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Transformation of Althaea officinalis L. by Agrobacterium rhizogenes for the production of transgenic roots expressing the anti-HIV microbicide cyanovirin-N

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Abstract

The marshmallow plant (Althaea officinalis L.) has been used for centuries in medicine and other applications. Valuable secondary metabolites have previously been identified in Agrobacterium rhizogenes-generated transgenic ‘hairy’ roots in this species. In the present study, transgenic roots were produced in A. officinalis using A. rhizogenes. In addition to wild-type lines, roots expressing the anti-human immunodeficiency virus microbicide candidate, cyanovirin-N (CV-N), were generated. Wild-type and CV-N root lines were transferred to liquid culture and increased in mass by 49 and 19 % respectively over a 7 day culture period. In the latter, the concentration of CV-N present in the root tissue was 2.4 μg/g fresh weight, with an average secretion rate into the growth medium of 0.02 μg/ml/24 h. A. officinalis transgenic roots may therefore in the future be used not only as a source of therapeutic secondary metabolites, but also as an expression system for the production of recombinant pharmaceuticals.

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Acknowledgments

We thank Nigel Dungey for supplying Althaea officinalis seed and Giorgio De Guzman for supplying A. rhizogenes LBA 9402. This project was jointly funded by the Comopharm European Union FP7 project grant, EU COST ACTION FA0804 and the Sir Joseph Hotung Endowment.

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Correspondence to Pascal M. W. Drake.

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Pascal M. W. Drake and Luisa de Moraes Madeira contributed equally to this work.

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Drake, P.M.W., de Moraes Madeira, L., Szeto, T.H. et al. Transformation of Althaea officinalis L. by Agrobacterium rhizogenes for the production of transgenic roots expressing the anti-HIV microbicide cyanovirin-N. Transgenic Res 22, 1225–1229 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11248-013-9730-7

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