Frontiers in Plant Science (Apr 2018)

Engineering the Chloroplast Genome of Oleaginous Marine Microalga Nannochloropsis oceanica

  • Qinhua Gan,
  • Jiaoyun Jiang,
  • Xiao Han,
  • Shifan Wang,
  • Shifan Wang,
  • Yandu Lu,
  • Yandu Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.00439
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Plastid engineering offers an important tool to fill the gap between the technical and the enormous potential of microalgal photosynthetic cell factory. However, to date, few reports on plastid engineering in industrial microalgae have been documented. This is largely due to the small cell sizes and complex cell-wall structures which make these species intractable to current plastid transformation methods (i.e., biolistic transformation and polyethylene glycol-mediated transformation). Here, employing the industrial oleaginous microalga Nannochloropsis oceanica as a model, an electroporation-mediated chloroplast transformation approach was established. Fluorescent microscopy and laser confocal scanning microscopy confirmed the expression of the green fluorescence protein, driven by the endogenous plastid promoter and terminator. Zeocin-resistance selection led to an acquisition of homoplasmic strains of which a stable and site-specific recombination within the chloroplast genome was revealed by sequencing and DNA gel blotting. This demonstration of electroporation-mediated chloroplast transformation opens many doors for plastid genome editing in industrial microalgae, particularly species of which the chloroplasts are recalcitrant to chemical and microparticle bombardment transformation.

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