Attempt to express the Xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, Xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis
Bibliography: leaves 24-29. === Low temperature is one of the environmental factors that cause substantial crop losses in the world. Recent advances in the study of plants native from temperate regions, have established that cold acclimation is regulated at the gene expression leveL To study the fun...
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-43382020-10-06T05:11:32Z Attempt to express the Xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, Xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis Tawouokam, Jean Bernard Molecular and cell biology Bibliography: leaves 24-29. Low temperature is one of the environmental factors that cause substantial crop losses in the world. Recent advances in the study of plants native from temperate regions, have established that cold acclimation is regulated at the gene expression leveL To study the function ofaXerophyta viscosa cold responsive protein that accumulates in plant cells under various environmental stresses, we have cloned the Xerophyta viscosa cold-responsive cDNA gene designed Xvcor, into a less complex host, Saccharomyces cerevisiae with the purpose of carrying out in vivo functional analysis. Sequence analysis showed that Xvcor encodes a 264 amino acid residue protein (Garwe et al 2002). The Hydropathy plot indicated that the XVCOR protein is highly hydrophobic and contains 6 transmembrane domains (Garwe et al 2002). In order to achieve high-level expression of Xvcor, the gene was placed under the control of a strong promoter (Phosphoglycerate kinase). Reverse-transcription PCR amplification revealed that the Xvcor transcript accumulated in yeast cells. However, SDS-PAGE analysis could not detect the predicted 29.6 kDa recombinant protein, suggesting that the translation might be hampered. Tests designed to measure the enhancement of stress tolerance between the recombinant and the control showed similar growth performance, confirming the absence of recombinant protein. A computer search for codon usage showed that the codon usage bias in Xvcor was low compared with that of highly expressed genes of S. cerevisiae. Together, these results suggest that the codon usage in Xvcor could influence its expression in yeast. 2014-07-30T17:42:04Z 2014-07-30T17:42:04Z 2002 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4338 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Molecular and Cell Biology |
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Molecular and cell biology Tawouokam, Jean Bernard Attempt to express the Xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, Xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis |
description |
Bibliography: leaves 24-29. === Low temperature is one of the environmental factors that cause substantial crop losses in the world. Recent advances in the study of plants native from temperate regions, have established that cold acclimation is regulated at the gene expression leveL To study the function ofaXerophyta viscosa cold responsive protein that accumulates in plant cells under various environmental stresses, we have cloned the Xerophyta viscosa cold-responsive cDNA gene designed Xvcor, into a less complex host, Saccharomyces cerevisiae with the purpose of carrying out in vivo functional analysis. Sequence analysis showed that Xvcor encodes a 264 amino acid residue protein (Garwe et al 2002). The Hydropathy plot indicated that the XVCOR protein is highly hydrophobic and contains 6 transmembrane domains (Garwe et al 2002). In order to achieve high-level expression of Xvcor, the gene was placed under the control of a strong promoter (Phosphoglycerate kinase). Reverse-transcription PCR amplification revealed that the Xvcor transcript accumulated in yeast cells. However, SDS-PAGE analysis could not detect the predicted 29.6 kDa recombinant protein, suggesting that the translation might be hampered. Tests designed to measure the enhancement of stress tolerance between the recombinant and the control showed similar growth performance, confirming the absence of recombinant protein. A computer search for codon usage showed that the codon usage bias in Xvcor was low compared with that of highly expressed genes of S. cerevisiae. Together, these results suggest that the codon usage in Xvcor could influence its expression in yeast. |
author |
Tawouokam, Jean Bernard |
author_facet |
Tawouokam, Jean Bernard |
author_sort |
Tawouokam, Jean Bernard |
title |
Attempt to express the Xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, Xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis |
title_short |
Attempt to express the Xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, Xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis |
title_full |
Attempt to express the Xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, Xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis |
title_fullStr |
Attempt to express the Xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, Xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Attempt to express the Xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, Xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis |
title_sort |
attempt to express the xerophyta viscose stress-responsive gene, xvcor, in yeast with view to functional analysis |
publisher |
University of Cape Town |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4338 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tawouokamjeanbernard attempttoexpressthexerophytaviscosestressresponsivegenexvcorinyeastwithviewtofunctionalanalysis |
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1719349768230010880 |