4.6 Review

Advancing organelle genome transformation and editing for crop improvement

Journal

PLANT COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.xplc.2021.100141

Keywords

organelle; transformation; genome editing; homologous recombination; crop improvement

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31872035, 32071477, 31700227]
  2. Science and Technology Department of Hubei Province of China [2020CFA012, 2018CFB637]

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Plant cells contain three organelles (nucleus, plastids, and mitochondria) with DNA, and plastid transformation is an attractive platform for generating transgenic plants. While plastid genome editing has not been commercialized, progress has been made in modifying mitochondrial genes, though genetic transformation of higher plant mitochondria has not yet been successful.
Plant cells contain three organelles that harbor DNA: the nucleus, plastids, and mitochondria. Plastid transformation has emerged as an attractive platform for the generation of transgenic plants, also referred to as transplastomic plants. Plastid genomes have been genetically engineered to improve crop yield, nutritional quality, and resistance to abiotic and biotic stresses, as well as for recombinant protein production. Despite many promising proof-of-concept applications, transplastomic plants have not been commercialized to date. Sequence-specific nuclease technologies are widely used to precisely modify nuclear genomes, but these tools have not been applied to edit organelle genomes because the efficient homologous recombination system in plastids facilitates plastid genome editing. Unlike plastid transformation, successful genetic transformation of higher plant mitochondria! genome transformation was tested in several research group, but not successful to date. However, stepwise progress has been made in modifying mitochondria! genes and their transcripts, thus enabling the study of their functions. Here, we provide an overview of advances in organelle transformation and genome editing for crop improvement, and we discuss the bottlenecks and future development of these technologies.

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