which the mutant cp S3-CAT-28 was transcribed. Correct sequence and orientation were confirmed by sequencing. Gene Anal. Technol. 2:89-94.
  • pBGC43 pTK49 was constructed by cloning the 1.4 kb Pstl-Hindlll fragment of TMV cDNA in pUC19 as described by Dawson, W., et al. , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 83:1832-36 (1986).
  • the 1.4 kb Pstl-Hindlll from pTK49 was recloned into pUC19 to form pTTl.
  • the 1.6 kb Hindlll-BamHI fragment from pD0432 described in Ow et al., Science 214:856-59, (1986) was cloned into pTTl.
  • NotI linkers were added at the Hindlll site of the fragment and the EcoRI site of the vector.
  • pTT3 was constructed by digesting pTT2 with Pstl-BamHI and mung bean nuclease to position the 35S promoter at the 5' end of TMV cDNA. The 1.9 kb Notl-Smal fragment of pTT3 was cloned into pBStKs+ to form pBGC43.
  • Phytopathology 21:783-789) was substituted for the 0.9 kb NcoI-PstI fragment of pGC14 to form pGC15.
  • pBGC19 was formed by deleting the 0.03 kb Kpnl- Hindlll polylinker region of pBGC14.
  • pBGC70 was formed by cloning a 0.05 kb synthetic Apal-PstI ribozyme encoding fragment into pBstSk+.
  • pBGC72 was formed by deleting the 3.5 kb Clal fragment from pBGC19.
  • pBGC73 was formed by cloning the 0.05 kb Apal-PstI fragment of pBGC70 into pBGC72.
  • pBGC74 was formed by substituting the 0.1 kb Clal- Nsil fragment of pBGC15 for the 0.5 kb Clal-Nsil fragment of pBGC73.
  • the 3.5 kb Clal fragment of pBGC19 was cloned into pBGC74 to form pBGC75.
  • Plasmids pBstSK/pBstKS E. coli cloning plasmids, pBluescript (+/-) Stratagene, La Jolla, California
  • the transgene it is desired to place the 30-kDA movement protein gene at precisely the same position as the replicase gene (relative to 5' replication origin in the wild type TMV genome, See Figure 5) .
  • a Ndel site is introduced at the start codon of each gene by PCR-based mutagenesis using synthetic primers and unique adjacent cloning sites.
  • a 270 bp mutagenesis product containing the internal Ndel site from the PCR primer is subcloned using the EcoRV site in the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter and the Hindlll site in the 30- Da protein gene. The ligation product is then sequence verified.
  • the 3' segment of the replicon, containing the CAT gene will be placed adjacent to the 3'-ribozyme as a Hindlll-Nsil fragment from the transient TMV vector pTMVS3CAT28 ( Figure 5) .
  • the 5' portion of the transgene and the 3' portion will be subcloned into the unique BamHI site of the plant transformation vector pAP2034 (Velton and Schell, NAR 13.:6981-6998 (1985) as a Bglll-BamHI fragment described previously (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Disertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-132 (1992)) .
  • the sequence of the replicon RNA, produced by host transcription, RNA processing, and replication in the presence of a helper virus is given as SEQ. No. 1.
  • the foreign gene CAT
  • CAT is placed on a RNA viral replicon, under control of the coat protein subgenomic promoter for messenger RNA synthesis (located at the 3' end of the movement protein gene) .
  • Agrobacterium tumefaciens is used for insertion of this sequence into the plant chromosome as described previously (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106-132 (1992)) .
  • the transformation vector pAP2034 is a cointegrating type Agrobacterium vector.
  • pAP2034 containing the transcription unit for the production of replicon RNA is mobilized into A . tumefaciens by conjugation using the helper strain GJ23 (Van Haute, E., JOOS, et al., EMBO J. 2:411-417 (1983)) .
  • Transconjugants are selected and the structure of the cointegrate between donor plasmid and the disarmed Ti plasmid pGV3850 (Zambryski, P., et al. , EMBO J. 2:2143-2150 (1983)) is confirmed by Southern blot hybridization. A correct homologous recombination event places the transgene construct between the T- DNA borders.
  • Hardened plants are grown in commercial potting soil (Cascade Forest Products Inc., Arcata, CA) at a temperature of 21-29°C, with a controlled release fertilizer (Osmocote, 14-14-14) using natural light (Vacaville, CA) supplemented with fluorescent light on a 16 hr day length in an indoor greenhouse.
  • the antibiotic resistance trait carried in transgenic lines is scored by germinating seedlings in sterile agar in the presence of 100 ug/ml kanamycin (Dunsmuir, P., et al. , Stability of introduced genes and stability of expression, Plant molecular biology manual . (S.B. Gelvin, R.A. Schilperoort, and D.P.S. Verma, eds.), Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, pp. Cl:l-17 (1988)).
  • replicon RNA Production of replicon RNA in the presence of helper virus.
  • the sequence of the replicon RNA, produced by host transcription, RNA processing, and replication in the presence of a helper virus, is given as SEQ. No. 1.
  • Tobamoviruses with mutations or naturally occurring variation in the 30-kDa protein gene are deficient in cell-to-cell movement on specific host species.
  • Transgenic plants or alternate hosts can complement this defect. It will be appreciated to those skilled in the art that there are numerous methods of producing helper tobamoviruses by genetic engineering or by mutagenesis in addition to those helper variants or host species combinations occurring naturally. Likewise, methods for producing transgenic plants which express 30 kDa protein and which complement defective 30 kDa containing viruses have been published.
  • helper viruses can be synthesized by transcription of TMV with known mutations for the production of RNA inoculum.
  • Transgenic plants expressing the 30-kDa protein complement this defect (Deom, C. M., et al. , Science 237:389-394 (1987)) . Therefore, large quantities of a helper virus can be propagated.
  • a 30-kDa protein frameshift mutant having a single base pair deletion at position 4931 thereby creating a EcoRV site in the cDNA, is used as helper virus.
  • Transgenic tobacco (-100 plants) are regenerated containing this replicon transgene construction and assayed for CAT activity in the presence and absence of helper viruses using procedures described (Shaw, W.V., Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase from chloramphenicol-resistant bacteria, Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 53, (S. Fleischer and L. Packer, eds.), pp. 737-755 (1975)) .
  • leaf tissue 200 g is macerated in assay buffer followed by the addition of 0.5 mM acetyl CoA and 0.1 uCi [ 14 C]chloramphenicol, incubation for 45 min at 37°C, extraction, resolution by thin-layer chromatography, and autoradiography.
  • Several tobacco plants were transformed with a transgene of the present invention in order to evaluate the ability of the transgene to be expressed within a plant cell as well as the ability of the transgene to systemically infect a plant and express a protein encoded by the transgene.
  • systemic expression of chloramphenicol acetyl transferase encoded by the transgene was achieved at a level two fold that of the background level and comparable to levels obtained for single copy tobacco genes.
  • pBGC272 and pBGC273 were used to introduce the transgenes.
  • a restriction map of the transgene portion of pBGC272 is provided in Fig. 6.
  • pBGC272 has been deposited with the American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, Maryland (ATCC) under Accession No. . It is predicted that amplified expression of CAT from pBGC272 would be observed in the presence of a helper virus through complementation with the helper virus.
  • a control plasmid, pBGC273, was also prepared which differs from pBGC272 in that the 3' noncoding region has been deleted. Amplified expression of CAT is not expected with pBGC273 because deletion of the 3 ' noncoding region prevents synthesis of the minus strand.
  • Tobacco plants were transformed with either pBGC272 or pBGC273 using the Agrobacterium tumefaciens leaf-dip method as described in Example 2.
  • bacterial conjugation was avoided by using a binary plasmid vector system for plant transformation instead of employing cointegrate vectors. Bevan, M., et al. Nucleic Acid Res. 12:8711-8721 (1984) .
  • An autoradiograph showing the separation and identification of pBGC272 and pBGC273 is depicted in Fig. 7.
  • Lanes 1, 2 and 20 contain control DNA restriction fragments from pBGC272.
  • Lanes 3-10 and 13-18 contain total RNA from transgenic plant samples (pBGC272, pBGC273) . Lanes
  • 11 and 12 contain control samples from 3OK transgenic plants (line 26C) known to complement helper virus TMMVDEcoRV.
  • Lane 19 contains RNA (1/220 equivalent) from helper virus TMMVDEcoRV-infected line 26C control plants.
  • CAT chloramphenicol acetyl transferase
  • Leaf disc samples (# 8 core bore) were used. Total soluble protein from the same leaf disk samples used for CAT/ELISA was determined by the method Bradford, M. Anal. Biochem. 72:248-254 (1976) .
  • Three groups of plants containing pBGC272 or pBGC273 by the Acrrobacterium tumefaciens leaf-dip method were infected with one of three helper viruses.
  • the helper viruses used in the present example include the wild type TMV virus (TMVU1) ,
  • TMVDEcoRV and TMV30K-O The helper viruses used in the present study are derived from the readily available tobamovirus strains, TMVU1 (also known as the common or wild type strain, ATCC No. PV 135) and odonoglossum ringspot tobamovirus (ORSV, ATCC No. PV274) . Paul, H., C.M.I./A.A.B. Descriptions of Plant Viruses, No. 155 (TMVU1) ; Zaitlin, M., C.M.I./A.A.B. Descriptions of Plant Viruses, No. 151 (ORSV) . Helper virus TMVDEcoRV contains a point mutation in the TMV 3OK gene.
  • TMVDEcoRV was created by deleting nucleotide 4931 by oligonucleotide site directed mutagenesis of TMVUl cDNA, thereby introducing an EcoRV site at this position and causing a frame shift mutation in the 3OK gene.
  • RNA transcripts are then synthesized in vitro and used as inoculum.
  • TMV30K-0 contains the 3OK gene from odonoglossum ringspot tobamovirus (ORSV) in a Ul strain background. TMV30K-O is partially deficient in movement function, showing delated and sporadic systemic infection in Xanthi tobacco. Dawson, ., et al. Ann. Rev. Plant Physiol. Plant Mol. Biol. 43 . :527- 555 (1992) .
  • Helper virus TMV30K-0 may be prepared by substituting the cDNA encoding the 30K gene of the TMVUl strain with the 3OK gene from ORSV by routine genetic manipulation techniques. Infectious RNA transcripts are then synthesized in vitro and used as inoculum. The first group of plants (147 individuals) were infected with TMVDEcoRV. Plants containing pBGC272 did not show symptoms of systemic infection and were thus unable to complement the helper virus or amplify CAT expression.
  • the second group of plants (9 individuals) were infected with TMVUl. These plants exhibited systemic infection of the wild type virus but were unable to amplify CAT expression above background control levels because genetic complementation is not necessary for systemic infection of the plant with a wild type helper virus.
  • the third group of plants (78 individuals) were infected with TMV30K-O. Of the 78 inoculated plants, 24 individuals became systemically infected earlier than plants inoculated solely with TMV30K, indicating complementation of the movement function debilitated helper virus with pBGC272.
  • MOLECULE TYPE RNA (episomal), peptide
  • ORGANISM Tobacco Mosaic Virus
  • Gin Phe Lys Val Val Pro Asn Tyr Ala lie Thr Thr Gin Asp Ala
  • Lys lie Thr Gly Tyr Thr Thr Val Asp lie Ser Gin Ser His Arg 5 10 15

Abstract

A novel method of over expressing genes in plants is provided. This method is based on the RNA amplification properties of plus strand RNA viruses of plants. A chimeric multicistronic gene is constructed containing a plant promoter, viral replication origins, a viral movement protein gene, and one or more foreign genes under control of viral subgenomic promoters. Plants containing one or more of these recombinant RNA transcripts are inoculated with helper virus. In the presence of helper virus, recombinant transcripts are replicated producing high levels of foreign gene RNA. Sequences are provided for the high level expression of the enzyme chloramphenicol acetyltransferase in tobacco plants by replicon RNA amplification with helper viruses and movement protein genes derived from the tobamovirus group.

Description

TITLE OF THE INVENTION
VIRAL AMPLIFICATION OF RECOMBINANT MESSENGER RNA IN TRANSGENIC PLANTS
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
The present application is a continuation-in- part of application Serial No. 997,733 filed December 30, 1992, now pending.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to the field of genetically engineering transgenic plants. More specifically, the invention relates to the use of viral RNA to achieve high level expression of foreign genes in plants.
The use of transgenic plants for high level expression of foreign genes has been targeted as an inexpensive means for mass producing desired products. All higher plants are photoautotrophic, requiring only C02, H20, N03 _1, S04 "2, POή "3 and trace amounts of other elements for growth. From these inexpensive starting materials, plants are capable of synthesizing a variety of valuable products. Progress in utilizing transgenic plants as low cost factories will depend on both the characterization of biosynthetic pathways and on the further development of gene expression technologies.
In the past decade, a number of techniques have been developed to transfer genes into plants (Potrykus, I., Annual Rev. Plant Physiol. Plant Mol. Biol. 42:205-225 (1991)) . For example, chromosomally integrated transgenes have been expressed by a variety of promoters offering developmental control of gene expression. ( alden and Schell, Eur. J. Bioche . 192:563-576 (1990)). This technology has been used primarily to improve certain agronomic traits such as disease resistance or food quality. (Joshi and Joshi, Febs. Lett. 281:1-8 (1991)). However, the utility of known transgene methodology is limited by 1) the difficulty of obtaining high level expression of individual transgenes 2) the lack of means necessary for coordinating control of several transgenes in an individual plant 3) the lack of means to enable precise temporal control of gene expression and 4) the lack of adequate means to enable shutting off introduced genes in the uninduced state (Walden and Schell, Eur. J. Biochem 192 :563- 576 (1990) ) . The most highly expressed genes in plants are encoded in plant RNA viral genomes. Many RNA viruses have gene expression levels or host ranges that make them useful for development as commercial vectors. (Ahlquist, P., and Pacha, R.F., Physiol. Plant. 29_:163-167 (1990) , Joshi, R.L., and Joshi, V., FEBS
Lett. 281:1-8 (1991), Turpen, T.H. , and Dawson, .O., Amplification, movement and expression of genes in plants by viral-based vectors, Transgenic plants : fundamentals and applications (A. Hiatt, ed.), Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York, pp. 195-217. (1992)) . For example, tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) accumulates approximately 10 mg of tobacco mosaic tombamovirus (TMV) per gram of fresh-weight tissue 7-14 days after inoculation. TMV coat protein synthesis can represent 70% of the total cellular protein synthesis and can constitute 10% of the total leaf dry weight. A single specific RNA transcript can accumulate to 10% of the total leaf RNA. This transcript level is over two orders of magnitude higher than the transcription level observed for chromosomally integrated genes using conventional plant genetic engineering technology. This level of foreign gene expression has not yet been obtained using the prior art viral vectors in plants. Most plant viruses contain genomes of plus sense
RNA (messenger RNA polarity) (Zaitlin and Hull, Ann. Rev. Plant Physiol. 38:291-315 (1987)) . Plus sense plant viruses are a very versatile class of viruses to develop as gene expression vectors since there are a large number of strains from some 22 plus sense viral groups which are compatible with a wide number of host plant species. (Martelli, G. P., Plant Disease 26_:436 (1992)) . In addition, an evolutionarily related RNA-dependent RNA polymerase is encoded by each of these strains. This enzyme is responsible for genome replication and mRNA synthesis resulting in some of the highest levels of gene expression known in plants.
In order to develop a plant virus as a gene vector, one must be able to manipulate molecular clones of viral genomes and retain the ability to generate infectious recombinants. The techniques required to genetically engineer RNA viruses have progressed rapidly. If the virus is an RNA virus, the virus is generally cloned as a cDNA and inserted into a plasmid. The plasmid is used to make all of the constructions. The genome of many plus sense RNA viruses can be manipulated as plasmid DNA copies and then transcribed in vitro to produce infectious RNA molecules (reviewed in Turpen and Dawson, Transgenic Plants, Fundamentals and Applications, Marcel Dekker, New York, pp 195-217 (1992)) .
The interaction of plants with viruses presents unique opportunities for the production of complex molecules as typified by the TMV/tobacco system (Dawson, W.O., Virolocrv 186:359-367 (1992)) . Extremely high levels of viral nucleic acids and/or proteins accumulate in infected cells in a brief period of time. The virus catalyzes rapid cell-to- cell movement of its genome throughout the plant, with no significant tissue tropism. The infection is maintained throughout the life of the plant. The plants are not significantly adversely affected by the viral infection since the virus causes little or no general cytotoxicity or specific suppression of host gene expression.
The tobacco mosaic tobamovirus is of particular interest to the instant invention in light of its ability to express genes at high levels in plants. TMV is a member of the tobamovirus group. TMV virions are 300 nm X 18 nm tubes with a 4 nm-diameter hollow canal, and consist of 2140 units of a single structural protein helically wound around a single RNA molecule. The genome is a 6395 base plus-sense RNA. The 5' -end is capped and the 3' -end contains a series of pseudoknots and a tRNA-like structure that will specifically accept histidine. The genomic RNA functions as mRNA for the production of proteins involved in viral replication: a 126-kDa protein that initiates 68 nucleotides from the 5'-terminus and a 183-kDa protein synthesized by readthrough of an amber termination codon approximately 10% of the time (Fig. 1) . Only the 183-kDa and 126-kDa viral proteins are required for TMV replication in trans. (Ogawa, T., Watanabe, Y., Meshi, T., and Okada, Y., Virology 185:580-584 (1991)). Additional proteins are translated from subgenomic size mRNA produced during replication (reviewed in Dawson, W.O., Adv. Virus Res. 3_8.:307-342 (1990)). The 30-kDa protein is required for eell-to-cell movement; the 17.5-kDa capsid protein is the single viral structural protein. The function of the predicted 54-kDa protein is unknown.
The minimal sequences required in cis for TMV replication are located at the extreme 5' and 3' noncoding regions (replication origins) , as determined by analysis of deletion mutants in plant protoplasts (Takamatsu, N., et al. , J. Virol. 64:3686-3693 (1990), Takamatsu, N. , et al. , J. Virol. 65:1619-1622 (1991)) . In whole plants, helper- dependent RNA replicons, constructed by deletion of most of the 126/183-kDa replication protein sequence and most of the 30-kDa movement protein sequence, are replicated and spread systemically in the presence of wild type TMV (Raffo A.J., and Dawson .O., Virology 184:277-289 (1991) ) .
Turpen, et al. discloses a simple and reliable gene transfer method wherein cDNA of TMV is engineered into A . tumefaciens for expression in plant cells (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-105 (1992) ) . This method provides an alternative to the use of synthetic infectious transcripts to inoculate plants based on host transcription of viral cDNA in vivo. Turpen showed successful transfection of tobacco (N. tabacum cv. Xanthi and Xanthi/nc) with wild type and defective viral genomes using this methodology.
Transfection also occurs spontaneously in transgenic lines containing defective or wild type cDNA of TMV integrated chromosomally (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106-132 (1992), Yamaya, J., et al. , Mol. Gen. Genet. 211:520-525 (1988)) . Thus, once chromosomally integrated, viral replication can be derived from the process of host cell transcription.
Plant virus infections are initiated by mechanical damage to the plant cell wall. Following replication in the initially wounded cells, progeny viruses spread over short distances (cell-to-cell movement) before entering vascular tissue for long distance movement. Studies with chimeric tobamoviruses indicate that the coat protein is required for efficient long distance movement.
However, a virus where the coat protein has been deleted or inactivated moves over short distances as does wild type virus (Dawson W.O. and Hilf, M.E., Ann. Rev. Plant Physiol. Plant Mol. Biol. 41:527-555 (1992) ) .
In the case of TMV, functional 30-kDa movement protein is absolutely required for cell-to-cell movement in whole plants, but can be deleted or inactivated without affecting replication in protoplasts or inoculated leaves (reviewed in
Citovsky, V., Zambryski, P., BioEssays 13:373-379 (1991) and Deom, CM., Lapidot, M., and Beachy, R.N., Cell 69:221-224 (1992)).
A sequence located within the 30kDa movement protein gene of the Ul strain of TMV serves as the origin of assembly. It is at this origin of assembly that the TMV RNA and the viral capsid protein spontaneously aggregate to initiate the assembly of virions (Butler, P.J.G., Mayo, M.A., Molecular architecture and assembly of tobacco mosaic virus particles, The molecular biology of the positive strand RNA viruses. (D.J. Rowlands, M.A. Mayo, and B.W.J. Mahy, eds. ) , Academic Press, London, pp. 237- 257 (1987) ) . A functional origin of assembly is also required for efficient long distance movement (Saito, T., Yamanaka, K., and Okada, Y., Virology 176:329- 336 (1990) ) . There does not appear to be any additional requirements for packaging. A variety of heterologous sequences can be encapsidated yielding rod-shaped virions whose lengths are proportional to the size of the RNA molecule containing the origin of assembly (Dawson, W.O. et al . , Virology 172 :285-292 (1989) ) .
Construction of plant RNA viruses for the introduction and expression of foreign genes in plants is demonstrated by French, R., et al . , Science 211:1294-1297 (1986) ; Takamatsu, N., et al . , EMBO J 6_:307-311 (1987) ; Ahlquist, P., et al . , Viral Vectors. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York, 183-189 (1988) ; Dawson, W.O., et al . , Phytopathology 21:783-789 (1988) ; Dawson, W.O., et al . , Virology 172 :285-292 (1989) ; Cassidy, B., and Nelson, R., Phytopathology 80:1037 (1990) ; Joshi, R. L., et al . , EMBO J. 9:2663-2669 (1990) ; Jupin, I., et al . , Virology 178:273-280 (1990) ; Takamatsu, N. , et al . , FEBS Letters 269:73-76 (1990) ; Japaneses Published Application No. 63-14693 (1988) ; European Patent Application No. 067,553; and European Patent Application No. 194,809, European Patent Application No. 278,667. Most of the viral vectors constructed in these references were not shown to be capable of systemic movement in whole plants. Rather, gene expression has only been confirmed in inoculated leaves. In other cases, systemic movement and expression of the foreign gene by the viral vector was accompanied by rapid loss of the foreign gene sequence (Dawson, . 0., et al . , Virology 122:285 (1989) ) .
With further improvements, successful vectors have been developed based on tobamoviruses for rapid gene transfer to plants. (Donson et al. , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 18:7204-7208 (1991)). For example, the α-trichosanthin gene was added to the genome of a tobamovirus vector under the transcriptional control of a subgenomic promoter obtained from a strain distantly related to wild type TMV (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Dissertation,. University of California, Riverside, pp. 72-87 (1992)) . This vector is an autonomous virus, containing all known viral functions. Two weeks post-inoculation, transfected Nicotiana benthamiana plants accumulated α.-trichosanthin to levels of at least 2% total soluble protein. Purified recombinant α-trichosanthin produced by this method was correctly processed and had the same specific activity as the enzyme derived from the native source. Therefore, messenger RNA produced by viral RNA amplification in whole plants is fully functional. However, after prolonged replication of certain sequences using this vector, some genetic instability was observed primarily due to recombinational deletions and point mutations (Kearney, C. M., et al . , Virology (in press) ) .
Recently, very similar results were obtained using gene vectors derived from additional plus sense RNA viruses infecting plants; a potyvirus, tobacco etch virus ( (Dolja, V., et al . , PNAS 89:10208-10212 (1992) and a potexvirus, potato virus X (Chapman, S., et al., Plant Journal 2:549-557 (1992)) . Therefore, the major functional disadvantages of existing prior art viral vectors are their genetic instability regarding the fidelity of maintenance of some non-viral foreign genes in systemically infected whole plants, after prolonged replication and passaging. For many products, it will be desirable to increase the genetic fidelity by lowering the proportion of deletion and other variants in amplified populations.
An additional concern regarding the use of viral vectors for the expression of foreign genes in transgenic plants is biological containment of the viral vectors encoding for foreign genes.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to a replicon transcribed from a transgene integrated into the chromosome of a plant cell. The replicon encodes for replication origins possessing substantial sequence identity to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus and at least one gene non-native to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus. However, the replicon does not encode for at least one protein necessary for replication. According to the present invention, expression of the non-native gene is regulated by a helper virus encoding for a protein needed by the replicon for replication.
According to the present invention, it is preferred that the sequence encoding the non-native gene be located 5' to the 3' replication origin of the replicon. It is further preferred that the replicon encode for a gene needed by the helper virus for systemic infection, most preferably a viral movement protein located 3' to the 5' replication origin of the replicon.
The present invention also relates to a protein expressed in a plant cell using a replicon of the present invention. The present invention also relates to an RNA sequence expressed in a plant cell using the replicon of the present invention. The present invention also relates to a primary or secondary metabolite accumulated in the tissues of a transfected plant as a result of the expression of the non-native gene encoded by a replicon of the present invention. The present invention also relates to a transgenic plant comprising a transgene integrated into the chromosome of a plant cell wherein the transgene encodes for a replicon of the present invention.
The present invention also relates to a method of expressing a gene in a plant by integrating a transgene into a chromosome of a plant cell, the transgene encoding for a replicon of the present invention. The transgenic plant is then infected with a helper virus encoding for the protein needed by the replicon for replication.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 depicts the genome of wild type TMV. FIG. 2a, b and c depict the essential features of the instantly claimed viral replicons. FIG. 3 depicts an embodiment where the replicon and helper virus are mutually dependent.
FIG. 4 depicts a preferred replicon gene arrangement where the foreign gene is situated at the 3' end of the genome 5' to the 3' replication origin. FIG. 5 depicts the construction of a transgene for the synthesis of a replicon encoding Chloramphenicol Acetyltransferase (CAT) in an Agrobacterium transformation vector.
FIG. 6 provides a restriction map of the transgene portion of pBGC272.
FIG. 7 depicts an autoradiograph showing the separation and identification of pBGC272 and pBGC273. Definitions
Foreign gene: A "foreign gene" refers to any sequence that is not native to the virus.
In cis: "In cis" indicates that two sequences are positioned on the same strand of RNA or DNA.
In trans: "In trans" indicates that two sequences are positioned on different strands of RNA or DNA.
Movement protein: A "movement protein" is a noncapsid protein required for cell to cell movement of replicons or viruses in plants.
Origin of Assembly: An "origin of assembly" is a sequence where self-assembly of the viral RNA and the viral capsid protein initiates to form virions.
Replication origin: A "replication origin" refers to the minimal terminal sequences in linear viruses that are necessary for viral replication.
Replicon: A "replicon" is an arrangement of RNA sequences generated by transcription of a transgene that is integrated into the host DNA that is capable of replication in the presence of a helper virus. A replicon may require sequences in addition to the replication origins for efficient replication and stability.
Transcription termination region: The "transcription termination region" is a sequence that controls formation of the 3' end of the transcript. Self- cleaving ribozymes and polyadenylation sequences are examples of transcription termination sequences.
Transgene: A "transgene" refers to the DNA sequence coding for the replicon that is inserted into the host DNA.
Virion: A "virion" is a particle composed of viral RNA and viral capsid protein.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The instant invention provides high level expression of foreign genes in plants by viral replicons wherein the replicons possess improved genetic stability. The replicons of the instant invention are produced in host plant cells by transcription of integrated transgenes. The replicons of the instant invention are derived, in part, from single stranded plus sense plant RNA viruses.
The replicons of the instant invention code for at least one foreign gene and possess sequences required in cis for replication ("replication origins") . Figure 2(c). The replicons are produced by host cell transcription of a chromosomally integrated transgene to form an RNA transcript. The transgene is a DNA sequence that codes for the replicon and also contains a promoter and a transcription termination region. Figure 2(a) . The replicon is generated from an RNA transcript of the transgene by RNA processing and replication in the presence of a helper virus. Figure 2(b) . The replicons of the instant invention lack functional replication protein sequences. Because the replicons of the instant invention lack replication protein sequences, they must rely on genetic complementation with helper viruses for replication. The replicon's dependency on the helper virus for replication enables regulatable amplification of these replicons through the introduction of the helper virus. Genetic complementation of the replicon with a helper virus provides many advantages over autonomous viral vectors for amplifying gene expression. Each infected cell of a transgenic plant contains a correct master copy of the gene to be amplified. This reduces the effects of genetic drift in replicating RNA populations that can result in sequence instabilities and point mutations after prolonged replication of an RNA vector (Kearney, C. M. , et al. , Virology (in press) ) . In a further embodiment of the instant invention, the replicon codes for at least one sequence upon which the helper virus is dependent. Thus, in this further embodiment, the replicon and the helper virus are mutually dependent. [See Figure 3] . Helper virus dependence on the replicon insures amplified expression of the replicon sequences by the helper virus in whole plants.
In a further embodiment, the replicon codes for a functional movement protein such as the 30kDa TMV movement protein. The helper virus used in this embodiment does not possess a functional movement protein. Thus, the helper virus is dependent on the replicon for movement functionality. Movement proteins are necessary for cell to cell movement in plants. By placing a functional movement protein sequence on the replicon and either deactivating or deleting the same sequence on the helper virus or by using a host species with helper virus encoded movement protein incompatibility, the helper virus's dependency on the replicon enables systemic infection of the whole plant with the viral replicon plus helper virus.
This embodiment of the instant invention has the further advantage that the only virus released into the environment will be a debilitated helper virus. Thus, the helper virus will not be able to spread in plants that do not already contain a functional copy of the viral movement protein. This embodiment provides an option for more stringent levels of biological containment which may be desirable in some cases for large scale commercial production.
In a preferred embodiment, the replicon is formulated such that the sequences encoding the replication origins and the movement functions are linked to the foreign gene sequences. The chromosomally integrated transgene that codes for the replicon is transcribed by host RNA polymerase II producing recombinant mRNAs. In the presence of a helper virus, these transcripts are replicated as additional replicon components in a mixed population. During viral replication, subgenomic messenger RNA may be produced from replicon RNA resulting in amplified expression of foreign genes. The most preferred replicon gene arrangement places the foreign gene at the extreme 3' end of the genome where the viral structural protein is normally encoded. See Figure 4. This position for the foreign gene at the extreme 3' end of the genome, as depicted in Figure 4, is critical for high level expression (Culver, J. N. , et al. , Virology (in press) ) . However, the protein coding sequences or other gene sequences located between the replication origins may be functional in any order.
Additional preferred embodiments of the replicon sequence include the use of regulatable promoters to control expression of the foreign gene and/or movement protein. One promoter for expression of a fusion protein containing the foreign protein or a series of subgenomic promoters may be employed. Self-cleaving ribozymes or a polyadenylation region may also be employed as the transcription termination regions.
The replicons are generated in vivo in plants through transcription of transgenes that are integrated into the host plant cell chromosome and through replication in the presence of a helper virus. The transgenes can be introduced into the host plant cell chromosome by known transformation methods using a variety of promoters. After the replicon has been introduced into the host, the resulting transgenic plants are grown to an optimized stage at which point a helper virus strain is added. The replicons are then amplified by the introduced helper virus and the foreign gene is expressed. The foreign gene product coded for and expressed by the replicon can be a very wide variety of RNA or proteins products and include, for example, antisense and ribozyme RNA, regulatory enzymes, and structural, regulatory and therapeutic proteins that may be expressed in their native form or as gene fusions. Typical therapeutic proteins include members of the interleukin family of proteins and colony stimulating factors such as CSF-G, CSF-GM and CSF-M. It is understood, however, that any therapeutic protein can be coded for and expressed in the instant invention. If expression of the foreign gene results in the accumulation of a protein or other material in the plant tissues, that resulting product may be harvested once the desired concentration of that product is achieved. Significant quantities of recombinant proteins, nucleic acids or other metabolites can be inexpensively produced using this procedure. The low level of expression and wide variation that is observed in transgenic organisms chromosomally transformed with the same construct (a phenomenon attributed to "position effects") , is avoided by this method. RNA-based amplification is not critically dependent on initial transcript amounts. There is also no theoretical limit to the number of genes that can be amplified at the RNA level. The target gene remains "off" before amplification because subgenomic mRNA is only produced during viral replication. Therefore this approach might be particularly appropriate for controlling complex biochemical pathways or producing products that are toxic to the plant. It would be feasible for example, to overexpress critical enzymes in a pathway and simultaneously down-regulate other genes by amplifying antisense RNA only after inoculation with a helper virus. These types of manipulations are not possible using existing or proposed technologies for chromosomal transformation of plants or plant cell cultures or by using prior art viral vectors.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The following examples further illustrate the present invention. Example 1
Construction of a transgene for expression of recombinant messenger RNA
Construction of a transgene derived from TMV is set forth herein. The wild type TMV genome is set forth in Figure 1. The construction of DΝA plasmids containing the 5 ' replication origin fused to the CaMV 35S promoter are described in (Ow, D. W., et al., Science 234:856-859 (1986)) and the 3' replication origin fused to a ribozyme termination region are described by Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Disertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-105 (1992) .
The substitution of the coat protein gene for the coding sequence of CAT is described in Dawson, et al., Phytopathol. 78:783-789 (1988) .
Previously disclosed plasmids, pBGC43, pBGC44, pBGC75 (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Disertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-136 (1992)) and pTMVS3CAT28 (Dawson, et al . , Phvtopathol . 78:783-789 (1988) ) are used as precursors for the construction of the desired transgene for synthesis of replicon RΝA (Figure 5) . Construction of plasmids pBGC43, pBGC44, pBGC75 are described in Table 1 taken from Turpen, T. H. , Ph.D. Disertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 92, 112 (1992) . Construction of plasmids pBGC43, pBGC44, pBGC75 and pTMVS3CAT28 are also discussed below.
Preparation of pTMVS3-CAT-28 pTMVS3-CAT-28 containing a substitution of the chloramphenicol acetlytransferase (CAT) gene for the coat protein gene was constructed as follows . The CAT gene was removed from pCMl (Pharmacia) with Sail and ligated into Xhol-cleaved pTMVS3-28. pTMVS3-28 was constructed by cloning genomic length TMV cDNA (6.4 kb) in pBR322 as described in Dawson W., et al. , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 11:1832-36, (1986) . The CAT construction produced pTMVS3-CAT-28 from which the mutant cp S3-CAT-28 was transcribed. Correct sequence and orientation were confirmed by sequencing. Gene Anal. Technol. 2:89-94.
Preparation of pBGC43 pTK49 was constructed by cloning the 1.4 kb Pstl-Hindlll fragment of TMV cDNA in pUC19 as described by Dawson, W., et al. , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 83:1832-36 (1986). The 1.4 kb Pstl-Hindlll from pTK49 was recloned into pUC19 to form pTTl. The 1.6 kb Hindlll-BamHI fragment from pD0432 described in Ow et al., Science 214:856-59, (1986) was cloned into pTTl. NotI linkers were added at the Hindlll site of the fragment and the EcoRI site of the vector. pTT3 was constructed by digesting pTT2 with Pstl-BamHI and mung bean nuclease to position the 35S promoter at the 5' end of TMV cDNA. The 1.9 kb Notl-Smal fragment of pTT3 was cloned into pBStKs+ to form pBGC43.
Preparation of pBGC44
The 1.4 kb Sall-Hindlll fragment from pTTl was cloned into pstSk- to form pBGC8. The 3.6 kb Hindlll fragment from pTMV204 disclosed in Dawson, et al. , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 11:1832-36, (1986) was cloned into pBGC8 to form pBGC9. The 4.8 kb Smal-PstI fragment from pBGC9 was cloned into pBGC43 (described above) to form pBGC44. Preparation of pBGC 75
The 2.1 kb EcoRI-PstI fragment from pTMV204 described in Dawson, W., et al. , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 11:1832-36, (1986) was cloned into pBstSk- to form pBGCll. The 3.6 Hindlll fragment from pTMV204 was cloned into pBGCll to form pBGC14. The 0.4 kb NcoI-PstI fragment of pTMVcpS3-28 (0.5 kb coat protein deletion of pTMV304, described in Dawson, W., et al. Phytopathology 21:783-789) was substituted for the 0.9 kb NcoI-PstI fragment of pGC14 to form pGC15. pBGC19 was formed by deleting the 0.03 kb Kpnl- Hindlll polylinker region of pBGC14. pBGC70 was formed by cloning a 0.05 kb synthetic Apal-PstI ribozyme encoding fragment into pBstSk+. pBGC72 was formed by deleting the 3.5 kb Clal fragment from pBGC19. pBGC73 was formed by cloning the 0.05 kb Apal-PstI fragment of pBGC70 into pBGC72. pBGC74 was formed by substituting the 0.1 kb Clal- Nsil fragment of pBGC15 for the 0.5 kb Clal-Nsil fragment of pBGC73. The 3.5 kb Clal fragment of pBGC19 was cloned into pBGC74 to form pBGC75.
Figure imgf000022_0001
TABLE 1
Designation Relevant Characteristics Source or Reference
E. coli JM109 recAl, eπdAl, gyrA96, thi - , hsdR17 (rκ_, mκ+) , Yanish-Perron et al . supE44, relAl, Δ(λac-proAB) , [F traD36, proAB, Gene 11=103-199 (1985) lacIqZΔM15]
HB101 ήsdS20(rB_, mB_) ,supE44, aral4, grelK2, lecYl, Sambrook et al . proA2, rspL20, yl-5, mtl-1 recA13 Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (1989)
10 GJ23 General plasmid mobilizing strain containing Van Haute et al . pGJ28 and pR64 rdll EMBO J. 2:411-417 (1983)
A . tumefaciens C58C1 Rifr derivative of strain C58 containing pGV3850 Zambryski et al .
EMBO J. 2:2143-2150 (1983)
15 A . t.-17 TMV transfection strain containing Turpen, T.H. , Ph.D. pGV3850: :pBGC17 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992)
A. t.-46 TMV transfection strain containing Turpen, T.H. , Ph.D.
20 pGV3850: :pBGC46 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992)
A . t.-49 TMV transfection strain containing Turpen, T . H . , Ph . D .
Figure imgf000023_0001
pGV3850: :pBGC49 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992)
A . t . - ll TMV transfection strain containing Turpen, T.H. , Ph.D. PGV3850: :pBGC77 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88- 105 (1992)
Plasmids pBstSK/pBstKS E. coli cloning plasmids, pBluescript (+/-) Stratagene, La Jolla, California
I
10 pUC18/pUC19 E. coli cloning plasmids Yanish-Perron et al . Gene 11:103-199 (1985) pT7/T3αl9 E. coli cloning plasmid BRL, Gaithersburg, MD pT 49 1.4 kb Pstl-Hindlll fragment of TMV cDNA in pUC19 Dawson et al . Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81:1832-1836 (1986)
15 pTMV204 Genomic length TMV cDNA (6.4 kb) in pBR322 Dawson, et al . Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 11:1832-1836 (1986) pTMV212 Genomic length TMV cDNA in pT7/T3αl9 Dawson, unpublished pTMVcpS3-28 Coat protein deletion (0.5 kb) mutant of pTMV204 Dawson et al . Phytopathology 21:783-789 (1988)
20 pAP2034 pBR322- sed selection-expression vector for Velton et al . Nucleic Acids Res. plant transformation, Cbr, Spr, Knr 11:6981-6998 (1985)
Figure imgf000024_0001
pD0432 Source of restriction site modified 35S promoter Ow et al.
Science 234.:856-859 (1986) pTTl 1.4 kb Pstl-Hindlll fragment from pTK49 cloned in Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. pUC19 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) pTT2 1.6 kb Hindlll-bamHI fragment from pD0432 cloned Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. in pTTl, NotI linkers added at Kindlll site of Dissertation, University of fragment and EcoRI site of vector California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992)
10 pTT3 Pstl-BamHI + mung bean nuclease deletion of PTT2 Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. positioning 35S promoter at 5'-end of TMV cDNA Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) pBGC6 0.2 kb XhoI-PstI fragment from pTMVcpS3-28 in Turpen, T.H., Ph.D.
15 pBstKS+ Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) pBGC8 1.4 kb Sall-Hindlll fragment from PTTl cloned in Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. pBstSK- Dissertation, University of
20 California, Riverside, pp. 106-
Figure imgf000024_0002
Figure imgf000024_0003
pBGC9 3.6 kb Hindlll fragment from pTMV204 cloned in Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. pBGC8 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106-
25 132 (1992)
Figure imgf000025_0001
pBGCll 2.1 kb EcoRI-PstI fragment from pTMV204 cloned in Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. pBstSK- Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) pBGC14 3.6 kb Hindlll fragment from pTMV204 cloned in Turpen, T.H. , Ph.D. pBGCll Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) pBGC15 0.4 kb NcoI-PstI of pTMVcpS3-28 substituted for Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. I
10 0.9 kb NcoI-PstI fragment of pBGC14 Dissertation, University of O
I California, Riverside, pp. 88- 105 (1992) pBGC16 3.3 kb Sall-BamHI fragment of pBGC9 cloned in Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. pAP2034 Dissertation, University of
15 California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) pBGC17 Full length wtTMV cDNA in pAP2034 Turpen, T.H. , Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106-
20 132 (1992) pBGC19 0.03 kb Kpnl-Hindlll polylinker deletion of Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. pBGC14 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992)
25 pBGC43 1.9 kb Notl-Smal fragment from pTT3 cloned in Turpen , T . H . , Ph . D .
Figure imgf000026_0001
Figure imgf000026_0002
pBstKSπ- Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) pBGC4 4.8 kb Smal-PstI fragment of pBGC9 cloned in Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. pBGC43 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) pBGC45 4.3 kb Bglll-BamHI fragment of pBGC44 cloned in Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. the BamHI site of pAP2034 Dissertation, University of
10 California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992) I t pBGC46 3.1 kb BamHI fragment of pBGC44 cloned in the Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. I BamHI site of pAP2043 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106-
15 132 (1992) pBGC49 2.6 kb BamHI fragment of pBGC14 cloned in the Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. BamHI site of pBGC45 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106- 132 (1992)
20 pBGC70 0.05 kb synthetic Apal-PstI ribozyme encoding Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. fragment cloned in pBstSK+ Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88- 105 (1992)
Figure imgf000026_0003
pBGC72 3.5 kb Clal deletion of pBGC19 Turpen, T.H., Ph.D.
25 Dissertation, University of
Figure imgf000027_0001
California, Riverside, pp. 105 (1992) pBGC73 0.05 kb Apal-PstL fragment of pBGC70 cloned in Turpen, T.H. , Ph.D. pBGC72 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88- 105 (1992) pBGC74 0.1 kb Clal-Nsil fragment of pBGC15 substituted Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. for 0.5 kb Clal-Nsil gragment of pBGC73 Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-
Figure imgf000027_0002
California, Riverside, pp. 88- 105 (1992)
15 pBGC77 2.7 kb BamHI fragment of pBGC75 cloned into Turpen, T.H., Ph.D. pBGC45, 35S promoter plus full length cp-TMV cDNA Dissertation, University of in pAP2034 with rebozyme self-cleaving fragment California, Riverside, pp. 88- at 3 ' -terminus 105 (1992)
ith regard to construction of the transgene, it is desired to place the 30-kDA movement protein gene at precisely the same position as the replicase gene (relative to 5' replication origin in the wild type TMV genome, See Figure 5) . To accomplish this, a Ndel site is introduced at the start codon of each gene by PCR-based mutagenesis using synthetic primers and unique adjacent cloning sites. A 270 bp mutagenesis product containing the internal Ndel site from the PCR primer is subcloned using the EcoRV site in the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter and the Hindlll site in the 30- Da protein gene. The ligation product is then sequence verified.
The 3' segment of the replicon, containing the CAT gene will be placed adjacent to the 3'-ribozyme as a Hindlll-Nsil fragment from the transient TMV vector pTMVS3CAT28 (Figure 5) . In the final cloning step, the 5' portion of the transgene and the 3' portion will be subcloned into the unique BamHI site of the plant transformation vector pAP2034 (Velton and Schell, NAR 13.:6981-6998 (1985) as a Bglll-BamHI fragment described previously (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Disertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 88-132 (1992)) . The sequence of the replicon RNA, produced by host transcription, RNA processing, and replication in the presence of a helper virus is given as SEQ. No. 1. Thus, the foreign gene (CAT) is placed on a RNA viral replicon, under control of the coat protein subgenomic promoter for messenger RNA synthesis (located at the 3' end of the movement protein gene) . Example 2. Transformation of plants.
In one embodiment of this invention, Agrobacterium tumefaciens is used for insertion of this sequence into the plant chromosome as described previously (Turpen, T. H., Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Riverside, pp. 106-132 (1992)) . The transformation vector pAP2034 is a cointegrating type Agrobacterium vector. pAP2034 containing the transcription unit for the production of replicon RNA is mobilized into A . tumefaciens by conjugation using the helper strain GJ23 (Van Haute, E., JOOS, et al., EMBO J. 2:411-417 (1983)) . Transconjugants are selected and the structure of the cointegrate between donor plasmid and the disarmed Ti plasmid pGV3850 (Zambryski, P., et al. , EMBO J. 2:2143-2150 (1983)) is confirmed by Southern blot hybridization. A correct homologous recombination event places the transgene construct between the T- DNA borders.
Axenic leaf segments of N. tabacum cv. Xanthi are treated (Horsch, R.B., et al. , Leaf disc transformation, Plant molecular biology manual . (S.B. Gelvin, R.A. Schilperoort, and D.P.S. Verma, eds. ) , Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The
Netherlands, pp. A5:l-9 (1988)) in the following sequence: day 1; leaf segments are dipped in A . tumefaciens liquid culture and placed on regeneration media (RM) , day 3; explants are transferred to RM supplemented with cefotaxime (500 μg/ml) , day 5; explants are transferred to RM/cefotaxime (500 μg/ml) + kanamycin (100 μg/ml), day 30-40; shoots excised and placed onto rooting media containing cefotaxime (500 μg/ml) and kanamycin (100 μg/ml) . Cultures are maintained under continuous fluorescent light (Sylvania GTE, Gro-Lux WS) at 20°C.
Hardened plants are grown in commercial potting soil (Cascade Forest Products Inc., Arcata, CA) at a temperature of 21-29°C, with a controlled release fertilizer (Osmocote, 14-14-14) using natural light (Vacaville, CA) supplemented with fluorescent light on a 16 hr day length in an indoor greenhouse. The antibiotic resistance trait carried in transgenic lines is scored by germinating seedlings in sterile agar in the presence of 100 ug/ml kanamycin (Dunsmuir, P., et al. , Stability of introduced genes and stability of expression, Plant molecular biology manual . (S.B. Gelvin, R.A. Schilperoort, and D.P.S. Verma, eds.), Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, pp. Cl:l-17 (1988)).
Example 3.
Production of replicon RNA in the presence of helper virus. The sequence of the replicon RNA, produced by host transcription, RNA processing, and replication in the presence of a helper virus, is given as SEQ. No. 1. Tobamoviruses with mutations or naturally occurring variation in the 30-kDa protein gene are deficient in cell-to-cell movement on specific host species. Transgenic plants or alternate hosts can complement this defect. It will be appreciated to those skilled in the art that there are numerous methods of producing helper tobamoviruses by genetic engineering or by mutagenesis in addition to those helper variants or host species combinations occurring naturally. Likewise, methods for producing transgenic plants which express 30 kDa protein and which complement defective 30 kDa containing viruses have been published. For example, movement deficient helper viruses can be synthesized by transcription of TMV with known mutations for the production of RNA inoculum. Transgenic plants expressing the 30-kDa protein complement this defect (Deom, C. M., et al. , Science 237:389-394 (1987)) . Therefore, large quantities of a helper virus can be propagated. In one embodiment of this invention, a 30-kDa protein frameshift mutant, having a single base pair deletion at position 4931 thereby creating a EcoRV site in the cDNA, is used as helper virus. Transgenic tobacco (-100 plants) are regenerated containing this replicon transgene construction and assayed for CAT activity in the presence and absence of helper viruses using procedures described (Shaw, W.V., Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase from chloramphenicol-resistant bacteria, Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 53, (S. Fleischer and L. Packer, eds.), pp. 737-755 (1975)) . 200 g of leaf tissue is macerated in assay buffer followed by the addition of 0.5 mM acetyl CoA and 0.1 uCi [14C]chloramphenicol, incubation for 45 min at 37°C, extraction, resolution by thin-layer chromatography, and autoradiography.
Example 4.
Production of CAT in tobacco plants using a replicon RNA in the presence of helper virus.
Several tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum) were transformed with a transgene of the present invention in order to evaluate the ability of the transgene to be expressed within a plant cell as well as the ability of the transgene to systemically infect a plant and express a protein encoded by the transgene. In the present example, systemic expression of chloramphenicol acetyl transferase encoded by the transgene was achieved at a level two fold that of the background level and comparable to levels obtained for single copy tobacco genes. In the present example, pBGC272 and pBGC273 were used to introduce the transgenes. A restriction map of the transgene portion of pBGC272 is provided in Fig. 6. pBGC272 has been deposited with the American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, Maryland (ATCC) under Accession No. . It is predicted that amplified expression of CAT from pBGC272 would be observed in the presence of a helper virus through complementation with the helper virus.
A control plasmid, pBGC273, was also prepared which differs from pBGC272 in that the 3' noncoding region has been deleted. Amplified expression of CAT is not expected with pBGC273 because deletion of the 3 ' noncoding region prevents synthesis of the minus strand. Identification of Transcript Production
Tobacco plants were transformed with either pBGC272 or pBGC273 using the Agrobacterium tumefaciens leaf-dip method as described in Example 2. In order to save time, bacterial conjugation was avoided by using a binary plasmid vector system for plant transformation instead of employing cointegrate vectors. Bevan, M., et al. Nucleic Acid Res. 12:8711-8721 (1984) .
The presence of the viral transcripts after inoculation was measured by northern hybridization. Specifically, total RNA was purified, glyoxalated, separated by electrophoresis, blotted to a nylon membrane (Nytran) and probed with the Ndel-Nsil fragment of pBGC272 which had been 32P-labeled by the random primer method. An autoradiograph showing the separation and identification of pBGC272 and pBGC273 is depicted in Fig. 7. Lanes 1, 2 and 20 contain control DNA restriction fragments from pBGC272. Lanes 3-10 and 13-18 contain total RNA from transgenic plant samples (pBGC272, pBGC273) . Lanes
11 and 12 contain control samples from 3OK transgenic plants (line 26C) known to complement helper virus TMMVDEcoRV. Lane 19 contains RNA (1/220 equivalent) from helper virus TMMVDEcoRV-infected line 26C control plants.
Out of 16 plants transformed with pBGC272, 12 contained abundant levels of transcript. Similarly, out of 6 plants transformed with pBGC273, 4 plants produced transcripts.
Identification of CAT Production
The ability of pBGC272 to systemically infect a plant and produce a marker protein, chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) , was also evaluated. CAT concentrations were determined using an ELISA assay. Gendloff, E., et al. Plant Mol. Biol. 14:575-583
(1990) . Leaf disc samples (# 8 core bore) were used. Total soluble protein from the same leaf disk samples used for CAT/ELISA was determined by the method Bradford, M. Anal. Biochem. 72:248-254 (1976) . Three groups of plants containing pBGC272 or pBGC273 by the Acrrobacterium tumefaciens leaf-dip method were infected with one of three helper viruses. The helper viruses used in the present example include the wild type TMV virus (TMVU1) ,
TMVDEcoRV and TMV30K-O. The helper viruses used in the present study are derived from the readily available tobamovirus strains, TMVU1 (also known as the common or wild type strain, ATCC No. PV 135) and odonoglossum ringspot tobamovirus (ORSV, ATCC No. PV274) . Paul, H., C.M.I./A.A.B. Descriptions of Plant Viruses, No. 155 (TMVU1) ; Zaitlin, M., C.M.I./A.A.B. Descriptions of Plant Viruses, No. 151 (ORSV) . Helper virus TMVDEcoRV contains a point mutation in the TMV 3OK gene. TMVDEcoRV was created by deleting nucleotide 4931 by oligonucleotide site directed mutagenesis of TMVUl cDNA, thereby introducing an EcoRV site at this position and causing a frame shift mutation in the 3OK gene.
Infectious RNA transcripts are then synthesized in vitro and used as inoculum.
TMV30K-0 contains the 3OK gene from odonoglossum ringspot tobamovirus (ORSV) in a Ul strain background. TMV30K-O is partially deficient in movement function, showing delated and sporadic systemic infection in Xanthi tobacco. Dawson, ., et al. Ann. Rev. Plant Physiol. Plant Mol. Biol. 43.:527- 555 (1992) . Helper virus TMV30K-0 may be prepared by substituting the cDNA encoding the 30K gene of the TMVUl strain with the 3OK gene from ORSV by routine genetic manipulation techniques. Infectious RNA transcripts are then synthesized in vitro and used as inoculum. The first group of plants (147 individuals) were infected with TMVDEcoRV. Plants containing pBGC272 did not show symptoms of systemic infection and were thus unable to complement the helper virus or amplify CAT expression.
The second group of plants (9 individuals) were infected with TMVUl. These plants exhibited systemic infection of the wild type virus but were unable to amplify CAT expression above background control levels because genetic complementation is not necessary for systemic infection of the plant with a wild type helper virus.
The third group of plants (78 individuals) were infected with TMV30K-O. Of the 78 inoculated plants, 24 individuals became systemically infected earlier than plants inoculated solely with TMV30K, indicating complementation of the movement function debilitated helper virus with pBGC272.
Of the 24 systemically infected plants, 19 plants had been infected with pBGC272 and 5 with pBGC273. Of the 19 plants infected with pBGC272, 12 were found to contain elevated levels of CAT. Upon resampling and assaying in triplicate, 8 plants were found to have CAT levels of roughly 0.1 ng CAT/mg of total soluble protein which is two fold that of the background level.
Biological Deposits
The following plasmids have been deposited at the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) , Rockville, MD, USA, under the terms of the Budapest Treaty on the International Recognition of the Deposit of Microorganisms for the Purposes of Patent Procedure and Regulations thereunder (Budapest Treaty) and are thus maintained and made available according to the terms of the Budapest Treaty. Availability of such plasmids is not to be construed as a license to practice the invention in contravention of the rights granted under the authority of any government in accordance with its patent laws.
The deposited cultures have been assigned the indicated ATCC deposit numbers:
Plasmid ATCC No. pBGC272
Pursuant to 37 C.F.R. §1.808, Applicants agree that all restrictions imposed by the depositor on the availability to the public of the deposited plasmids will be irrevocably removed upon the granting of a patent on the present application.
While the invention of this patent application is disclosed by reference to the details of preferred embodiments of the invention, it is to be understood that this disclosure is intended in an illustrative rather than limiting sense, as it is contemplated that modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art, within the spirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims. It is further understood that the instant invention applies to all viruses infecting plants and plants generally and is not limited to those plasmids, viruses or plants described herein.
Figure imgf000037_0001
SEQUENCE LISTING
(1) GENERAL INFORMATION:
(i) APPLICANT: Turpen, Thomas H.
(ii) TITLE OF INVENTION: VIRAL AMPLIFICATION OF RECOMBINANT MESSENGER RNA IN TRANSGENIC PLANTS
(iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 1 t!o tn
10 I
(iv) CORRESPONDENCE ADDRESS:
(A) ADDRESSEE: Limbach & Limbach
(B) STREET: 2001 Ferry Building
(C) CITY: San Francisco 15 (D) STATE: CAL
(F) ZIP: 94111
(v) COMPUTER READABLE FORM:
(A) MEDIUM TYPE: Floppy disk
20 (B) COMPUTER: IBM PC compatible
(C) OPERATING SYSTEM: PC-DOS/MS-DOS
Figure imgf000038_0001
(D) SOFTWARE:Patent in Release #1.0, Version #1.25
(vi) CURRENT APPLICATION DATA: (A) APPLICATION NUMBER: 5 (B) FILING DATE:
(C) CLASSIFICATION:
(vii) PRIOR APPLICATION DATA:
(A) APPLICATION NUMBER: US 07/997,733
10 (B) FILING DATE: 30-DEC-1992
(viii) ATTORNEY/AGENT INFORMATION:
(A) NAME: Halluin, Albert P.
(B) REGISTRATION NUMBER: 25,227
15 (C) REFERENCE/DOCKET NUMBER: BIOG-20220 USA
(ix) TELECOMMUNICATION INFORMATION:
(A) TELEPHONE: 415-433-4150
(B) TELEFAX : 415 -433 - 8716
20 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 1 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 1826
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single 5 (D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: RNA (episomal), peptide
(A) DESCRIPTION: Peptide encodes for TMV 30kDa movement protein (268 residues) and CAT (204
10 residues) .
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(iv) ANTI-SENSE: NO 15
(vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE:
(A) ORGANISM: Tobacco Mosaic Virus
(vii) IMMEDIATE SOURCE:
20 (B) CLONE:
( ix) FEATURE :
Figure imgf000040_0001
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 1:
GUAUUUUUAC AACAAUUACC AACAACAACA AACAACAAAC AACAUUACAA UUACUAUUUA 60 5 CAAUUACAU AUG GCU CUA GUU GUU AAA GGA AAA GUG AAU AUC AAU 105
Met Ala Leu Val Val Lys Gly Lys Val Asn lie Asn
5 10
GAG UUU AUC GAC CUG ACA AAA AUG GAG AAG AUC UUA CCG UCG AUG 150
10 Glu Phe lie Asp Leu Thr Lys Met Glu Lys lie Leu Pro Ser Met
15 20 25
UUU ACC CCU GUA AAG AGU GUU AUG UGU UCC AAA GUU GAU AAA AUA 195
Phe Thr Pro Val Lys Ser Val Met Cys Ser Lys Val Asp Lys lie 15 30 35 40
AUG GUU CAU GAG AAU GAG UCA UUG UCA GAG GUG AAC CUU UUU AAA 240
Met Val His Glu Asn Glu Ser Leu Ser Glu Val Asn Leu Leu Lys
45 50 55
20
GGA GUU AAG CUU AUU GAU AGU GGA UAC GUC UGU UUA GCC GGU UUG 285
Figure imgf000041_0001
Gly Val Lys Leu lie Asp Ser Gly Tyr Val Cys Leu Ala Gly Leu 60 65 70
GUC GUC ACG GGC GAG UGG AAC UUG CCU GAC AAU UGC AGA GGA GGU 330
5 Val Val Thr Gly Glu Trp Asn Leu Pro Asp Asn Cys Arg Gly Gly
75 80 85
GUG AGC GUG UGU CUG GUG GAC AAA AGG AUG GAA AGA GCC GAC GAG 375
Val Ser Val Cys Leu Val Asp Lys Arg Met Glu Arg Ala Asp Glu
10 90 95 100
GCC ACU CUC GGA UCU UAC UAC ACA GCA GCU GCA AAG AAA AGA UUU 420
Ala Thr Leu Gly Ser Tyr Tyr Thr Ala Ala Ala Lys Lys Arg Phe
105 110 115
15
CAG UUC AAG GUC GUU CCC AAU UAU GCU AUA ACC ACC CAG GAC GCG 465
Gin Phe Lys Val Val Pro Asn Tyr Ala lie Thr Thr Gin Asp Ala
Figure imgf000041_0002
20 AUG AAA AAC GUC UGG CAA GUU UUA GUU AAU AUU AGA AAU GUG AAG 510
Met Lys Asn Val Trp Gin Val Leu Val Asn lie Arg Asn Val Lys
135 140 145
Figure imgf000042_0001
AUG UCA GCG GGU UUC UGU CCG CUU UCU CUG GAG UUU GUG UCG GUG 555
Met Ser Ala Gly Phe Cys Pro Leu Ser Leu Glu Phe Val Ser Val
150 155 160
5
UGU AUU GUU UAU AGA AAU AAU AUA AAA UUA GGU UUG AGA GAG AAG 600
Cys lie Val Tyr Arg Asn Asn lie Lys Leu Gly Leu Arg Glu Lys
165 170 175
10 AUU ACA AAC GUG AGA GAC GGA GGG CCC AUG GAA CUU ACA GAA GAA 645 lie Thr Asn Val Arg Asp Gly Gly Pro Met Glu Leu Thr Glu Glu 180 185 190
GUC GUU GAU GAG UUC AUG GAA GAU GUC CCU AUG UCG AUC AGG CUU 690
15 Val Val Asp Glu Phe Met Glu Asp Val Pro Met Ser lie Arg Leu
195 200 205
GCA AAG UUU CGA UCU CGA ACC GGA AAA AAG AGU GAU GUC CGC AAA 735 Ala Lys Phe Arg Ser Arg Thr Gly Lys Lys Ser Asp Val Arg Lys
20 210 215 220
GGG AAA AAU AGU AGU AAU GAU CGG UCA GUG CCG AAC AAG AAC UAU 780
Figure imgf000043_0001
Gly Lys Asn Ser Ser Asn Asp Arg Ser Val Pro Asn Lys Asn Tyr 225 230 235
AGA AAU GUU AAG GAU UUU GGA GGA AUG AGU UUU AAA AAG AAU AAU 825
5 Arg Asn Val Lys Asp Phe Gly Gly Met Ser Phe Lys Lys Asn Asn
240 245 250
UUA AUC GAU GAU GAU UCG GAG GCU ACU GUC GCC GAA UCG GAU UCG 870
Leu lie Asp Asp Asp Ser Glu Ala Thr Val Ala Glu Ser Asp Ser i
10 255 260 265
UUU UAA AUACGCUCGA CGAGAUUUUC AGGAGCUAAG GAAGCUAAA AUG GAG AAA 924 Phe * Met Glu Lys
15 AAA AUC ACU GGA UAU ACC ACC GUU GAU AUA UCC CAA UCG CAU CGU 969
Lys lie Thr Gly Tyr Thr Thr Val Asp lie Ser Gin Ser His Arg 5 10 15
AAA GAA CAU UUU GAG GCA UUU CAG UCA GUU GCU CAA UGU ACC UAU 1014
20 Lys Glu His Phe Glu Ala Phe Gin Ser Val Ala Gin Cys Thr Tyr
20 25 30
Figure imgf000044_0001
AAC CAG ACC GUU CAG CUG GAU AUU ACG GCC UUU UUA AAG ACC GUA 1059
Asn Gin Thr Val Gin Leu Asp He Thr Ala Phe Leu Lys Thr Val 35 40 45
5 AAG AAA AAU AAG CAC AAG UUU UAU CCG GCC UUU AUU CAC AUU CUU 1104
Lys Lys Asn Lys His Lys Phe Tyr Pro Ala Phe He His He Leu 50 55 60
GCC CGC CUG AUG AAU GCU CAU CCG GAA UUC CGU AUG GCA AUG AAA 1149
10 Ala Arg Leu Met Asn Ala His Pro Glu Phe Arg Met Ala Met Lys
65 70 75
GUU UUC CAU GAG CAA ACU GAA ACG UUU UCA UCG CUC UGG AGU GAA 1194
Val Phe His Glu Gin Thr Glu Thr Phe Ser Ser Leu Trp Ser Glu 15 80 85 90
UAC CAC GAC GAU UUC CGG CAG UUU CUA CAC AUA UAU UCG CAA GAU 1239
Tyr His Asp Asp Phe Arg Gin Phe Leu His He Tyr Ser Gin Asp
95 100 105
20
GUG GCG UGU UAC GGU GAA AAC CUG GCC UAU UUC CCU AAA GGG UUU 1284
Val Ala Cys Tyr Gly Glu Asn Leu Ala Tyr Phe Pro Lys Gly Phe
Figure imgf000045_0001
110 115 120
AUU GAG AAU AUG UUU UUC GUC UCA GCC AAU CCC UGG GUG AGU UUC 1329
He Glu Asn Met Phe Phe Val Ser Ala Asn Pro Trp Val Ser Phe 125 130 135
ACC AGU UUU GAU UUA AAC GUG GCC AAU AUG GAC AAC UUC UUC GCC 1374
Thr Ser Phe Asp Leu Asn Val Ala Asn Met Asp Asn Phe Phe Ala
140 145 150
10
CCC GUU UUC ACC AUG GGC AAA UAU UAU ACG CAA GGC GAC AAG GUG 1419
Pro Val Phe Thr Met Gly Lys Tyr Tyr Thr Gin Gly Asp Lys Val 155 160 165
15 CUG AUG CCG CUG GCG AUU CAG GUU CAU CAU GCC GUC UGU GAU GGC 1464
Leu Met Pro Leu Ala He Gin Val His His Ala Val Cys Asp Gly 170 175 180
UUC CAU GUC GGC AGA AUG CUU AAU GAA UUA CAA CAG UAC UGC GAU 1509
20 Phe His Val Gly Arg Met Leu Asn Glu Leu Gin Gin Tyr Cys Asp
185 190 195
GAG UGG CAG GGC GGG GCG UAA UUUUUUUAAG GCAGUUAUUG GUGCCCUUA AAC 1563
Glu Trp Gin Gly Gly Ala * 200
GCCUGGUGCU ACGCCUGAAU AAGUGAUAAU AAGCGGAUGA AUGGCAGAAA UUCGUCGAGG 1623
GUAGUCAAGA UGCAUAAUAA AUAACGGAUU GUGUCCGUAA UCACACGUGG UGCGUACGAU 1683
AACGCAUAGU GUUUUUCCCU CCACUUAAAU CGAAGGGUUG UGUCUUGGAU CGCGCGGGUC 1743
AAAUGUAUAU GGUUCAUAUA CAUCCGCAGG CACGUAAUAA AGCGAGGGGU UCGAAUCCCC 1803
CCGUUACCCC CGGUAGGGGC CCA 1826
-
4
Figure imgf000046_0001

Claims

hat is claimed is:
1. A replicon transcribed from a transgene integrated into the chromosome of a plant cell, the replicon encoding for: replication origins possessing substantial sequence identity to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus,- and at least one gene non-native to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus; the replicon not encoding for at least one protein necessary for replication.
2. A replicon of claim 1 wherein expression of the non-native gene is regulated by a helper virus encoding for a protein needed by the replicon for replication.
3. A replicon of claim 1 wherein the sequence encoding the non-native gene is located 5' to the 3 ' replication origin of the replicon.
4. A replicon of claim 2 wherein the replicon encodes for a gene needed by the helper virus for systemic infection.
5. A replicon of claim 4 wherein the gene needed by the helper virus is a viral movement protein.
6. A replicon of claim 5 wherein the viral movement protein is located 3' to the 5' replication origin of the replicon.
7. A replicon of claim 6 wherein the sequence encoding the non-native gene is located 5' to the 3 ' replication origin of the replicon.
8. A replicon of claim 5 wherein the non- native gene is expressed systemically in the presence of a helper virus encoding for a protein needed by the replicon for replication.
9. A replicon of claim 5 wherein the movement protein is native to a tobamovirus.
10. A replicon of claim 5 wherein the movement protein is native to a TMV strain virus.
11. A protein expressed in a plant cell using the replicon of claim 1 wherein the protein is encoded by the gene non-native to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus.
12. A protein expressed in a plant cell using the replicon of claim 5 wherein the protein is encoded by the gene non-native to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus.
13. An RNA sequence expressed in a plant cell using the replicon of claim 1.
14. An RNA sequence expressed in a plant cell using the replicon of claim 5.
15. A primary or secondary metabolite accumulated in the tissues of a transfected plant as a result of the expression of the non-native gene encoded by the replicon of claim 1.
16. A primary or secondary metabolite accumulated in the tissues of a transfected plant as a result of the expression of the non-native gene encoded by the replicon of claim 5.
17. A transgenic plant comprising a transgene integrated into the chromosome of a plant cell, the transgene encoding for a replicon which encodes for: replication origins possessing substantial sequence identity to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus; and at least one gene non-native to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus; the replicon not encoding for at least one protein necessary for replication.
18. A method of expressing a gene in plants comprising: a) integrating a transgene into a chromosome of a plant cell, the transgene encoding for a replicon which encodes for: replication origins possessing substantial sequence identity to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus; and at least one gene non-native to a plus sense, single stranded RNA plant virus; the replicon not encoding for at least one protein necessary for replication; and
b) infecting the plant cell with a helper virus encoding for the protein needed by the replicon for replication.
19. The method of claim 18 wherein the replicon encodes for a gene needed by the helper virus for systemic infection.
20. The method of claim 19 wherein the gene needed by the helper virus encodes for a movement protein.
21. The method of claim 20 wherein said movement protein is native to a tobamovirus.
22. The method of claim 20 wherein said movement protein is native to a TMV strain virus.
PCT/US1993/012636 1992-12-30 1993-12-29 Viral amplification of recombinant messenger rna in transgenic plants WO1994016089A1 (en)

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AT94905969T ATE234361T1 (en) 1992-12-30 1993-12-29 VIRAL AMPLIFICATION OF RECOMBINANT MESSENGER RNA IN TRANSGENIC PLANTS
EP94905969A EP0677113B1 (en) 1992-12-30 1993-12-29 Viral amplification of recombinant messenger rna in transgenic plants
DE69332763T DE69332763T2 (en) 1992-12-30 1993-12-29 VIRAL AMPLIFICATION OF RECOMBINANT MESSENGER RNA IN TRANSGENIC PLANTS
JP6516080A JPH08505289A (en) 1992-12-30 1993-12-29 Cross reference for applications related to virus amplification of recombinant messenger RNA in transgenic plants
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AU5987194A (en) 1994-08-15
JPH08505289A (en) 1996-06-11
US6852846B2 (en) 2005-02-08
KR960700344A (en) 1996-01-19
ATE234361T1 (en) 2003-03-15
EP0677113A1 (en) 1995-10-18
EP0677113B1 (en) 2003-03-12

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