Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Plant synthetic biology aims to apply engineering principles to plant genetic design. One strategic requirement of plant synthetic biology is the adoption of common standardized technologies that facilitate the construction of increasingly complex multigene structures at the DNA level while enabling the exchange of genetic building blocks among plant bioengineers. Here, we describe GoldenBraid 2.0 (GB2.0), a comprehensive technological framework that aims to foster the exchange of standard DNA parts for plant synthetic biology. GB2.0 relies on the use of type IIS restriction enzymes for DNA assembly and proposes a modular cloning schema with positional notation that resembles the grammar of natural languages. Apart from providing an optimized cloning strategy that generates fully exchangeable genetic elements for multigene engineering, the GB2.0 toolkit offers an evergrowing open collection of DNA parts, including a group of functionally tested, premade genetic modules to build frequently used modules like constitutive and inducible expression cassettes, endogenous gene silencing and protein-protein interaction tools, etc. Use of the GB2.0 framework is facilitated by a number of Web resources that include a publicly available database, tutorials, and a software package that provides in silico simulations and laboratory protocols for GB2.0 part domestication and multigene engineering. In short, GB2.0 provides a framework to exchange both information and physical DNA elements among bioengineers to help implement plant synthetic biology projects.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3707536PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.113.217661DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

plant synthetic
20
synthetic biology
20
dna assembly
8
dna parts
8
multigene engineering
8
gb20 framework
8
plant
7
dna
6
gb20
6
synthetic
5

Similar Publications

Evaluating the olfactory preferences of emerging insect pests is critical to develop monitoring tools and improve early detection and management strategies. Here the chemical ecology and olfactory preferences of the allium leafminer Phytomyza gymnostoma Loew (Diptera: Agromyzidae), an invasive pest in North America affecting allium crops such as leeks and onions, were investigated. Three bioassay methods were assessed under laboratory conditions: wind tunnel, Y-tube olfactometer, and arena bioassay.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of the study was to reduce the chemical fertilizers with microbial inoculant-rich vermicompost, which enhanced the growth, flowering, and soil health of the tuberose crop. A total of six treatments were applied with reducing doses of synthetic fertilizers under a factorial randomized design and replicated thrice. In this study, vermicompost (VC) made from cow dung and vegetable waste utilizing Eisenia foetida and their mixed biomass were enriched with microbial inoculants and assessed for their impact on microbial and enzymatic populations including urease, acid phosphatase activity and dehydrogenase activity in soil, nutrient availability, and tuberose development and flowering.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

While PGPB have historically been applied in agriculture, their formal recognition in the last century has driven intensive research into their role as sustainable tools for improving crop yield and stress tolerance. As they are primarily sourced from wild or native environments, the widespread enthusiasm has led to heightened expectations surrounding their potential, often based on the assumption that biological solutions are inherently safer and more effective than synthetic inputs. However, despite their popularity, increasing reports of inconsistent or limited performance under real-world, field conditions have raised critical questions about their credibility as biofertilizers and biocontrol agents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Structurally unique halichonine B is promising for the design of pharmaceutical leads, while function-oriented optimization is unknown in agrochemical science. Our recent practical synthesis offers a great chance for the discovery of antimicrobial leads. "Linker plus replaceable substituents" is exerted, in which up to 9 unique linkers together with diverse substituents from a wide chemical space are investigated for optimization of the readily available drimanyl amine.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plant-Derived Anticancer Candidates Targeting mTOR, EGFR, HER2: Insights From Molecular Docking and Dynamics Simulations.

Chem Biodivers

September 2025

School of Traditional Chinese Materia Medica, Key Laboratory of Ethnomedicine Material Basis & Pharmacological Mechanisms, Shenyang, Shenyang Pharmaceutical University, Shenyang, China.

In intracellular signaling, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) as an important mammalian target for breast cancer therapy, plays a key role in receiving upstream signals from growth factor receptors such as epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2). Using 30 compounds from Meehania fargesii var. Radicans, structure-based virtual screening and molecular docking were performed to develop novel and safe breast cancer targeting inhibitors from natural products.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF