Claims
- 1. A transgenic plant or a regenerable portion thereof whose genome contains a transgene that encodes a chimeric ketolase enzyme polypeptide having two portions, (i) an N-terminal first portion comprising a plastid transit peptide portion fused to (ii) a second ketolase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a 4-keto-β-ionene ring, said trangene being operatively linked to a promoter that controls expression of said transgene, wherein the flower petals of a plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase produce a carotenoid compound that contains a β-ionene ring having an unsubstituted 4-position, and wherein the flower petals of said transgenic plant accumulate a carotenoid compound having a 4-keto-β-ionene ring.
- 2. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said carotenoid compound having a 4-keto-β-ionene ring is a 4,4′-diketo-β-ionene ring carotenoid compound.
- 3. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said 4,4′-diketo-β-ionene ring carotenoid compound is canthaxanthin.
- 4. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said 4,4′-diketo-β-ionene ring carotenoid compound is astaxanthin.
- 5. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said plastid transit peptide portion is the RUBISCO transit peptide.
- 6. The plant according to claim 1 whose genome includes a second transgene that encodes a second chimeric polypeptide that contains (i) an N-terminal plastid transit peptide fused to (ii) a hydroxylase enzyme that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring compound into a carotenoid 3-hydroxy-β-ionene ring compound, and said second transgene is operatively linked to a promoter that controls expression of said second transgene.
- 7. The plant according to claim 6 wherein said carotenoid compound having a 3-hydroxyl-β-ionene ring is a 3,3′-dihydroxy-β-ionene ring carotenoid compound.
- 8. The plant according to claim 7 wherein said 3,3′-dihydroxy-β-ionene ring carotenoid compound is zeaxanthin.
- 9. The plant according to claim 6 wherein said plastid transit peptide portion is the RUBISCO transit peptide.
- 10. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said ketolase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a carotenoid 4-keto-β- ionene ring is a β-carotene-4-oxygenase that is encoded by a gene present in one or more organisms selected from the group consisting of Adonis aestivalis, Agrobacterium aurantiacum, Alcaligenes sp., Bradyrhizobium sp., Brevundimonas aurantiaca, Haematococcus pluvialis, Nostoc sp., Paracoccus marcusii, Xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous, Synechocystis sp., Thermosynechococcus elongates, and Trichodesmium erythraeum.
- 11. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said ketolase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a carotenoid 4-keto-β-ionene ring is encoded by one or both of the bkt gene and the crtO gene of Haematococcus pluvialis, or the crtW gene of Agrobacterium aurantiacum.
- 12. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said ketolase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a carotenoid 4-keto-β-ionene ring is encoded by one or both of the AdK1 gene and AdK6 gene of Adonis aestivalis.
- 13. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said ketolase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a carotenoid 4-keto-β-ionene ring is encoded by the crtw gene of Alcaligenes sp.PC-1.
- 14. The plant according to claim 7 wherein said hydroxylase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a carotenoid 3-hydroxy-β-ionene ring is encoded by one or both of the crtZ genes of Erwinia uredovora and Erwinia herbicola.
- 15. The plant according to claim 1 wherein said promoter that controls expression of said transgene is a flower petal-preferred promoter.
- 16. The plant according to claim 1 wherein the carotenoid compound that contains a β-ionene ring having an unsubstituted 4-position produced in the flower petals of a plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is one or both of β-carotene and zeaxanthin.
- 17. The plant according to claim 16 wherein said plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is transformed with one or more DNA segments that encode one or more carotenoid-forming enzymes other than a ketolase.
- 18. The plant according to claim 1 that further includes one or more further transgenes selected from the group consisting of the (a) crtE, crtB, crtI, crtY and crtZ genes of Erwinia uredovora or (b) GGPP synthase, phytoene synthase, phytoene dehydrogenase(4H), lycopene cyclase, and β-carotene hydroxylase genes of Erwinia herbicola, wherein each of said further transgenes (i) is operatively linked to a promoter that directs flower petal-preferred expression of said transgene, and (ii) expresses a chimeric polypeptide enzyme that contains an N-terminal plastid transit peptide portion.
- 19. The plant according to claim 1 is selected from the group consisting of Amaryllidaceae; Apocynaceae; Compositae; Ralsaminaceae; Begoniaceae; Caryophyllaceae; Chenopodiaceae; Cucurbitaceae; Cruciferae; Gentinaceae; Geraniaceae; Graminae; Euphorbiaceae; Labiatae; Leguminosae; Liliaceae; Lobeliaceae; Malvaceae; Plumbaginaceae; Polemoniaceae; Primulaceae; Ranunculaceae; Rosaceae; Rubiaceae; Scrophulariaceae; Solanaceae; Umbelliferae; Verbenaceae; and Violaceae.
- 20. A transgenic plant or a regenerable portion thereof whose genome contains a transgene that encodes a chimeric ketolase enzyme polypeptide having two portions, (i) an N-terminal first portion comprising a plastid transit peptide fused to (ii) a second ketolase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a 4-keto-β-ionene ring, said transgene being operatively linked to a promoter that controls expression of said transgene, wherein the flower petals of a plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase produce one or both of β-carotene and zeaxanthin, and wherein the flower petals of said transgenic plant accumulate a carotenoid compound having a 4-keto-β-ionene ring.
- 21. The plant according to claim 20 wherein β-carotene is produced in the flower petals of a plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase.
- 22. The plant according to claim 21 wherein the β-carotene-producing plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is a mutant or differently transformed transgenic plant that accumulates β-carotene in the flower petals in an amount of an about 5- to about 200-fold enhancement relative to a non-mutant or non-transformed plant of the same type.
- 23. The plant according to claim 22 wherein the β-carotene-producing plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is a mutant plant.
- 24. The plant according to claim 23 wherein flower petals of said mutant plant exhibit a ratio of the amount of β-carotene ratio of about 1:10 to about 1.
- 25. The plant according to claim 24 wherein the mutant plant is a marigold.
- 26. The transgenic plant according to claim 22 wherein the β-carotene-producing plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is a differently transformed transgenic plant.
- 27. The plant according to claim 26 wherein said differently transformed transgenic plant contains one or more DNA segments that encode and express one or more heterologous carotenoid-forming enzymes.
- 28. The plant according to claim 27 wherein the transgenic plant is a petunia.
- 29. The plant according to claim 20 wherein said promoter that controls expression of said transgene is a flower petal-preferred promoter.
- 30. The plant according to claim 20 wherein zeaxanthin is produced in the flower petals of a plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase.
- 31. The plant according to claim 30 wherein the zeaxanthin-producing plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is a mutant or differently transformed transgenic plant that accumulates zeaxanthin in the flower petals and exhibits about a 10-fold to about a 20-fold enhancement of zeaxanthin relative to a non-mutant or non-transformed plant of the same type.
- 32. The plant according to claim 30 wherein the zeaxanthin-producing plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is a mutant or differently transformed transgenic plant that accumulates zeaxanthin in the flower petals and exhibits a zeaxanthin ratio of about 1:10 to about 1.
- 33. The plant according to claim 31 wherein the zeaxanthin-producing plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is a mutant plant.
- 34. The plant according to claim 33 wherein flower petals of said mutant plant exhibit a ratio of the amount of zeaxanthin to the amount of zeaxanthin plus the amount of lutein is about 1:10 to about 1.0.
- 35. The plant according to claim 34 wherein the mutant plant is a marigold.
- 36. The plant according to claim 20 wherein said plastid transit peptide and said promoter are from different species.
- 37. A transgenic plant or a regenerable portion thereof whose genome contains a transgene that encodes a chimeric ketolase enzyme polypeptide having two portions, (i) an N-terminal first portion comprising a plastid transit peptide fused to (ii) a second ketolase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a 4-keto-β-ionene ring, said transgene being operatively linked to a petal-preferred promoter that controls expression of said transgene and is from a species different from that of said plastid transit peptide, wherein the flower petals of a plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase produce one or both of β-carotene and zeaxanthin, and wherein the flower petals of said transgenic plant accumulate a carotenoid compound having a 4-keto-β-ionene ring.
- 38. The plant according to claim 37 wherein the 5-carotene or zeaxanthin-producing plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is a mutant or differently transformed transgenic plant that accumulates one or both of zeaxanthin and β-carotene in the flower petals and exhibits one or both of an enhancement of zeaxanthin of about a 10-fold to about a 20-fold and an enhancement of β-carotene of about 5- to about 200-fold relative to a non-mutant or non-transformed plant of the same type.
- 39. The plant according to claim 37 wherein said ketolase enzyme portion that converts a carotenoid β-ionene ring into a carotenoid 4-keto-β-ionene ring is encoded by a gene selected from the group consisting of one or both of the bkt gene and the crtO gene of Haematococcus pluvialis, one or both of the AdK1 gene and AdK6 gene of Adonis aestivalis, the crtW gene of Agrobacterium aurantiacum and the crtW gene of Alcaligenes sp.PC-1, and mixtures thereof.
- 40. The plant according to claim 39 wherein the zeaxanthin- or β-carotene-producing plant of the same type that is not transformed with said chimeric ketolase is a mutant plant.
- 41. The plant according to claim 40 wherein flower petals of said mutant plant exhibit one or both of a zeaxanthin ratio and a β-carotene ratio of about 1:10 to about 1.
- 42. The plant according to claim 41 wherein the mutant plant is a marigold.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 10/325,265, filed Dec. 19, 2002 and claims priority from U.S. provisional application Serial No. 60/366,444 that was filed on Mar. 21, 2002, and.
Provisional Applications (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60366444 |
Mar 2002 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
10325265 |
Dec 2002 |
US |
Child |
10392942 |
Mar 2003 |
US |