The genetic transformation of plastids of higher plants has developed into a powerful approach for both basic research and biotechnology. Due to the high copy number of the plastid genome per plastid and per cell, repeated cycles of shoot regeneration under conditions selective for the modified plastid chromosome are required to obtain transformants entirely lacking wild-type plastid genomes. The presence of promiscuous plastid DNA in nuclear and/or mitochondrial genomes that generally contaminate even gradient-purified plastid fractions reduces the applicability of the highly sensitive PCR approach to monitor the absence of residual wild-type plastid chromosomes in transformed lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranscription of plastid chromosomes in vascular plants is accomplished by at least two RNA polymerases of different phylogenetic origin: the ancestral (endosymbiotic) cyanobacterial-type RNA polymerase (PEP), of which the core is encoded in the organelle chromosome, and an additional phage-type RNA polymerase (NEP) of nuclear origin. Disruption of PEP genes in tobacco leads to off-white phenotypes. A macroarray-based approach of transcription rates and of transcript patterns of the entire plastid chromosome from leaves of wild-type as well as from transplastomic tobacco lacking PEP shows that the plastid chromosome is completely transcribed in both wild-type and PEP-deficient plastids, though into polymerase-specific profiles.
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