947 resultados para chloroplast genetic engineering
Resumo:
Proceedings of the International Coconut Forum held in Cairns, Australia, 22-24 November 2005. Coconut is one of the most important crops grown in the humid tropics, with more than 11 million farmers, mostly smallholders with low income, growing the palm in 90 countries. These proceedings document the vast range of topics covered in the forum, including R&D, business and government, and regional and international agency interests.
Resumo:
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) kills more people worldwide than any other infectious disease. Approximately 42 million people, mostly in Africa and Asia, are currently infected with HIV (Figure 3.1), and 5 million new infections occur every year (AIDS Epidemic Update, 2002). It is estimated that 22 milIion people have died since the first clinical evidence of AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) emerged in 1981 ('Mobilization for Microbicides' ~ The Rockfeller Foundation). HIV is generally transmitted in one of three ways: through unprotected sexual intercourse, blood-to-blood contact, and mother-to-child transmission. Once the virus has entered the body, it invades the cells of the immune system and initiates the production of new virus particles with concomitant destruction of the immune cells. As the number of immune cells in the body slowly declines, weight loss, debilitation, and eventually death occur due to opportunistic infections or cancers. Although AIDS is presently incurable, highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), where a cocktail of potent antiretroviral drugs are administered daily to HIV-positive patients to control the viral load, has resulted in dramatic reductions in HIV-related morbidity and mortality in the developed world
Resumo:
The inefficiency of chemical pesticides to control phytopathogenic fungi in agriculture and the frequent incidence of human diseases caused by bacteria which are resistant to antibiotics lead to the search for alternative antimicrobial compounds. In this context, plant defensins are a promising tool for the control of both plant and human pathogenic agents. Plant defensins are cationic peptides of about 50 amino acid residues, rich in cysteine and whose tridimensional structure is considerably conserved among different plant species. These antimicrobial molecules represent an important innate component from plant defense response against pathogens and are expressed in various plant tissues, such as leaves, tubers, flowers, pods and seeds. The present work aimed at the evaluation of the antimicrobial activity of two plant defensins against different phytopathogenic fungi and pathogenic bacteria to humans. The defensin Drr230a, whose gene was isolated from pea (Pisum sativum), and the defensin CD1,whose gene was identified within coffee (Coffea arabica) transcriptome, were subcloned in yeast expression vector and expressed in Pichia pastoris. The gene cd1 was subcloned as two different recombinant forms: CD1tC, containing a six-histidine sequence (6xHis) at the peptide C-terminal region and CD1tN, containing 6xHis coding sequence at the N-terminal region. In the case of the defensin Drr230a, the 6xHis coding sequence was inserted only at the N-terminal region. Assays of the antimicrobial activity of the purified recombinant proteins rDrr230a and rCD1 against Phakopsora pachyrhizi, causal agent of soybean Asian rust, were performed to analyze the in vitro spore germination inhibition and disease severity caused by the fungus in planta. Both recombinant defensins were able to inhibit P. pachyrhizi uredospore germination, with no difference between the antimicrobial action of either CD1tC or CD1tN. Moreover, rDrr230a and rCD1 drastically reduced severity of soybean Asian rust, as demonstrated by in planta assays. In spite of the fact that rCD1 was not able to inhibit proliferation of the human pathogenic bacteria Staplylococcus aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae, rCD1 was able to inhibit growth of the phytopathogenic fungus Fusarium tucumaniae, that causes soybean sudden death syndrome. The obtained results show that these plant defensins are useful candidates to be used in plant genetic engineering programs to control agriculture impacting fungal diseases.