Improvement of protein quality in transgenic soybean plants

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Abstract

Glycinin is one of the abundant storage proteins in soybean seeds. A modified Gy1 (A1aB1b) proglycinin gene with a synthetic DNA encoding four continuous methionines (V3-1) was connected between the hpt gene and the modified green fluorescent protein sGFP(S65T) gene, and a resultant plasmid was introduced into soybean by particle bombardment in order to improve nutritional value of its seeds. After the selection with hygromycin, the efficiency of gene introduction was evaluated. More than 60 % of the regenerated plants tolerant to hygromycin yielded the hpt and V3-1 fragment by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis, and the expression of sGFP was detected in about 50 % of putative transgenic soybeans. Southern hybridization confirmed the presence of transgenes in T0 plants and the transgenic soybeans hybridized with the hpt and V3-1 genes were analyzed showed different banding patterns. Most of the transgenic plants were growing, flowering normally and produced seeds. Analysis of seed obtained from transgenic soybean plants expressing hpt and V3-1 genes showed higher accumulation of glycinin compared with non-transgenic plants. In addition, protein expression in transgenic soybean plants was observed by using 2D-electrophoresis. © 2007 Institute of Experimental Botany, ASCR.

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APA

El-Shemy, H. A., Khalafalla, M. M., Fujita, K., & Ishimoto, M. (2007). Improvement of protein quality in transgenic soybean plants. Biologia Plantarum, 51(2), 277–284. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10535-007-0055-3

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