Characterization of plants expressing the human β1,4-galactosyltrasferase gene

Journal Article (2015)
Author(s)

Jeannine Schneider (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Alexandra Castilho (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Martin Pabst (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Friedrich Altmann (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Clemens Gruber (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Richard Strasser (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Pia Gattinger (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Georg J. Seifert (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Herta Steinkellner (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plaphy.2015.04.010 Final published version
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Publication Year
2015
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Volume number
92
Pages (from-to)
39-47
Downloads counter
176

Abstract

Modification of the plant N-glycosylation pathway towards human type structures is an important strategy to implement plants as expression systems for therapeutic proteins. Nevertheless, relatively little is known about the overall impact of non-plant glycosylation enzymes in stable transformed plants. Here, we analyzed transgenic lines (Nicotiana benthamiana and Arabidopsis thaliana) that stably express a modified version of human β1,4-galactosyltransferase (STGalT). While some transgenic plants grew normally, other lines exhibited a severe phenotype associated with stunted growth and developmental retardation. The severity of the phenotype correlated with both increased STGalT mRNA and protein levels but no differences were observed between N-glycosylation profiles of plants with and without the phenotype. In contrast to non-transgenic plants, all STGalT expressing plants synthesized significant amounts of incompletely processed (largely depleted of core fucose) N-glycans with up to 40% terminally galactosylated structures. While transgenic plants showed no differences in nucleotide sugar composition and cell wall monosaccharide content, alterations in the reactivity of cell wall carbohydrate epitopes associated with arabinogalactan-proteins and pectic homogalacturonan were detected in STGalT expressing plants. Notably, plants with phenotypic alterations showed increased levels of hydrogen peroxide, most probably a consequence of hypersensitive reactions. Our data demonstrate that unfavorable phenotypical modifications may occur upon stable in planta expression of non-native glycosyltransferases. Such important issues need to be taken into consideration in respect to stable glycan engineering in plants.