Transgenic farm animals are attractive alternative mammalian models to rodents for the study of developmental, genetic, reproductive and disease-related biological questions, as well for the production of recombinant proteins, or the assessment of xenotransplants for human patients. Until recently, the ability to generate transgenic farm animals relied on methods of passive transgenesis. In recent years, significant improvements have been made to introduce and apply active techniques of transgenesis and genetic engineering in these species. These new approaches dramatically enhance the ease and speed with which livestock species can be genetically modified, and allow to performing precise genetic modifications. This paper provides a synopsis of enzyme-mediated genetic engineering in livestock species covering the early attempts employing naturally occurring DNA-modifying proteins to recent approaches working with tailored enzymatic systems.
Inoculation practice with plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) has been proposed as a good biotechnological tool to enhance plant performance and alleviate heavy metal/metalloid stress. Soybean is often cultivated in soil with high arsenic (As) content or irrigated with As-contaminated groundwater, which causes deleterious effects on its growth and yield, even when it was inoculated with rhizobium. Thus, the effect of double inoculation with known PGPB strains, Bradyrhizobium japonicum E109 and Azospirillum brasilense Az39 was evaluated in plants grown in pots under controlled conditions and treated with As. First, the viability of these co-cultivated bacteria was assayed using a flow cytometry analysis using SYTO9 and propidium iodide (PI) dyes. This was performed in vitro to evaluate the bacterial population dynamic under 25 µM AsV and AsIII treatment. A synergistic effect was observed when bacteria were co-cultured, since mortality diminished, compared to each growing alone. Indole acetic acid (IAA) produced by A. brasilense Az39 would be one of the main components involved in B. japonicum E109 mortality reduction, mainly under AsIII treatment. Regarding in vivo assays, under As stress, plant growth improvement, nodule number and N content increase were observed in double inoculated plants. Furthermore, double inoculation strategy reduced As translocation to aerial parts thus improving As phytostabilization potential of soybean plants. These results suggest that double inoculation with B. japonicum E109 and A. brasilense Az39 could be a safe and advantageous practice to improve growth and yield of soybean exposed to As, accompanied by an important metalloid phytostabilization.
The development of efficient transfection protocols for livestock cells is crucial for implementation of cell-based transgenic methods to produce genetically modified animals. We synthetized fully deacylated linear 22, 87 and 217 kDa polyethylenimine (PEI) nanoparticles and compared their transfection efficiency and cytotoxicity to commercial branched 25 kDa PEI and linear 58 kDa poly(allylamine) hydrochloride. We studied the effect of PEI size and presence of serum on transfection efficiency on primary cultures of bovine fetal fibroblasts and established cells lines (HEK 293 and Hep G2). We found that transfection efficiency was affected mainly by polymer/pDNA ratio and DNA concentration and in less extent by PEI MW. In bovine fibroblast, preincubation of PEI nanoparticles with fetal bovine serum (FBS) greatly increased percentage of cells expressing the transgene (up to 82%) while significantly decreased the polymer cytotoxic effect. 87 and 217 kDa PEI rendered the highest transfection rates in HEK 293 and Hep G2 cell lines (>50% transfected cells) with minimal cell toxicity. In conclusion, our results indicate that fully deacylated PEI of 87 and 217 kDa are useful DNA vehicles for non-viral transfection of primary cultures of bovine fetal fibroblast and HEK 293 and Hep G2 cell lines.
Transposon-mediated transgenesis is a well-established tool for genome modification in small animal models. However, translation of this active transgenic method to large animals warrants further investigations. Here, the piggyBac (PB) and sleeping beauty (SB) transposon systems were assessed for stable gene transfer into the cattle genome. Bovine fibroblasts were transfected either with a helper-independent PB system or a binary SB system. Both transposons were highly active in bovine cells increasing the efficiency of DNA integration up to 88 times over basal nonfacilitated integrations in a colony formation assay. SB transposase catalyzed multiplex transgene integrations in fibroblast cells transfected with the helper vector and two donor vectors carrying different transgenes (fluorophore and neomycin resistance). Stably transfected fibroblasts were used for SCNT and on in vitro embryo culture, morphologically normal blastocysts that expressed the fluorophore were obtained with both transposon systems. The data indicate that transposition is a feasible approach for genetic engineering in the cattle genome.
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