Ayuda
Ir al contenido

Dialnet


Heterologous expression of circular rnas in escherichia coli for analyzing the ligation process of chloroplastic viroids and producing double-stranded rnas with insecticidal activity

  • Autores: Beltrán Ortolá Navarro
  • Directores de la Tesis: José Antonio Daròs Arnau (dir. tes.), Carmelo López del Rincón (tut. tes.)
  • Lectura: En la Universitat Politècnica de València ( España ) en 2023
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Tribunal Calificador de la Tesis: Enrique Moriones Alonso (presid.), Marcos de la Peña (secret.), Francisco Tenllado Peralo (voc.)
  • Programa de doctorado: Programa de Doctorado en Biotecnología por la Universitat Politècnica de València
  • Materias:
  • Enlaces
    • Tesis en acceso abierto en: RiuNet
  • Resumen
    • Viroids, minimal genomes of non-coding circular RNA, single-stranded and highly structured, parasitize plant cellular factors to replicate autonomously, establish systemic infections, and typically cause disease. Those of the family Avsunviroidae replicate and accumulate in chloroplasts by a symmetrical rolling circle mechanism. A chloroplast RNA polymerase produces linear concatemers of complementary polarity that are reduced to monomers by the hammerhead ribozymes (HHR) of the concatemer. They produce 5'-hydroxyl and 2',3'-cyclic phosphodiester ends, which the chloroplastic isoform of tRNA ligase converts to intramolecular 5',3'-phosphodiester bonds, generating circular viroids of complementary polarity that can enter another round of transcription, symmetric to the first one. In this Thesis, the viroid sequences and structures essential for its circularization have been analyzed, using as a model the eggplant latent viroid (ELVd), which induces asymptomatic infections in eggplant. We expressed in Escherichia coli linear ELVd(+) precursors flanked by two copies of its HHR. Its processing generates monomers with suitable ends for ligation by the eggplant tRNA ligase, which is co-expressed. Point mutations and deletions at the wild-type ligation site suggest that only the HHR domain is essential for circularization. The conservation of the sequence and structure of the HHR with those of the natural substrate of the enzyme (the tRNAs) lead us to propose that the HHR of the ELVd hijacks the ligase, mimicking the general characteristics of the anticodon loop of the tRNAs.

      This expression system also allows the production of recombinant RNAs, inserting them into a particular position of the ELVd RNA. Chimeras are processed by flanking HHRs and their ends ligated by the tRNA ligase. The compact, circular viroidal scaffold, possibly associated with the ligase, allows increasing the half-life of the RNA of interest and its accumulation in the bacteria. In this Thesis we adapt the system to produce double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs) that trigger RNA interference (RNAi), a eukaryotic gene regulation and defense mechanism based on base complementarity between RNAs. dsRNAs complementary to endogenous genes reduce the levels of their transcripts and generate loss-of-function phenotypes. Insects can take dsRNAs from the environment, internalize them into cells, and distribute them systemically, making RNAi a promising pest control strategy. To produce dsRNAs, we separated the inverted repeats of the target gene that generates the hairpin with the cDNA of a group-I autocatalytic intron from Tetrahymena thermophila, increasing the stability of the expression plasmids. The intron is removed after transcription, resulting in a viroidal molecule from which the dsRNA of interest protrudes. Flanking the inverted repeats with an additional copy of the intron in a permuted form allows the ELVd molecule to be separated from the final product, a circular dsRNA molecule capped on both sides by small loops. Both molecules have regulatory activity: the viroid-dsRNA chimeras with homology to the smooth septate junction 1 gene of the corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera) exhibit oral insecticidal activity against larvae similar to that of in vitro synthesized hairpins, and the circular dsRNAs without the viroid scaffold homologous to the vacuolar ATPase (subunit A) and ribosomal protein S13 genes efficiently silence those genes in adult Medfly (Ceratitis capitata); this case is of special relevance as it is the first demonstration of RNAi for the control of this pest.

      In conclusion, despite its limited agricultural relevance, the ELVd is useful for investigating the molecular biology of the Avsunviroidae family and a powerful biotechnological tool in combination with the E. coli expression system.


Fundación Dialnet

Dialnet Plus

  • Más información sobre Dialnet Plus

Opciones de compartir

Opciones de entorno