专利摘要:
The present invention relates to heliomycin, DNA sequences encoding heliomycin, vectors containing DNA sequences for transforming host organisms and transformation methods. The present invention relates in particular to heliomycin as a medicament for treating fungal infections. More specifically, it relates to heliomycin produced by transformed plants which ensure resistance to plant cells and plant transformations, diseases, especially diseases of fungal origin.
公开号:KR20010042735A
申请号:KR1020007011459
申请日:1999-04-12
公开日:2001-05-25
发明作者:람베르띠미레이유;뷜레필리쁘;브룩하트게리리;호프만쥘르
申请人:아벤티스 크롭사이언스 에스.에이.;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

Genes encoding heliomycin and their uses {GENE CODING FOR HELIOMICINE AND USE THEREOF}
<110> RHONE-POULENC AGROCHIMIE
<120> Gene encoding heliomicine, protein obtained, vector containing
it, transformed organisms obtained and method of preparation
<150> FR
<151> 1998-04-15
<160> 38
<170> KopatentIn 1.71
<210> 1
<211> 147
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (1) .. (147)
<400> 1
agc ttg gat aaa aga gac aag ttg att ggc agc tgt gtt tgg ggc gcc 48
Ser Leu Asp Lys Arg Asp Lys Leu Ile Gly Ser Cys Val Trp Gly Ala
1 5 10 15
gtc aac tac act agt gac tgc aac ggc gag tgc aag cgc cgc ggt tac 96
Val Asn Tyr Thr Ser Asp Cys Asn Gly Glu Cys Lys Arg Arg Gly Tyr
20 25 30
aag ggt ggc cat tgt gga tcc ttc gct aac gtt aac tgt tgg tgt gaa 144
Lys Gly Gly His Cys Gly Ser Phe Ala Asn Val Asn Cys Trp Cys Glu
35 40 45
acc 147
Thr
<210> 2
<211> 169
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (1) .. (132)
<400> 2
gat aag ctt atc ggt tcc tgc gtg tgg ggt gct gtg aac tac act tcc 48
Asp Lys Leu Ile Gly Ser Cys Val Trp Gly Ala Val Asn Tyr Thr Ser
1 5 10 15
gat tgc aac ggt gag tgc aag agg agg ggt tac aag ggt ggt cac tgc 96
Asp Cys Asn Gly Glu Cys Lys Arg Arg Gly Tyr Lys Gly Gly His Cys
20 25 30
ggt tcc ttc gct aac gtg aac tgc tgg tgc gag act tgagagct 140
Gly Ser Phe Ala Asn Val Asn Cys Trp Cys Glu Thr
35 40
cggcgaggcg aacctctcga cggatccgg 169
<210> 3
<211> 261
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (3) .. (224)
<400> 3
cc atg ggt ttc gtg ctt ttc tct cag ctt cca tct ttc ctt ctt 44
Met Gly Phe Val Leu Phe Ser Gln Leu Pro Ser Phe Leu Leu
1 5 10
gtg tct act ctt ctt ctt ttc ctt gtg atc tct cac tct tgc cgt gcc 92
Val Ser Thr Leu Leu Leu Phe Leu Val Ile Ser His Ser Cys Arg Ala
15 20 25 30
gat aag ctt atc ggt tcc tgc gtg tgg ggt gct gtg aac tac act tcc 140
Asp Lys Leu Ile Gly Ser Cys Val Trp Gly Ala Val Asn Tyr Thr Ser
35 40 45
gat tgc aac ggt gag tgc aag agg agg ggt tac aag ggt ggt cac tgc 188
Asp Cys Asn Gly Glu Cys Lys Arg Arg Gly Tyr Lys Gly Gly His Cys
50 55 60
ggt tcc ttc gct aac gtg aac tgc tgg tgc gag act tgagag ctcggcgagg 240
Gly Ser Phe Ala Asn Val Asn Cys Trp Cys Glu Thr
65 70
cgaacgtgtc gacggatccg g 261
<210> 4
<211> 120
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (12) .. (101)
<400> 4
ccgtcgacgc g atg ggt ttc gtg ctt ttc tct cag ctt cca tct 44
Met Gly Phe Val Leu Phe Ser Gln Leu Pro Ser
1 5 10
ttc ctt ctt gtg tct act ctt ctt ctt ttc ctt gtg atc tct cac tct 92
Phe Leu Leu Val Ser Thr Leu Leu Leu Phe Leu Val Ile Ser His Ser
15 20 25
tgc cgt gct ggagacgcg aattcacaca 120
Cys arg ala
30
<210> 5
<211> 75
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 5
gcgtcgacgc gatgggtttc gtgcttttct ctcagcttcc atctttcctt cttgtgtcta 60
ctcttcttct tttcc 75
<210> 6
<211> 72
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 6
tcgccggcac ggcaagagta agagatcaca aggaaaagaa gaagagtaga cacaagaagg 60
aaagatggaa gc 72
<210> 7
<211> 80
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 7
gataagctta tcggttcctg cgtgtggggt gctgtgaact acacttccga ttgcaacggt 60
gagtgcaaga ggaggggtta 80
<210> 8
<211> 109
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 8
ccggatccgt cgacacgttc gcctcgccga gctctcaagt ctcgcaccag cagttcacgt 60
tagcgaagga accgcagtga ccacccttgt aacccctcct cttgcactc 109
<210> 9
<211> 85
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 9
agggccccct agggtttaaa cggccagtca ggccgaattc gagctcggta cccggggatc 60
ctctagagtc gacctgcagg catgc 85
<210> 10
<211> 66
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 10
ccctgaacca ggctccaggg cgcgccttaa ttaaaagctt gcatgcctgc aggtcgactc 60
tagagg 66
<210> 11
<211> 93
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 11
ccggccagtc aggccacact taattaagtt taaacgcggc cccggcgcgc ctaggtgtgt 60
gctcgagggc ccaacctcag tacctggttc agg 93
<210> 12
<211> 93
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 12
ccggcctgaa ccaggtactg aggttgggcc ctcgagcaca cacctaggcg cgccggggcc 60
gcgtttaaac ttaattaagt gtggcctgac tgg 93
<210> 13
<211> 50
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 13
ggtctagaat ggcctgcacc aacaacgcca tgagggccct cttcctcctc 50
<210> 14
<211> 50
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 14
ccgaattcgg cgccgtgcac gatgcagaag agcacgagga ggaagagggc 50
<210> 15
<211> 81
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (7) .. (72)
<400> 15
tctaga atg gcc tgc acc aac aac ccc atg agg gcc ctc ttc ctc ctc 48
Met Ala Cys Thr Asn Asn Pro Met Arg Ala Leu Phe Leu Leu
1 5 10
ctg ctc ttc tgc atc gtg cac ggc gccgaatt c 81
Leu Leu Phe Cys Ile Val His Gly
15 20
<210> 16
<211> 24
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 16
gataagctta tcggttcctg cgtg 24
<210> 17
<211> 32
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 17
ggctcgagtc aagtctcgca ccaccagttc ac 32
<210> 18
<211> 213
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (7) .. (204)
<400> 18
tctaga atg gcc tgc acc aac aac gcc atg agg gcc ctc ttc ctc ctc 48
Met Ala Cys Thr Asn Asn Ala Met Arg Ala Leu Phe Leu Leu
1 5 10
ctg ctc ttc tgc atc gtg cac ggc gat aag ctt atc ggt tcc tgc gtg 96
Leu Leu Phe Cys Ile Val His Gly Asp Lys Leu Ile Gly Ser Cys Val
15 20 25 30
tgg ggt gct gtg aac tac act tcc gat tgc aac ggt gag tgc aag agg 144
Trp Gly Ala Val Asn Tyr Thr Ser Asp Cys Asn Gly Glu Cys Lys Arg
35 40 45
agg ggt tac aac ggt ggt cac tgc ggt tcc ttc gct aac gtg aac tgc 192
Arg Gly Tyr Asn Gly Gly His Cys Gly Ser Phe Ala Asn Val Asn Cys
50 55 60
tgg tgc gag act tgactc gag 213
Trp Cys Glu Thr
65
<210> 19
<211> 838
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<220>
<221> terminator
<222> (569) .. (832)
<220>
<221> promoter
<222> (7) .. (532)
<223> CsVMV promoter
<220>
<221> misc_feature
<222> (533) .. (568)
<223> multiple cloning site
<400> 19
aagcttccag aaggtaatta tccaagatgt agcatcaaga atccaatgtt tacgggaaaa 60
actatggaag tattatgtga gctcagcaag aagcagatca atatgcggca catatgcaac 120
ctatgttcaa aaatgaagaa tgtacagata caagatccta tactgccaga atacgaagaa 180
gaatacgtag aaattgaaaa acaagaacca ggcgaagaaa agaatcttga agacgtaagc 240
actgacgaca acaatgaaaa gaagaagata aggtcggtga ttgtgaaaga gacatagagg 300
acacatgtaa ggtggaaaat gtaagggcgg aaagtaacct tatcacaaag gaatcttatc 360
ccccactact tatcctttta tatttttccg tgtcattttt gcccttgagt tttcctatat 420
aaggaaccaa gttcggcatt tgtgaaaaca agaaaaaatt tggtgtaagc tattttcttt 480
gaagtactga ggatacaact tcagagaaat ttgtaagttt gtagatctcg attctagaag 540
gcctgaattc gagctcggta ccggatccaa ttcccgatcg ttcaaacatt tggcaataaa 600
gtttcttaag attgaatcct gttgccggtc ttgcgatgat tatcatataa tttctgttga 660
attacgttaa gcatgtaata attaacatgt aatgcatgac gttatttatg agatgggttt 720
ttatgattag actcccgcaa ttatacattt aatacgcgat agaaaacaaa atatagcgcg 780
caaactagga taaattatcg cgcgcggtgt catctatgtt actagatcgg ggatcgat 838
<210> 20
<211> 1036
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (539) .. (736)
<220>
<221> terminator
<222> (767) .. (1030)
<223> nos terminator
<220>
<221> promoter
<222> (7) .. (532)
<223> CsVMV promoter
<400> 20
aagcttccag aaggtaatta tccaagatgt agcatcaaga atccaatgtt tacgggaaaa 60
actatggaag tattatgtga gctcagcaag aagcagatca atatgcggca catatgcaac 120
ctatgttcaa aaatgaagaa tgtacagata caagatccta tactgccaga atacgaagaa 180
gaatacgtag aaattgaaaa agaagaacca ggcgaagaaa agaatcttga agacgtaagc 240
actgacgaca acaatgaaaa gaagaagata aggtcggtga ttgtgaaaga gacatagagg 300
acacatgtaa ggtggaaaat gtaagggcgg aaagtaacct tatcacaaac gaatcttatc 360
ccccactact tatcctttta tatttttccg tgtcattttt gcccttgagt tttcctatat 420
aaggaaccaa gttcggcatt tgtgaaaaca agaaaaaatt tggtgtaagc tattttcttt 480
gaagtactga ggatacaact tcagagaaat ttgtaagttt gtagatctcg attctaga 538
atg gcc tgc acc aac aac gcc atg agg gcc ctc ttc ctc ctc gtg ctc 586
Met Ala Cys Thr Asn Asn Ala Met Arg Ala Leu Phe Leu Leu Val Leu
1 5 10 15
ttc tgc atc gtg cac ggc gat aag ctt atc ggt tcc tgc gtg tgg ggt 634
Phe Cys Ile Val His Gly Asp Lys Leu Ile Gly Ser Cys Val Trp Gly
20 25 30
gct gtg aac tac act tcc gat tgc aac ggt gag tgc aag agg agg ggt 682
Ala Val Asn Tyr Thr Ser Asp Cys Asn Gly Glu Cys Lys Arg Arg Gly
35 40 45
tac aag ggt ggt cac tgc ggt tcc ttc gct aac gtg aac tgc tgg tgc 730
Tyr Lys Gly Gly His Cys Gly Ser Phe Ala Asn Val Asn Cys Trp Cys
50 55 60
gag act tgac tcgagggggg gcccggtacc ggatccaatt cccgatcgtt 780
Glu thre
65
caaacatttg gcaataaagt ttcttaagat tgaatcctgt tgccggtctt gcgatgatta 840
tcatataatt tctgttgaat tacgttaagc atgtaataat taacatgtaa tgcatgacgt 900
tatttatgag atgggttttt atgattagac tcccgcaatt atacatttaa tacgcgatag 960
aaaacaaaat atagcgcgca aactaggata aattatcgcg cgcggtgtca tctatgttac 1020
tagatcgggg atcgat 1036
<210> 21
<211> 52
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 21
agcttggata aaagagacaa gttgattggc agctgtgttt ggggcgccgt ca 52
<210> 22
<211> 56
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 22
agtgtagttg acggcgcccc aaacacagct gccaatcaac ttgtctcttt tatcca 56
<210> 23
<211> 52
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 23
actacactag tgactgcaac ggcgagtgca agcgccgcgg ttacaagggt gg 52
<210> 24
<211> 52
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 24
cacaatggcc acccttgtaa ccgcggcgct tgcactcgcc gttgcagtca ct 52
<210> 25
<211> 56
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 25
ccattgtgga tccttcgcta acgttaactg ttggtgtgaa acctgatagg tcgaca 56
<210> 26
<211> 52
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 26
gatctgtcga cctatcaggt ttcacaccaa cagttaacgt tagcgaagga tc 52
<210> 27
<211> 42
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 27
gatccttcgc taacgttaac tgttggtgta gaacctgata gg 42
<210> 28
<211> 42
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 28
tcgacctatc aggttctaca ccaacagtta acgttagcga ag 42
<210> 29
<211> 32
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 29
ctagtgactg caacggcgag tgcttgttgc gc 32
<210> 30
<211> 26
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 30
gcaacaagca ctcgccgttg cagtca 26
<210> 31
<211> 32
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 31
ctagtgactg cgctgctgag tgcaagcggc gc 32
<210> 32
<211> 26
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 32
gccgcttgca ctcagcaggg cagtca 26
<210> 33
<211> 40
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 33
agcttggata aaagagctgc tgctgctggt agctgtgttt 40
<210> 34
<211> 18
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 34
ggggcgccgt caactaca 18
<210> 35
<211> 22
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 35
ctagtgtagt tgacggcgcc cc 22
<210> 36
<211> 36
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 36
aaacacagct accagcagca gcagctcttt tatcca 36
<210> 37
<211> 32
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 37
ctagtgactg cgctgctgag tgcttgttgc gc 32
<210> 38
<211> 26
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown
<220>
<223> ORGANISM IS UNKNOWN
<400> 38
gcaacaagca ctcagcagcg cagtca 26
The subject of the invention is a novel cysteine-rich peptide called heliomycin, its use as a medicament and a composition containing the same, a DNA sequence encoding the peptide, a vector containing the same for transformation of a host organism and a transformation of said organism. It is about a method.
The present invention relates more specifically to heliomycin produced from transformed plants which confer plant resistance to plant cells and plant transformation, disease, and in particular to heliomycin derived from fungi.
In order to protect the environment, there is an increasing need for plants to be resistant to diseases, especially fungal diseases, in order to circumvent the need to reduce or use treatment with antifungal protective agents. One way to increase this resistance to disease is to transform the plant so that the plant produces a substance that can provide its own defense against this disease.
In the field of human health, opportunistic fungal infections occur because no effective treatment of sedation currently exists. In particular, this is the case for certain severe invasive filamentous fungi in which the immune system affects hospital patients who are suppressed after transplantation, chemotherapy or HIV infection. Compared with antimicrobial accumulation, the current range of antifungal agents is very limited. Therefore, there is a real need for the characterization and development of new classes of antifungal substances.
Various substances of natural origin, in particular peptides, are known which exhibit bactericidal or fungicidal properties against fungi associated with plant diseases in particular. However, the first problem lies in finding substances that can be produced by transformed plants as well as which can be given to these plants while preserving their bactericidal or fungicidal properties. In the present invention, bactericidal or fungicidal means actual bactericidal or fungicidal and bactericidal or bacteriostatic properties.
Cysteine-rich peptides that are bactericidal or bacteriostatic but not fungicidal or bacteriostatic are also known. Another problem is to find cysteine rich peptides which show high fungicidal or fungicidal properties compared to the prior art peptides.
Heliomycin is a peptide isolated from the hemolymph of lepidopteron Heliothis virescens, which is fungicidal against fungi associated with plant diseases and fungi of human or animal pathology. After first synthesizing a gene for heliomycin, it is inserted into a host organism, such as yeast or plant, to express heliomycin, produce purified or unpurified heliomycin, or to a fungal disease in the host organism. It has been found that by imparting the properties of resistance to, it can provide a particularly advantageous solution to the above mentioned problems.
Therefore, the subject matter of the present invention firstly comprises heliomycin, its medicament or its use in agrochemistry for the protection of plants, compositions containing the same, nucleic acid fragments encoding heliomycin, said fragments encoding heliomycin and heterologous regulatory elements. Chimeric genes contained at the 5 'and 3' positions capable of functioning in host organisms, particularly yeast or plants, and vectors for transforming host organisms containing such chimeric genes, and transformed host organisms. It also relates to transformed plant cells containing one or more nucleic acid fragments encoding heliomycin and plants which are resistant to diseases containing such cells, in particular regenerated by said cells. Finally, the present invention relates to a method for transforming a plant, wherein the gene encoding heliomycin is inserted by a suitable vector so that the plant is resistant to disease. It also relates to methods of making heliomycin with transformed host organisms.
In the present invention, heliomycin means any peptide which essentially contains the peptide sequence of the following formula (I).
Xaa-Cys-Xab-Cys-Xac-Cys-Xad-Cys-Xae-Cys-Xaf-Cys-Xag
Food,
Xaa is a peptide moiety containing -NH 2 or 1 to 10 amino acids, preferably 1 to 6 amino acids,
Xab is a peptide residue containing 1 to 10 amino acids, preferably 10 amino acids,
Xac is a peptide residue of three amino acids,
Xad is a peptide residue containing 1 to 9 amino acids, preferably 9 amino acids,
Xae is a peptide residue containing 1 to 7 amino acids, preferably 7 amino acids,
Xaf is a peptide residue of 1 amino acid,
Xag is -OH or a peptide residue containing 1 to 5 amino acids, preferably 1 or 2 amino acids.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, Xaa contains at least one basic amino acid and / or Xad contains at least one basic amino acid. Advantageously, Xad contains 1,2,3 or 4 basic amino acids.
Advantageously, Xad represents the following peptide sequence -Lys-Xad'-Xad'-Gly-His-, wherein Xad 'represents a peptide residue of 1 basic amino acid and Xad' represents 0-5 amino acids, preferably Preferably a peptide residue containing 5 amino acids.
In the present invention, the basic amino acid more specifically means an amino acid selected from lysine, arginine or homoarginine.
Preferably, Xad represents the following peptide sequence: -Lys-Arg-Arg-Gly-Tyr-Lys-Gly-Gly-His- or Leu-Leu-Arg-Gly-Tyr-Lys-Gly-Gly-His -.
According to another preferred embodiment of the invention, Xac contains one or more acidic amino acids, preferably one amino acid.
Advantageously, Xac represents the following peptide sequence: -Asn-Xac'-Xac 'wherein Xac' represents a peptide residue of one amino acid and Xac 'represents a peptide residue of one acidic amino acid.
Acidic amino acid in the present invention means any amino acid on the side chain which contains an organic acid functional group, more specifically a carboxylic acid selected from glutamic acid (Glu) or aspartic acid (Asp).
Preferably, Xac represents the following peptide sequence: -Asn-Gly-Glu- or Ala-Ala-Glu-.
Advantageously, Xaa represents the following peptide sequence: Xaa'-Gly-Xaa 'wherein Xaa' represents NH 2 or a peptide residue containing 1 to 9 amino acids, preferably 1 to 5 amino acids , Xaa 'represents a peptide residue containing at least one amino acid, preferably an amino acid selected from Leu, Ile, Val, Pro, Ser or Thr,
Xab represents the following peptide sequence:-Val-Xab'-Asp-, wherein Xab 'represents a peptide residue containing 0 to 8 amino acids, preferably 8 amino acids, and / or
Xae represents the following peptide sequence: -Gly-Xae'-Asn-, wherein Xae 'represents a peptide residue containing 0-5 amino acids, preferably 5 amino acids, and / or
Xaf represents one of -Trp-, Phe, Leu, Ile or Val amino acids, and / or
Xag represents the peptide sequence -Glu-Xag ', wherein Xag' represents various residues having a OH or a sequence containing 1 to 4 amino acids, preferably 1 amino acid.
According to a more preferred embodiment of the invention, Xaa represents the peptide sequence NH 2 -Asp-Lys-Leu-Ile-Gly-Ser- or NH 2 -Ala-Ala-Ala-Ala-Gly-Ser, and / or Xab Represents the peptide sequence -Val-Trp-Gly-Ala-Val-Asn-Tyr-Thr-Ser-Asp- and / or Xae represents the peptide sequence -Gly-Ser-Phe-Ala-Asn-Val-Asn- Or Xaf represents amino acid -Trp- and / or Xag represents peptide sequence -Glu-Thr-OH or -Arg-Thr-OH.
According to a more preferred embodiment of the present invention, the heliomycin has a sequence identifier No. 2 (SEQ ID NO 2) as its coding sequence. Sequence identifier No. The same sequence corresponding to amino acids 6 to 49 of 1 (SEQ ID NO 1) is described.
NH 2 -terminal residues may exhibit post-translational mutations such as acetylation, and likewise C-terminal residues may exhibit post-translational mutations such as amidation.
Peptide sequences containing essentially the peptide sequences of formula (I) include sequences as described above as well as those containing peptide residues necessary for their expression and targeting at the host organism at one or both ends thereof. it means. By host organism is meant any organism, microorganism, in particular yeast or bacteria, or alternatively higher organisms such as plant cells or plants, containing one or more cells.
This may in particular be a "peptide-heliomycin" fusion peptide in which the aforementioned heliomycin is released by cleavage by the enzymatic system of the host organism. Peptides fused with heliomycin may modulate and orient the production of heliomycin in a particular manner, for example in the cytoplasm, in part of a host organism such as a cell membrane, or in the case of plants, in certain types of cell compartments or tissues or in an extracellular matrix. May be a signal peptide or a transit peptide.
According to one embodiment, the transit peptide can be a signal for chloroplast or mitochondrial homing, which is later cleaved at chloroplast or mitochondria.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the signal peptide is an N-terminal signal or "prepeptide", or a peptide for fear homing, optionally in combination with a signal involved in the retention of the protein in endoplasmic reticulum. Propeptide ". Endogenous reticulum is a site performed by a "cell machinery" to work for processing the resulting protein, such as cleavage of signal peptides.
Transit peptides may be single or double, in this case optionally separated by an intervening sequence, ie, in the direction of transcription, the sequence encoding the transit peptide of the plant gene encoding the plastid localization enzyme, the plastid local A portion of the sequence of the N-terminal mature portion of the plant gene encoding the enzymatic enzyme and then the sequence encoding the second transit peptide of the plant gene encoding the plastid localization enzyme may be contained as described in application EP 0 508 909. have.
As transit peptides useful in the present invention, particularly if heliomycin is produced by a plant cell or plant, the sequence identifier No. Mention may be made of signal peptides of the tobacco PR-1α gene described by Cornelissen et al., Represented by the coding sequence 2, or precursors of the factor Mat α1 when heliomycin is produced in yeast.
The fusion peptide “MFα1 / heliomycin” and its coding sequence having a fusion peptide of five residues of the propeptide of the factor MFα1 (Ser-Leu-Asp-Lys-Arg) located at the N-terminal position are part of the present invention. It forms in particular the sequence ID No. 1 (SEQ ID NO 1) and corresponds to amino acids 1-49.
The “PR-1α signal peptide-heliomycin” fusion peptide and its coding sequence are also part of the present invention, in particular the sequence identifier No. 3 (SEQ ID NO 3).
The fusion peptide “PG1 signal peptide / heliomycin” containing the signal peptide of the corn polygalacturonase PG1 gene fused with heliomycin is encoded by the sequences Identifiers No 18 and 20 (SEQ ID NO 18 and 20). Shown in sequence.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the cysteine residue of the peptide of formula (I) forms an intramolecular disulfide bridge, preferably three disulfide bridges. According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the disulfide bridge is established between cysteine residues 1 and 4, 2 and 5, and 3 and 6.
Heliomycin is a peptide that is particularly active against fungi and yeast, which can be used as such to prophylactically or therapeutically protect various organisms against fungal attack. The present invention therefore relates to heliomycin as a medicament. It also relates to the use of heliomycin to treat plants against fungal attack by applying heliomycin directly to plants.
The invention also relates to a composition containing heliomycin and a suitable vehicle. The first quality of a suitable vehicle is one that does not substantially degrade heliomycin in the composition and does not reduce the bactericidal and fungicidal properties of heliomycin. The composition may be a cosmetic composition, in which case the suitable vehicle is cosmetically acceptable (also suitable for application to the skin or exoskeleton), or it may be a therapeutic pharmaceutical composition, in which case the suitable vehicle is pharmaceutical Acceptable and suitable for the administration of heliomycin by local oral route or injection, or alternatively may be an agrochemical composition, in which case a suitable vehicle is agrochemically acceptable and is suitable for application without harming the plant or plant vicinity It is suitable.
The present invention also relates to DNA encoding the aforementioned heliomycin, in particular natural or synthetic, including nucleic acid fragments, “peptide-heliomycin” fusion peptides. This may be a fragment synthesized according to the invention or isolated from Repideteron heliotis, or alternatively a derived fragment suitable for the expression of heliomycin in the host organism in which the peptide will be expressed. Nucleic acid fragments can be obtained synthetically according to standard isolation and purification methods, or alternatively according to conventional methods of continuous hybridization of synthetic oligonucleotides. This technique is described in particular by Ausbel et al.
In the present invention, “nucleic acid fragment” means a nucleotide sequence which may be of DNA or RNA type, preferably of DNA type, in particular double stranded.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the nucleic acid fragment encoding heliomycin is selected from the sequence identifier No. Bases 16 to 147 of SEQ ID NO: 1, or SEQ ID NO: DNA sequences described as 2 (SEQ ID NO 2), in particular coding portions, homologous sequences, or complementary sequences to those sequences corresponding to bases 1 to 132.
According to another embodiment of the invention, a nucleic acid fragment encoding a "peptide-heliomycin" fusion peptide is selected from the sequence identifier No. DNA sequence or sequence identifier No. 1 described as SEQ ID NO 1 (SEQ ID NO 1). 3 (SEQ ID NO 3), the coding portion or sequence identifier corresponding to bases 3 to 224, in particular. 18 (SEQ ID NO 18), particularly the coding portion corresponding to bases 7-205, homologous sequences or sequences complementary to those sequences.
In the present invention, the expression "homology" refers to the sequence identifier No. By a nucleic acid fragment that exhibits one or more sequence variations associated with nucleotides described by 1, 2 or 3, and that encodes a heliomycin or “peptide-heliomycin” fusion peptide. Such variations can be obtained by selecting synthetic oligonucleotides for use in the preparation of such sequences according to conventional mutation techniques, or alternatively by hybridization. In view of multiple combinations of nucleic acids that can result in expression of identical amino acids, the sequence identifier No. The difference between the reference sequence described as 1,2 or 3 and the corresponding homologue can be substantial, since it involves small DNA fragments that can be produced by chemical synthesis.
Advantageously, the degree of homology will be at least 70%, preferably 80%, more preferably 90% as compared to the reference sequence. Such variations are usually neutral, ie they do not affect the primary sequence of the resulting heliomycin or fusion peptide.
The invention also relates to chimeric genes (or expression cassettes) containing coding sequences and heterologous regulatory elements at the 5 'and 3' positions capable of functioning in host organisms, in particular plant cells or plants, the coding sequence being helio It contains one or more DNA fragments encoding superstitions or “peptide-heliomycin” fusion peptides as described above. By host organism is meant any lower or higher, single or multicellular organism into which a chimeric gene according to the invention can be introduced for the production of heliomycin. These include, in particular, bacteria such as Escherichia coli, yeast, especially Saccharomyces or Kluyveromyces, Pichia genus, fungi, in particular Aspergillus, baculovirus, or Preferably plant cells and plants are included.
"Plant cell" in the present invention means any cell that is derived from a plant and can constitute an undifferentiated tissue such as kali, a differentiated tissue such as a pear, a plant part, a plant or a seed.
"Plant" in the present invention refers to any differentiated multicellular organism capable of photosynthesis, in particular monocot or bilobal plants, more specifically intended crop plants or corn, wheat, rapeseed, soybeans, rice, sugar cane, It means crop plants as animal or human food such as beet, tobacco, cotton, and the like.
Regulatory elements necessary for the expression of DNA fragments encoding heliomycin are well known to those skilled in the art depending on the host organism. These include in particular promoter sequences, transcriptional activators, terminator sequences (including initiation and termination codons). Means and methods for identifying and selecting regulatory elements are well known to those skilled in the art.
In the transformation of microorganisms such as yeast or bacteria, regulatory elements are known to those skilled in the art and in particular contain promoter sequences, transcriptional activators, transit peptides, terminator sequences and start and end codons.
To control expression and secretion of peptides in yeast culture medium, DNA fragments encoding heliomycin were incorporated into shuttle vectors containing the following elements:
Markers that enable selection of transformants. Preferably, the ura-3 gene is used for yeast and the gene that confers resistance to ampicillin is used for E. coli.
Nucleic acid sequences that allow for replication (replicating origin) of the plasmid in yeast. Preferably, the replication origin of the yeast 2i plasmid is used.
Nucleic acid sequences that allow for replication (replicating origin) of the plasmid in Escherichia coli,
An expression cassette consisting of:
(1) promoter regulatory sequences. Promoter sequences of genes naturally expressed in yeast can be used. Preferably S. The promoter of the S. cerevisiae Mfα1 gene is used.
(2) a sequence encoding a signal peptide (or prepeptide) in combination with a homing peptide (or propeptide). This region is important for accurate secretion of peptides. Preferably, sequences encoding the pre-pro-peptides of the precursors of factor Mfα1 are used.
(3) polyadenylation or terminator regulatory sequences. Preferably, terminators of S. cerevisiae phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) are used. In the expression cassette, the sequence encoding heliomycin is inserted downstream of the pre-pro sequence and upstream of the PGK terminator.
Such elements have been described in several documents [Reichhart et al., 1992, Invert. Reprod. Deu., 21, pp 15-24 and Michaut et al., 1996, FEBS Letters, 395, pp 6-10].
Preferably, yeast of S. cerevisiae species is transformed with an expression plasmid by the lithium acetate method (Ito et al., 1993, J. Bacteriol, 153, pp 163-168). Transformed yeast is selected on selective agar medium that does not contain uracil. Mass production of the transformed yeast is carried out by incubating for 24 to 48 hours in selective liquid medium.
The transformation of microorganisms makes it possible to produce heliomycin on a large scale. Therefore, the present invention also provides a method for preparing heliomycin, comprising culturing a transformed microorganism containing a gene encoding heliomycin as described above in a suitable culture medium, and then extracting part or all of the obtained heliomycin. It is about.
Preferably, during extraction of heliomycin produced by yeast, the yeast is removed by centrifugation and the culture supernatant is contacted with an acidic solution, which may be a solution of an inorganic or organic acid such as, for example, hydrochloric acid or acetic acid. The obtained extract is then centrifuged at 4000 to 10,000 rpm, 4 ° C., 30 to 60 minutes at cold temperature.
Purification of heliomycin may be preceded by fractionation of the supernatant obtained after the extraction step. Preferably, during the step of fractionation, the extract is deposited by reverse phase to effect solid extraction. The washing of molecules that can be dissolved in water is carried out with a dilute acidic solution and the elution of hydrophobic molecules with a suitable eluent. Good results are obtained by eluents containing increased amounts of acetonitrile in washing trifluoroacetic acid and diluted acid solution.
Preferably, purification of heliomycin is carried out in two steps: reverse phase HPLC after cation exchange HPLC with a suitable eluent which may be different or the same as the eluent of the preceding step. Various steps of purification are monitored by testing for inhibition of fungal growth in liquid medium. Preferably, the test is carried out with a fungal neurospora crassa.
The sequence of heliomycin produced by the transformed yeast is analyzed according to the method of ed sequencing and sequencing by mass spectroscopy. Structural characterization is performed directly on the resulting peptides, peptides mutated by reduction / alkylation and fragments of peptides. The peptide sequence and molecular weight of the resulting heliomycin are H. Compared with that of natural heliomycin extracted from hemolymph of nonresense. The results show that the two molecules have the same primary structure. The determination of the position of the disulfide bridge is the same in the arrangement of the disulfide bridge in both peptides, natural peptides and peptides produced by the transformed microorganism.
The present invention more specifically relates to plant transformation. As a promoter regulatory sequence in plants, any of the promoter sequences of genes naturally expressed in plants, in particular of promoters of bacterial, viral or plant origin, such as ribulose-biscarboxylase / oxygenase (RuBisCO) Using a promoter sequence of a gene for a bovine subunit, or a promoter sequence of a plant virus, such as the promoter sequence of a cowley flower mosaic (19S or 35S CAMV), or a promoter that can be induced by a pathogen such as tobacco PR-1α. It is possible and it is possible to use any known suitable promoter. Preferably, promoter control sequences are used which are induced by attack by a pathogen such as, for example, containing one or more histone promoters as described in application EP 0,507,698 or which essentially promote overexpression of the coding sequence.
According to the invention, together with a promoter regulatory sequence, a transcriptional activator (enhancer) such as a translational activator of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) described in application WO 87/07644, or tobacco etch virus (TEV) described by Carrington & Fried. It is possible to use other regulatory sequences located between the promoter and the coding sequence, such as a translational activator of.
As a polyadenylation or terminator regulatory sequence, any corresponding sequence of bacterial origin, such as Agrobacterium tumefaciens nos terminator, or otherwise a corresponding sequence of plant origin, such as an application Histone terminators as described in EP 0,633,317 can be used.
According to the present invention, chimeric genes can also be combined with selectable markers suitable for transformed host organisms. Such selectable markers are known to those skilled in the art. This may include genes that are resistant to antibiotics, or alternatively genes that are able to withstand plant herbicides.
The invention also relates to expression vectors or cloning for transformation of host organisms containing one or more chimeric genes as described above. Such vectors contain one or more origins of replication, in addition to the chimeric genes described above. Such vectors consist of plasmids, cosmids, bacteriophages or viruses, which can be transformed by the introduction of chimeric genes according to the invention. Depending on the host organism to be transformed, such transformation vectors are known to those skilled in the art and are described extensively in the literature.
For the transformation of plant cells or plants, this may in particular be used for the transformation of the developing plant and may include viruses which also contain their own elements for replication and expression. Preferably, the vector for transforming a plant cell or plant according to the invention is a plasmid.
Subject of the present invention is also a method of transforming a host organism, in particular plant cells by incorporation of one or more nucleic acid fragments or chimeric genes as described above, which transformation is carried out in certain documents and in particular in the references cited in the present application. By any suitable known means as broadly described in the above, it can be obtained in particular using a vector according to the invention.
A series of methods is to bambarding cells, protoplasts or tissues with particles to which DNA sequences are attached. Another set of methods utilizes chimeric genes inserted into Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti or Agrobacterium lysogen Ri plasmids as a means of transferring to plants.
Other methods such as microinjection or electroporation may be used, or alternatively direct precipitation with PEG.
Those skilled in the art will select the appropriate method depending on the nature of the host organism, in particular plant cells or cells.
Subject of the invention is also a host organism, in particular a plant cell or plant, which contains an effective amount of a chimeric gene, in particular transformed and containing a coding sequence for heliomycin described above.
Subject of the invention are also plants containing transformed cells, in particular plants regenerated from transformed cells. Regeneration is obtained by any suitable means depending on the nature of the species, as described by way of example in the above references.
In the transformation of plant cells and the regeneration of plants, mention may be made in particular of the following patents and patent applications: US 4,459,355, US 4,536,475, US 5,464,763, US 5,177,010, US 5,187,073, EP 267,159, EP 604,662, EP 672,752, US4, 945,050, US 5,036,006, US 5,100,792, US 5,371,014, US 5,478,744, US 5,179,022, US 5,565,346, US 5,484,956, US 5,508,468, US 5,538,877, US5,554,798, US 5,538,877, US5,554,798, US 5,489,520, US 5,510,318, US 5,204,253, EP 5,405,233 , EP 486,234, EP 539, 563, EP 674, 725, WO 91/02701 and WO 95/06128.
The present invention also relates to transformed plants and seeds of transformed plants derived from the culture and / or hybridization of said regenerated plants.
Such transformed plants are resistant to certain diseases, in particular to certain fungal or bacterial diseases. As a result, the DNA sequence encoding heliomycin can be incorporated into the main purpose of producing plants resistant to the disease, and heliomycin can be used in cercospora, in particular Cercospora beticola, Cladosporium, in particular Cladosporium herbarum, Fusarium, in particular Fusarium culmorum or Fusarium graminearum or fusarium It is effective against fungal diseases such as those caused by Phytophthora, in particular Phytophthora cinnamomi.
Chimeric genes may also advantageously contain one or more selectable markers, such as one or more genes resistant to herbicides.
DNA sequences encoding heliomycin may also be integrated as selectable markers during plant transformation with other peptides or other sequences encoding the protein of interest, such as genes resistant to herbicides.
Such genes that are resistant to herbicides are known to those skilled in the art and are described in particular in patent applications EP 115,673, WO 87/04181, EP 337,899, WO 96/38567 or WO 97/04103.
Of course, the transformed cells and plants according to the present invention may, in addition to the sequences encoding heliomycin, be used to encode proteins of interest, such as other additional peptides that can confer resistance to plants against other diseases of bacterial or fungal origin. It may contain heterologous sequences and / or other sequences encoding proteins resistant to herbicides and / or other sequences encoding proteins resistant to insects, such as, in particular, Bt proteins.
Other sequences may be integrated by the same vector containing the chimeric gene, which contains a first sequence encoding heliomycin and one or more other sequences encoding other peptides or proteins of interest.
It may also be incorporated by another vector containing at least said other sequence according to the conventional techniques described above.
The plant according to the invention is also obtained by hybridizing a parent carrying a gene according to the invention, one encoding heliomycin and the other carrying a gene encoding one or more other peptides or proteins of interest. can do.
Among the sequences encoding other antifungal peptides, drosomemycin is described in patent application FR 2,725,992 and described by Felbaum et al. (1994), and described in published patent application FR 97 09115 (application 17.7.24). Or sequences encoding androtonin described in patent application FR 2,745,004 and described in published patent application FR 97 10362 (filed Aug. 20, 1997).
The present invention finally relates to a method of culturing a transformed plant according to the present invention, which method is planted in a small compartment suitable for cultivating the seed of the transformed plant, wherein the agrochemical composition is Application without substantially affecting the transformed plant or said seed, followed by harvesting the cultured plant when the plant has reached the desired maturity, and separating the seed from the optionally ripened plant.
An agrochemical composition in the present invention means any agrochemical composition containing at least one active product having one of the following activities: herbicides, fungi, fungicides, viricides or pesticides.
According to a preferred embodiment of the culturing method according to the invention, the agrochemical composition supplements the activity of heliomycin produced by a plant transformed according to the invention, more preferably having one or more fungicidal and / or bactericidal properties. It contains one or more active products that exhibit normal activity.
In the present invention, a product showing complementary activity to the activity of heliomycin is a product having a complementary activity spectrum, that is, a product that is active against attack of contaminants (fungi, bacteria or viruses) that are not sensitive to heliomycin, or otherwise By activity spectrum is meant that the product completely or partially covers the activity of heliomycin and the applied amount is substantially reduced due to the presence of heliomycin produced by the transformed plant.
The following examples illustrate the invention without limiting its scope.
Example I Isolation and Characterization of Heliomycin from Hemolymph Collected from Immunized Larvae of Staphylococcus Insect H. Viresense
Example I.1 Separation
1-1 Induction of Biological Synthesis of Antifungal Substances in H. Virescens Hemolymph
Gram-positive and Gram-negative (E) prepared by incubating the fifth stage mature larvae of H. virescens for 12 hours at 37 ° C. in Lauria-Bertani medium. coli 1106) was immunized with a needle (30 ga) that had previously been inserted into a pellet of bacteria. These infected animals were individually maintained at 20-23 ° C. for 24 hours in tubes containing agar-based nutrient medium. Prior to collecting the hemolymph, the larvae were cooled on ice.
1-2 Preparation of Plasma
Hemolymph (approximately 30 il per larva) is collected by ablation of the abdominal appendages, cooled on ice, aprotinin (final concentration 20 ig / ml) as protease inhibitor and phenylthiourea (final concentration 20 im) as melanogenesis inhibitor ) Were harvested into 1.5 ml polypropylene microcentrifuge tubes containing). Blood lymphocytes collected from immunized larvae (2 ml) were centrifuged at 14.000 g for 1 minute at 4 ° C to remove blood cells. Hemolymphs without blood cells were stored at -20 ° C until use.
1-3 Acidification of Plasma
After rapid thawing, H. virescens plasma was acidified with 1% trifluoro acetic acid solution to pH 3. Under acidic conditions, extraction of the peptides was carried out on an ice cooled bath under slow stirring for 30 minutes. The obtained extract was centrifuged at 10,000 g at 4 ° C. for 30 minutes.
1-4 Purification of Peptides
a) pre-purification by solid phase extraction
The same amount of extract in 2 ml of hemolymph was placed on a reversed phase support (commercially available in cartridge form (Sep-Pak C 18 , Waters Associates)) equilibrated with acidified water (0.05%). Hydrophilic molecules were removed by simple washing with acidified water. Elution of the peptide was performed with 40% acetonitrile solution prepared in 0.05% TFA. The section eluted in 40% acetonitrile was dried by removing acetonitrile and TFA under vacuum and then restored in sterile ultrahigh purity water before the first purification step.
b) Purification by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) in reverse phase column
First step: compartments containing peptides were analyzed by reverse phase chromatography on Aquapore RP-300 C8 semi-preparation column (Brownlee , 220 × 70 mm, 300 mm 3) and elution was carried out at a constant flow rate of 1.5 ml / min. This was done using a linear gradient of 2% to 60% acetonitrile in 0.05% TFA over minutes. The sections were harvested by hand and the change in absorbance at 225 nm and 254 nm was measured. The combined compartments were dried under vacuum, restored to ultrapure water and analyzed for antifungal activity using the test described below.
Second step: using a biphasic linear gradient of acetonitrile from 2% to 22% over 10 minutes and from 22% to 32% over 50 minutes in 0.05% TFA at a constant flow rate of 0.8 ml / min, Antifungal compartments according to peptides were analyzed on an Aquapore RP-300 C 8 reversed phase analysis column. The sections were harvested by hand and the change in absorbance at 225 nm and 254 nm was measured. The combined compartments were dried under vacuum, restored to ultrapure water and analyzed for antifungal activity using the test described below.
Third step: at a controlled temperature of 30 ° C., in a 0.05% TFA at a constant flow rate of 0.25 ml / min, above 2% to 24% over 10 minutes and 24% to 44% over 100 minutes of acetonitrile ( Using a biphasic linear gradient, the antifungal compartments according to the peptides were uniformly purified on a Delta-Pak HPIC 18 reversed phase column (Waters Associates, 150 × 2.2 mm). The sections were harvested by hand and the change in absorbance at 225 nm was measured. The combined compartments were dried under vacuum and restored to filtered ultra high purity water and antifungal activity was analyzed using the test described below.
Example I.2: Peptide Structural Properties
2-1 Purification by band capillary electrophoresis
The purity of the antifungal peptides was confirmed by band capillary electrophoresis on a 270-HT model (PEApplied Biosystems division of Perkin Elmer). A 50 iM solution of 1 nl of purified peptide was injected into the silica capillary (72 cm x 50 im) in vacuo and the assay was performed in 20 mM citrate buffer at pH 2.5. Electrophoresis was performed at 30 ° C. for 20 minutes from anode to cathode at 20 kV. Shifts were recorded at 200 nm.
2-2 Determination of Cysteine Number: Reduction and S-pyridylethylation
The number of cysteine residues was determined for native peptides by reduction and S-pyridylethylation. 100 pmol of native peptide is reduced in pH 7.5, 40 il 0.5 M Tris-HCl buffer, containing 2 mM EDTA and 6 M guadinium chloride in the presence of 2 il 2.2 M dithiothreitol. The reaction medium is placed under nitrogen atmosphere. After 60 min incubation in the dark, 2 il fresh distilled 4-vinylpyridine is added to the reaction and incubated for 10 min at 45 ° C. in the dark under nitrogen atmosphere. Pyridylethylated peptide is separated from the components of the reaction medium by weak chromatography using a linear gradient of acetonitrile in the presence of 0.05% TFA.
2-3 Determination of mass of native peptides, S-pyridylethylated peptides, and proteolytic fragments by Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry
Mass measurements were performed in a positive linear mode on a Bruker Biflex MALDI-TOF mass spectrometer (Bremen, Germany). The mass spectrometer was externally calibrated with standard mixtures of known m / z peptides, 2199.5 Da, 3046.4 Da, and 4890.5 Da, respectively. Several products to be analyzed were placed in the α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid crystals of the thin film obtained by rapid evaporation of a solution saturated with ethanol. After drying under moderate vacuum, the sample was washed dropwise with 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid before introduction into the mass spectrum.
2-4 Sequencing by Edman Degradation
Automated sequencing by Edman degradation of native peptides, S-pyridylethylated peptides and fragments obtained after various proteolysiss and detection of phenylthiohydantoin derivatives was performed in a ABI473A sequencer (PEApplied Biosystems division of Perkin Elmer) It was.
2-5 Proteolytic Cleavage
The conformation of the peptide sequence at the C-terminal site
5 pmol of endoproteinase-Lys- according to the conditions recommended by the supplier (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 9) in the presence of 0.01 ptr 20, 200 pmol reduced and S-pyridylethylated peptide. Incubated in the presence of C (Acromobacter protease I, specific cleavage of lysine residues in the C-terminal direction, Otsu). After terminating the reaction with 1% TFA, peptide fragments were 0.05% TFA at a constant flow rate of 0.2 ml / min at a constant temperature of 37 ° C. on a Narrowbore Delta-Pak HPLC type 18 column (Waters Assocoates 150 × 2 mm). Isolated by reverse phase HPLC using a linear gradient of 2% to 60% acetonitrile over 80 minutes. The obtained fragments were analyzed by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and the peptidis according to the C-terminal fragments were sequenced by Edman digestion.
-Determination of the arrangement of disulfide bridges by proteolysis with thermolysin
The native peptide (8 ig) was added at pH 7, 0.1 M MES (N-ethyl) at 37 ° C. in the presence of 4 ig of termolysin (Boehringer Mannheim, thermolysin / peptide ratio, 1/2 weight: weight) for 1 hour. Morpholine) incubation in the presence of 2 mM CaCl 2 . The reaction was terminated by addition of formic acid and 2% over 10 minutes in 0.05% TFA at a constant flow rate of 0.2 ml / min at 30 ° C. on a Narrowbore Delta-Pak HPLC 18 column (Waters Assocoates, 150 × 2 mm). After the isocratic step with acetonitrile, the reaction product was immediately separated by reverse phase HPLC with a linear gradient of 2% to 50% acetonitrile over 100 minutes. The obtained fragments were analyzed by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and the peptidis according to the C-terminal fragments were sequenced by Edman digestion.
Example II Expression of Heliomycin in East Saccharyces serevisiae
All techniques used below are standard laboratory techniques. Detailed protocols for this technique are described in particular in Ausubel et al.
Example III Combination of Synthetic Genes
The combination was performed using six synthetic oligonucleotides encoding 44 amino acids after the 5 C-terminal amino acid of the pre-sequence sequence of yeast factor α1 (Mfα1). The oligonucleotides shown in FIG. 1 were selected in consideration of the preferred codons used by S. cerevisiae.
The combination takes place in several steps:
Oligonucleotides 2 to 5 are phosphorylated by the action of polynucleotide kinases (New England Biolabs) at their 5 'ends;
Oligonucleotides 1 to 6 are mixed and hybridized by heating to 100 ° C. and slowly decreasing the temperature to 25 ° C. over 3 hours;
Hybridized oligonucleotides were treated with T4 bacteriophage ligase (New England Biolabs) at 15 ° C. for 15 hours;
DNA units resulting from hybridization of oligonucleotides cleaved by the HinDIII and BglII restriction sites shown in FIG. 1 were inserted into plasmid pBluescript SK + (Stragene) cleaved with the enzymes HinDIII and BamHI (BglII and BamHI are compatible). The ligation reaction mixture was used to transform Compityn E. coli DH5α (Stragene). Several clones were analyzed and sequenced. One of these clones with the desired sequence is called pSEA1.
Example II-2 Preparation of Vector pSEA2 Producing Secreted Synthesized Heliomycin
HinphIII-SalI DNA fragments of vector pSEA1 carrying sequences encoding heliomycin, as well as SphI-HinDIII fragments of the vector M13JM132 (Michaut et al., 1996, FEBS Letters, 395, pp 6-10) were selected from the plasmid pTG4812 (Michaut et al. al., 1996, FEBS Letters, 395, pp 6-10), between the SphI and SalI sites. The SphI-HinDIII segment of the vector M13JM132 comprises the sequence encoding the pre-pre-site of factor MFα1 as well as the sequence of the promoter of the MFα1 gene of yeast. In the resulting plasmid pSEA2, the synthetic gene for heliomycin was inserted between the pre-pre-sequence of factor MFα1 and the transcription terminator; This construct confirms the maturation and secretion of heliomycin.
Example II-3 Transformation and Analysis of Strains of S. cerevisiae with DNA of pSEA2
Yeast strain TGY 48.1 (MATa, ura3-D5, his, pral, prbl, prcl, cps1; reichhart et al., 1992, Invert. Reprod. Dev. 21, pp 15-24) was transformed with plasmid pSEA2. Transformants were selected at 29 ° C. on selective YNBG medium (0.67% yeast nitrogen base, 2% glucose) supplemented with 0.5% casamino acid and not containing uracil. After transformation, several yeast clones selected for ura + properties were incubated at 29 ° C. for 48 hours in 50 ml of selective medium. After centrifugation (4000 g, 30 min, 4 ° C.), the supernatant was acidified with acetic acid to pH 3.5 and placed on a Sep-Pak C 18 cartridge equilibrated with acidified water (0.05% TFA). Several proteins bound to the cartridge were eluted with a solution of 0.05% TFA containing increasing percentage of acetonitrile.
40% compartments showing antifungal activity were collected from 2% over 80 minutes in 0.05% TFA at a constant flow rate of 0.8 ml / min by Aquapore RP-300 C8 reversed phase analytical column (Brownlee , 220 × 4.6 mm, 300 mm 3) HPLC. Analysis using a linear gradient of 40% acetonitrile. The sections were harvested by hand by measuring changes in absorbance at 225 nm and 254 nm. The combined compartments were dried under vacuum, restored to ultrapure water and analyzed for their antifungal activity under the conditions described in Example III. Structural properties of the peptides were performed as described in Example I.2.
Example II-4: Preparation of Recombinant Heliomycin on Semi-Preparation Scale
One clone of the transformed yeast expressing heliomycin was incubated in 100 ml selection medium for 24 hours at 29 ° C. The process was used to inoculate 4 l of selective medium and the incubation was carried out at 29 ° C. for 48 hours. Yeast was recovered by centrifugation (4000 g, 30 minutes, 4 ° C). The supernatant was acidified to pH 3.5 with acetic acid and equilibrated with acidified water (0.05% TFA) before centrifugation (2 g of waters associates, 125 cc, 6 g per 500 ml supernatant) before centrifugation. 4000 g, 30 minutes, 4 ° C). The hydrophilic molecules were removed by washing with acidified water and then washed with a 15% solution of acetonitrile prepared in 0.05% TFA. Elution of the peptide was performed using 40% acetonitrile solution in 0.05% TFA. The section eluted in 40% acetonitrile is lyophilized and then restored to sterile ultrapure water to carry out the first purification step.
First purification by HPLC: The purified compartment containing heliomycin was restored in 25 mM ammonium acetate solution, pH 3.4. The sample was subjected to aquapore cation exchange preparation cation-exchange using a linear gradient of 0% to 100% over 90 minutes in ammonium acetate, pH 3.4, 25 mM at a constant flow rate of 2 ml / min. Injection into a column (Brownlee ™, 250 × 10 mm). The combined sections were dried under vacuum, restored to ultrapure water and their antifungal activity was measured under the conditions described below.
Second step of purification by HPLC: Aquapore RP using heliomycin with a linear gradient of 2% to 40% acetonitrile over 80 minutes in 0.05% TFA at a constant flow rate of 2 ml / min. Purify uniformly by chromatography on a -300 C 8 semi-prepared reversed phase column (Brownlee , 220 × 7 mm, 300 mm 3).
Example III In Vitro Activity Tests: Determination of Antibacterial and Antifungal Activity by Microscopy
The method is used for antifungal activity, determination of the activity spectrum of peptides and determination of the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) at which peptides are active during various purification steps. MIC is represented by the concentration range [a]-[b] which [a] is the minimum density | concentration in which the onset of growth is observed, and [b] is the density | concentration in which growth is not observed. Examples of heliomycin specific activity against filamentous fungi and yeast are shown in Tables 1 and 2.
Example III-1 Detection Test of Activity against Filamentous Fungi
Antifungal activity was detected by testing for inhibition of growth in liquid medium. Spores of the fungi to be tested were suspended in "potato-glucose" type culture medium. Preferably, 12 g of potato dextrose broth medium (Difco) per 1 l of demineralized water was used. Two antibiotics were added to the culture medium: tetracycline (final concentration 10 ig / ml) and cytotaxy (100 ig / ml). Each compartment of 10 il to be analyzed was placed in a microtiter plate in the presence of 90 il culture medium containing spores (final concentration 104 spores / ml). Incubation was carried out in a humid chamber at 30 ° C. for 48 hours. Bacterial growth was observed under an optical microscope for 24 hours and quantified after 48 hours by measuring absorbance at 600 nm using a spectroscopic microtiter tactile device.
Filamentous fungi tested: Aspergillus fumigatus (Dr. H. Koenig, Hopital civil, Strasbourg); Nectria haemotococca, Fusarium culmorum, Trichoderma viride (fungus culture collection of Universite Catholique of Leuven, Belgium); Neurospora crossa, Fusarium oxysporum (fungus culture collection of Societe Clause, Paris).
The results of the heliomycin activity test against filamentous fungi are shown in Table 1 below.
Activity of Heliomycin on Filamentous Fungi Fungus Heliomycin MIC (iM) Nyurospora Crosapusarium Kummorumpusarium Oxysporum Nectar Hamatococatricoderma Birideaspergillus Pumigatus 0.1 to 0.20.2 to 0.41.5 to 30.4 to 0.81.5 to 36 to 12.5
Example III-2 Activity Detection Test for Yeast
Several yeast strains were incubated in “Sabouraud” type culture medium and stirred slowly at 30 ° C. for 24 hours. The test sample (10 il) was placed in a microtiter plate well, to which 90 il of a diluted yeast culture with a density adjusted to OD 600 = 0.001 was added. Growth was measured by measuring absorbance at 600 nm using a spectroscopic microtiter plate meter.
-Yeast tested: Candida albicans, C. glabrata, C. tropicalis, C. krusei, C. inconspicua C. inconspicua, Cryptococcus neoformans, Cryptococcus albidus, Saccharomyces cerevisiae (obtained by Dr H. Koenig, Hopital civil, Strasbourg) ).
Heliomycin activity test results for yeast are shown in Table 2 below.
Heliomycin Activity on Yeast East Heliomycin MIC (iM) Candida Albicans Scandina Tropical Scandinavian Cruzei Candida Inconspicua Cryptococcus Neoforma Scribtococcus Alvidus 2.5 to 52.5 to 510 to 205 to 102.5 to 55 to 10
These results show good antifungal activity of the peptides according to the invention.
Example IV Preparation of Transformed Plants Comprising Genes Encoding Heliomycin
This example describes the preparation of sequences, chimeric genes, combination vectors and transgenic plants that encode heliomycin for expression in plant cells.
2-6 show the schematic structure of some plasmids prepared for the construction of chimeric genes. In these figures, several restriction sites are shown in italics.
All techniques used below are standard laboratory techniques. Detailed protocols for this technique are described in particular in Ausubel et al.
Example IV-1 Preparation of Chimeric Gene for Plant Transformation
pRPA-MD-P: Preparation of a Plasmid Containing a Signal Peptide of the Tobacco PR-1α Gene
Two complementary synthetic oligonucleotides oligo 7 and oligo 8 hybridized at 65 ° C. for 5 minutes and slowly reduced the temperature to 30 ° C. over 30 minutes.
Oligo 7: 5 'GCGTCGACGC GATGGGTTTC GTGCTTTTCT CTCAGCTTCC
ATCTTTCCTT CTTGTGTCTA CTCTTCTTCT TTTCC 3 '
Oligo 8: 5 'TCGCCGGCAC GGCAAGCGTA AGAGATCACA AGGAAAAGAA
GAAGAGTAGA CACAAGAAGG AAAGATGGAA GC 3 '
After hybridization between oligo 7 and oligo 8, for the preparation of double stranded oligonucleotides starting from the 3 'end of each oligo, single stranded DNA was transferred to E. coli polymerase I (New England Biolabs under standard conditions). As a template for the Cleno section. The obtained double-stranded oligonucleotide is cleaved with restriction enzymes SacII and NaeI and cloned into plasmid pBS II SK (-) digested with the same restriction enzyme. A clone comprising the site encoding the signal peptide of the tobacco PR-1α gene (SEQ ID NO 4) is obtained.
pRPA-PS-PR1a-Helio: preparation of a sequence encoding heliomycin fused with a PR-1α signal peptide without a nontranscribed site at 3 '
Two synthetic oligonucleotides complementary to oligo 9 and oligo 10 were sequenced according to the operating conditions described for pRPA-MD-P.
Oligo 9: 5 'GATAAGATTA TCGGTTCCTG CGTGTGGGGT GCTGTGAACT
ACACTTCCGA TTGCAACGGT GAGTGCAAGA GGAGGGGTTA 3 '
Oligo 10: 5 'CCGGATCCGT CGACACGTTC GCCTCGCCGA GCTCTCAAGT
CTCGCACCAG CAGTTCACGT TAGCGAAGGA ACCGCAGTGA
CCACCCTTGT AACCCCTCCT CTTGCACTC 3 '
After hybridization between oligo 9 and oligo 10, the single stranded DNA was transferred to E. coli polymerase I (New England Biolabs under standard conditions) for the preparation of double stranded oligonucleotides starting from the 3 'end of each oligo. As a template for the Cleno section. The double-stranded oligonucleotide comprising the coding region of heliomycin (SEQ ID NO 2) is directly cloned into plasmid pRPA-MD-P digested with restriction enzyme NaeI. The correct orientation of the clones obtained is confirmed by sequencing. A clone is then obtained that contains a site coding for the PR-1α-heliomycin fusion protein located between the NcoI restriction site at the N-terminus and the ScaI, SacII and BamHI restriction sites at the C-terminus.
pRPA-RD-239: Preparation of Expression Vectors in Plants Containing Sequences Encoding PR-1α-Heliomycin Fusion Proteins
Plasmid pRTL-2 GUS derived from plasmid pUC-19 was obtained from Dr. Jim Carrington (Texas A & M University, not described). The plasmid showing the schematic structure in FIG. 2 comprises a cloned CaMV 35S promoter (CaMV 2 × 35S promoter; Odell et al., 1985) isolated from cauliflower mosaic virus, which represents a tobacco etch virus 5 ′ untranslated sequence ( TEV 5 ′ UTR; Carrington & Freed, 1990), E. coli a-gluronidase gene (GUS Jefferson et al., 1987), followed by CaMV 35S RNA polyadenylation site (CaMV polyA; Odell et al., 1985), indicating the expression of RNA.
Plasmid pRTL-2 GUS is digested with restriction enzymes NcoI and BamHI and large DNA fragments are purified. Plasmid pRPA-PS-PR1α-helio is cleaved with restriction enzymes NcoI and BamHI and a small DNA fragment containing the site encoding the PR-1α-heliiomycin fusion protein is purified. Two purified DNA fragments are then linked together into an expression cassette in the plant that synthesizes the PR-1α-heliomycin fusion protein. The schematic structure of the expression cassette is shown in FIG. 3. "PR-1α-heliomycin" refers to the site encoding the PR-1α-heliomycin fusion protein of pRPA-RD-239. Heliomycin is transported to the plant's extracellular matrix by the action of the PR-1α signal peptide.
pRPA-RD-195: Preparation of a Plasmid Containing an Altered Multicloning Site
Plasmid pRA-RD-195 is a plasmid derived from pUC-19 comprising an altered polycloning site. The following oligo 11 and oligo 12, complementary synthetic oligonucleotides, are hybridized according to the process described for pRPA-MD-P and prepared in double strands.
Oligo 11: 5 'AGGGCCCCCT AGGGTTTAAA CGGCCAGTCA GGCCGAATTC
GAGCTCGGTA CCCGGGGATC CTCTAGAGTA GACCTGCAGG
CATGC 3 '
Oligo 12: 5 'CCCTGAACCA GGCTCGAGGG CGCGCCTTAA TTAAAAGCTT
GCATGCCTGC AGGTCGACTC TAGAGG 3 '
The double-stranded oligonucleotide obtained is then linked with pUC previously digested with restriction enzymes EcoRI and HindIII to make blunt-ended using the cleno fragment of E. coli DNA polymerase I. In order to facilitate the introduction of expression cassettes into the Agrobacterium tumefaciens vector plasmid, a vector comprising multiple cloning sites is obtained. The schematic structure of the said multicloning site | part is shown in FIG.
pRPA-RD-240: Introduction of Cassette for Expression of PR-1α-Heliomycin from pRPA-RD-239 to pRPA-RD-195
Plasmid pRPA-RD-239 is digested with restriction enzyme PstII. DNA fragments containing the vectors for the expression of PR-1α-heliomycin are purified. The purified sections are then digested with restriction enzyme PstII in advance and linked to pRPA-RP-195 dephosphorylated with calf intestinal phosphatase.
pRPA-RD-174: Plasmid derived from pRPA-BL-150A (EP 0,508,909) containing a gene for resistance to bromocinyl of pRPA-BL-237 (EP 0,508,909)
Genes for resistance to bromoxynil are isolated from pRPA-BL-237 by gene amplification by PCR. The obtained sections are blunt-terminated and cloned into the EcoRI site of blunt terminated pRPA-BL-150A by the action of Clenow polymerase under standard conditions. A gene for resistance to broxynil near its right border, a gene for resistance to kanamycin near its left border, and an Agrobacterium tumefaciens vector comprising a cloning site between these two genes are obtained.
The schematic structure of pRPA-RD-174 is shown in FIG. 5. In the figure, "nos" represents the Agrobacterium tumefaciens napollin synthase polyadenylation site (Bevan et al., 1983), and "NOS pro" represents the Agrobacterium tumefaciens napollin synthase promoter. (Bevan et al., 1983), "NPT II" represents the E. coli Tn5 transposon neomycin phosphatase gene (Rothstein et al., 1981), and "35S pro" isolated from cauliflower mosaic virus. Represents the 35S promoter (Odell et al., 1985), and "BRX" represents the nitrolase gene (Stalker et al., 1988) isolated from K. ozaenae, "RB" and " LB ″ represents the right and left boundaries, respectively, of the sequence of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti plasmid.
pRPA-RD-184: Addition of novel unique restriction sites to pRPA-RD-174
Complementarily synthesized oligonucleotides oligo 13 and oligo 14 are hybridized and blunt ended following the process described for pRPA-MD-P.
Oligo 13: 5 'CCGGCCAGTC AGGCCACACT TAATTAAGTT TAAACGCGGC
CCCGGCGCGC CTAGGTGTGT GCTCGAGGGC CCAACCTCAG
TACCTGGTTC AGG 3 '
Oligo 14: 5 'CCGGCCTGAA CCAGGTACTG AGGTTGGGCC CTCGAGCACA
CACCTAGGCG CGCCGGGGCC GCGTTTAAAC TTAATTAAGT
GTGGCCTGAC TGG 3 '
Hybridized double stranded oligonucleotides (95 base pairs) are purified after separation on agarose gel (3% Nuseive, FMC). Plasmid pRPA-RD-174 is digested with restriction enzyme XmaI and large DNA fragments are purified. The two DNA fragments obtained are joined.
A plasmid derived from pRPA-RD-174 comprising another restriction site between the gene for resistance to bromocinyl and the kanamycin gene as a selection marker is obtained.
The schematic structure of pRPA-RD-184 is shown in FIG. 6 where the terms "nos", "NPT-II", "NOS pro", "35S pro", "BRX gene", "RB" and "LB" are shown in FIG. It has the same meaning as in 5.
pRPA-RD-241: Preparation of an Agrobacterium tumefaciens vector comprising a gene construct that coordinates heliomycin directed to extracellular matrix
Plasmid pRPA-RD-240 is digested with restriction enzymes SfiII and AscI and DNA fragments containing the PR-1α-heliomycin gene are purified. Plasmid pRPA-RD-184 is digested with the same restriction enzyme. The DNA fragment containing the cassette for the expression of PR-1α-heliomycin is then linked to pRPA-RD-184. An Agrobacterium tumefaciens vector is obtained comprising a sequence encoding a PR-1α-heliiomycin fusion protein that causes heliomycin expression in the plant's extracellular matrix.
Example IV-2 Preparation of Expression Cassette CsVMV Promoter-PG1 Signal Peptide-Heliomycin-Nos Terminator
pRPA-NP4: Preparation of a Plasmid Containing a Signal Peptide of Corn Polygalacturase PG1 Gene (Genbank, Accession No. X57627)
Two partially complementary synthesized oligonucleotides The following oligo 13 and oligo 14 hybridize at 65 ° C. for 5 minutes, then slowly reduce the temperature to 30 ° C. over 30 minutes.
Oligo 15: 5 'GGTCTAGAAT GGCCTGCACC AACAACGCCA TGAGGGCCCT
CTTCCTCCTC 3 '
Oligo 16: 5 'CCGAATTCGG CGCCGTGCAC GATGCAGAAG AGCACGAGGA
GGAAGAGGGC 3 '
After hybridization between oligo 13 and oligo 14, single strands of DNA were left to E. coli polymerase I (recommended by the manufacturer under standard conditions) for the preparation of double stranded oligonucleotides starting from the 3 'end of each oligo. England Biolabs) as a template for Cleno sections. Double stranded oligonucleotides were digested with restriction enzymes XbaI and EcoRI and then cloned into plasmid pBS II SK (-) (Stratagene) digested with the same restriction enzymes. A clone is obtained which comprises a site encoding the 22 amino acids of the signal peptide of the PG1 gene and which can be fused with the translation framework of other proteins at the level of the SfoI site (SEQ ID NO 15).
pRNA-NP5: preparation of a sequence encoding heliomycin fused with a signal peptide of the PG1 gene
Sites encoding heliomycin are amplified by PCR with a thermostable Pfu enzyme (Stratagene) from clone pRPA-PS-PR1α-helio (SEQ ID NO 3) according to standard conditions recommended by the manufacturer. Synthetic oligonucleotides used for this amplification are as follows:
Oligo 17: 5 'GATAAGCTTA TCGGTTCCTG CGTG 3'
Oligo 18: 5 'GGCTCGAGTC AAGTCTCGCA CCAGCAGTTC AC 3'
The PCR product is cleaved with restriction enzyme XhoI and cloned into vector pRPA-NP4 digested with restriction enzymes SfoI and XhoI. The resulting clone contains the site encoding the signal peptide of the fused PG1 gene in the same translation frame as the sequence encoding heliomycin (SEQ ID NO 18).
pRPA-NP6: Preparation of Cassette for Expression of Heliomycin in Transformation Vector
Expression and transformation vector pILTAB 357 is derived from the bidirectional vector pBin19. It includes a polycloning site and a napollin synthase Nos transcription terminator downstream of the CsVMV promoter (Verdaguer et al. 1996, Plant Mol. Biol. 31, 1129-1139) (FIG. X + 1). The sequence of the fragment is shown (SEQ ID NO 19).
Heliomycin expression vectors are obtained by inserting XbaI-KpnI restriction fragments of the pRPA-NP5 vector containing the PG1 signal peptide-heliomycin fusion into the pILTAB 357 vector digested with the same enzyme. The resulting clones comprise the expression cassette CsVMV promoter-PG1 signal peptide-heliomycin-Nos terminator (SEQ ID NO 20).
Example IV-3 Transformed Tobacco
3.1-Transformation
The vectors pRPA-RD-241 and pRPA-NP6 are introduced into the Agrobacterium tumefaciens EHA101 or EHA105 strain (Hood et al., 1987) carrying cosmid pTVK291 (Komari et al., 1986). The transformation method is based on the process of Horsh et al (1985).
3.2-Playback
Regeneration of PBD6 tobacco (from SEITA France) from leaf explants was carried out on Murage and Cook (MS) basic medium containing 30 g / l sucrose and 200 ig / ml kanamycin. Eating out of the leaves is harvested in three stages according to the disk method of leaves (Horsh et al., 1985) from plants grown in greenhouses or in vitro: the first stage is 0.05 mg / l naphthylacetic acid (ANA) and 2 mg inducing a shoot for 15 days on medium supplemented with 30 g / l sucrose containing / l benzylaminopurine (BAP). The chute formed during this step is grown by culturing on MS medium supplemented with 30 g / l sucrose without containing hormones for 10 days. The grown chutes are then harvested and cultured on MS rooting medium containing half the salt, vitamin and sugar content and no hormones. After about 15 days, the rooted chute is transferred to the soil.
Expression Analysis of Heliomycin in 3.3-Transgenic Tobacco
a) Preparation of Specific Polyclonal Antibodies
Polyclonal antibodies are obtained by immunizing rabbits with native heliomycin according to conventional procedures (Centre de bioexperimentation VALBEX, IUT A-Lyon I). The obtained serum (15 ml) was then immunopurified on a Sepharose 4B column (Phamacia: ref 17-0430-01) coupled with heliomycin to specifically select immunoglobulins that recognize the peptide. This antibody is finally eluted in 6 ml of glycine (200 mM; pH 3), neutralized to 1 M Tris pH 9.5, dialyzed with 0.5 x PBS and frozen at -20 ° C until use.
b) Immunodetection of Heliomycin in Transgenic Tobacco
Analysis of the expression of heliomycin was performed on the pRPA-NP6 construct in 8 transgenic plants as well as in the wild type control. The well-grown tobacco leaves in the greenhouse are finely ground at the temperature of liquid nitrogen and 1% PVP25, 0.05% Triton × in an amount of 4 ml buffer per gram in vivo in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer at 4 ° C. for 1 hour. 100, pH 7.5 extracted. After centrifugation, the protein concentration of the supernatant was measured by the Bradford method.
Nine extracts of each of 5 μg of protein, as well as 50 ng of pure heliomycin, served as a positive control, are placed on the nitrocellulose membrane in a “slot-blot” format. The membrane was incubated in 1% blocking buffer (Boehringer; ref 1 921 673) in TBS for 1 hour and then directed immunopurified antibody against heliomycin diluted to 1/2000 in TBS buffer with 0.05% Tween 20. Incubate overnight at 4 ° C. After washing (TBS, 0.1 Tween 20 and 0.5% of blocking buffer), membranes are generated specifically for rabbit immunoglobulin at room temperature (TBS with 0.5% blocking buffer) for 1 hour, and alkaline phosphatase (SIGMA A-3687) Incubate with goat antibody bound to 1/50 000. After washing (TBS, 0.1% Tween 20), detection was made by adding phosphatase substrate (BioRad; ref 170-5012) and confirmed by radiographic method of luminescent product on Amersham film (ECL).
The results of the fraud experiments indicate that four transgenic tobacco plants strongly express heliomycin. In other transgenic plants, the signal is weak or not significant compared to the wild type control. The signal observed for the best plants is the level of the positive control (50 ng of heliomycin), indicating that heliomycin represents about 1% by weight of total protein in the plant.
Example V-1: Emulsifiable Concentrate
Example EC1:
400 g / l active substrate
Alkali metal dodecylbenzenesulfonate 24 g / l
Containing 10 molecules of ethylene oxide
Oxyethylated nonylphenol 16 g / l
Cyclohexanone 200 g / l
-1 liter of aromatic solvent
Example EC2:
-250 g of active substrate
25 g of epoxidized vegetable oil
Alkylarylsulfonates and polyglycol ethers
And a mixture of fatty alcohols 100 g
50 g of dimethylformamide
Xylene 575 g
Example V-2: Fluidizable
Example F 1:
-500 g of active substrate
50 g / l polyethoxylated tristyrylphenol phosphate
50 g of polyethoxylated alkylphenol
20 g sodium carboxylate
50 g of ethylene glycol
-Organopolysiloxane oil (foam resistant) 1 g
-1.5 g of polysaccharides
316.5 g of water
Example V-2 Wettable Powder (or Spray Powder):
Example WP 1
-50% active substrate
-Ethoxylated fatty alcohol (wetting agent) 2.5%
-Ethoxylated phenylethylphenol (dispersant) 5%
-Choke (inert carrier) 42.5%
Example WP 2:
-10% active substrate
Ethoxylated with ethylene oxide of C13, 8-10
Branched chain oxo synthetic alcohol (wetting agent) 0.75%
Neutral calcium lignosulfonate (dispersant) 12%
-Calcium Carbonate (Inert Filling) Proper 100%
Example WP 3:
75% active substrate
-Wetting agent 1.50%
-Dispersant 8%
-Calcium Carbonate (Inert Filler) Proper 100%
Example WP 4:
-90% active substrate
-Ethoxylated fatty alcohols (wetting agents) 4%
-Ethoxylated phenylethylphenol (dispersant) 6%
Example WP 5:
-50% active substrate
-Mixture of anionic and nonionic surfactants (wetting agent) 2.5%
Sodium lignosulfonate (dispersant) 5%
-Kaolin clay (inert carrier) 42.5%
Example V-4 Dispersible Granules
Example DG 1
90% by weight of active substrate and 10% of pearl urea are mixed in a mixer. The mixture is ground in a gear mill. A powder wetted with about 8% by weight of water is obtained. The wet powder is extruded in a perforated roll extruder. After drying, it is ground and sieved to obtain granules each having granules having a size of 150 to 2000 microns.
Example DG 2:
The following ingredients are mixed in a mixer:
75% active substrate
-Wetting agent (sodium alkylnaphthalenesulfonate) 2%
Dispersant (sodium polynaphthalenesulfonate) 8%
-Water insoluble inert filler (kaolin) 15%
The mixture is granulated in the presence of water in a fluidized bed, then dried, pulverized and sieved to obtain granules having a size of 0.15 to 0.80 mm.
Example V-5: Pharmaceutical Compositions
Example A: Tablet
Tablets containing a dose of 50 mg of the active peptide having the following composition are prepared according to conventional methods:
Peptide heliomycin M1 50 mg
Starch 60 mg
-Lactose 50 mg
-Magnesium stearate 2 mg
Example B Injectable Solutions
Prepare injectable solutions containing 20 mg of active peptide having the following composition:
Peptide heliomycin M 2 22.4 mg
-2 cm 3 of distilled water
Example VI. Stability of Heliomycin Activity
The stability of antimicrobial peptides against plant proteases is an essential requirement to obtain good levels of expression of phytopathogens and thus resistance in transgenic plants. This stability is the critical point for insect antimicrobial peptides such as, for example, cecropin B (Owens and heutte, 1997, MPMI vol 10, No. 4, pp 525-528). The stability of heliomycin and crude extracts of eight major cultivated plants (corn, wheat, barley, rapeseed, soybean, sunflower, tomato and tobacco) and their activity against test plant pathogens after incubation were measured.
The eight leaves were ground at low temperature (liquid nitrogen) in mortar and then the powder was resuspended in the same volume of water. After centrifugation (10,000 g for 30 min), the supernatant was collected and the protein concentration was measured. The concentration was adjusted by dilution with water at 1 mg / ml for 8 extracts, and then the extract was filtered aseptically (0.2 micron). 100 μl of each extract (as well as the control only with water) was added to 50 μl of a solution of heliomycin in water (including 15 μg as well as the control without peptide). This mixture is incubated at 30 ° C., harvested after 20 hours, 1 hour, 2 hours, 4 hours and 20 hours with 20 μl dilution and immediately frozen to test.
Tests of antimicrobial activity were performed by adding each aliquot to 80 μl of a fresh suspension of Botrytis cinerea spores (10,000 spores / ml in solution of potato dextrose broth (Difco, 12 g / l)) at 25 ° C. Run on the low plate. Heliomycin on samples incubated for 20 hours at 30 ° C. in relation to the exposure of crude extracts of corn, wheat, barley, rapeseed, soybean, sunflower, tomato or tobacco when visually observed the results after 12 and 24 hours. There is no significant loss of antimicrobial activity. The results show significant stability of heliomycin against plant proteases, and the antimicrobial activity of heliomycin tested against Botrytis cinerea is not affected by the presence of crude plant extracts.
Example VII: Multiple Heliomycin Mutants: 1, 2, 3, and 4th Mutations
The following mutants were prepared according to the method described in Example II by substituting some oligonucleotides 1 to 6 with other oligonucleotides to induce mutations.
Heliomycin R48: The amino acid Glu48 of SEQ ID NO: 1 was substituted with a basic amino acid, in particular arginine (Arg48). By similarity with the sequence encoding heliomycin having the sequence: SEQ ID NO: 1, the codon GAA encoding Glu was replaced with the codon AGA encoding Arg. Oligonucleotides 19 and 20 were used as substituents to oligonucleotides 5 and 6 of Example II.
Oligo 19: 5 'GATCCTTCGC TAACGTTAAC TGTTGGTGTA GAACCTGATA GG 3'
Oligo 20: 5 'TCGACCTATC AGGTTCTACA CCAACAGTTA ACGTTAGCGA AG 3'
Heliomycin L28L29: Two basic amino acids Lys and Arg at positions 28 and 29 of SEQ ID NO: 1 were replaced with two hydrophobic amino acids, in particular two leucine amino acids (Leu 28 and Leu 28). Sequence: Similarity with the sequence encoding heliomycin with SEQ ID NO: 1, the partial AGG-CGC encoding peptide residue Lys-Arg was replaced with the sequence TTG-TTG encoding peptide residue Leu-Leu. Oligonucleotides 21 and 22 were used as substituents to oligonucleotides 3 and 4 of Example II.
Oligo 21: 5 'CTAGTGACTG CAACGGCGAG TGCTTGTTGC GC 3'
Oligo 22: 5 'GCAACAAGCA CTCGCCGTTG CAGTCA 3'
Heliomycin L28L29R48: replaces the two basic amino acids Lys and Arg at positions 28 and 29 of SEQ ID NO: 1 with two leucine amino acid residues and the amino acid arginine (Arg 48) of amino acid Glu48 of SEQ ID NO: 1 Substituted by Oligonucleotides 19 to 22 were used as substituents to oligonucleotides 3 to 6 according to Example II.
Heliomycin A24A25: Two amino acids Asn24 and Gly25 of SEQ ID NO: 1 were substituted with two alanine amino acids (Ala24 and Ala25). By similarity with the sequence encoding heliomycin of the sequence: ID NO: 1, the partial AAC-GGC encoding the peptide residue Asn-Gly was replaced with the sequence GCT-GCT encoding Ala-Ala. Oligonucleotides 23 and 24 were used as substituents to oligonucleotides 3 and 4 of Example II.
Oligo 23: 5 'CTAGTGACTG CGCTGCTGAG TGCAAGCGGC GC 3'
Oligo 24: 5 'GCCGCTTGCA CTCAGCAGCG CAGTCA 3'
Heliomycin A6A7A8A9: The amino acid Asp6-Lys7-Leu8-Ile9 of SEQ ID NO: 1 was substituted with four alanine amino acids (Ala). By similarity with the sequence encoding heliomycin of SEQ ID NO: 1, the partial GAC-AAG-TTG-ATT encoding peptide residue Asp-Lys-Leu-Ile was used to determine peptide residue Ala-Ala-Ala-Ala. The coding sequence GCT-GCT-GCT-GCT was substituted. Oligonucleotides 25 and 26 were used as substituents for oligonucleotide 1 of Example II and oligonucleotides 27 and 28 were used as substituents for oligonucleotide 2.
Oligo 25: 5 'AGCTTGGATA AAAGAGCTGC TGCTGCTGGT AGCTGTGTTT 3'
Oligo 26: 5 'GGGGCGCCG TCAACTACA 3'
Oligo 27: 5 'CTAGTGTAGT TGACGGCGCC CC 3'
Oligo 28: 5 'AAACACAGCT ACCAGCAGCA GCAGCTCTTT TATCCA 3'
Heliomycin A24A25A28A29: absence of restriction sites between a sequence encoding a peptide residue consisting of two amino acids Asn24-Gly25 and a sequence encoding a peptide residue consisting of two amino acids Lys28-Arg29 of heliomycin of SEQ ID NO: 1 Two oligonucleotides (sense and anticent) were required to compensate. Two oligonucleotide sequences 29 and 30 replaced the two oligonucleotide sequences 3 and 4 of Example II, respectively.
Oligo 29: 5 'CTAGTGACTG CGCTGCTGAG TGCTTGTTGC GC 3'
Oligo 30: 5 'GCAACAAGCA CTCAGCAGCG CAGTCA 3'
Preparation of Heliomycin Mutated on the Semi-Manufacturing Scale
Several mutants of heliomycin were prepared and purified by the following method. One of the transformed yeast clones expressing the mutated heliomycin was incubated in 50 ml of selection medium at 29 ° C. for 48 hours. The preculture was used to inoculate 2 l of selective medium and the incubation was carried out at 29 ° C. for 48 hours. Yeast was recovered by centrifugation (4000 g, 30 minutes, 4 ° C). The supernatant was acidified with acetic acid to pH 3.5 and a second centrifugation (4000 g, 30 min, 4 ° C.) was performed before the first solid phase extraction step.
First solid phase extraction step on reverse phase gel: The acidified supernatant is placed on a C18 reverse phase Sep-Pak Vac 35 cc cartridge (Waters Associates, 10 g phase) equilibrated with acidified water (005% TFA). The hydrophilic molecules are removed by washing with acidified water and then washed with 15% acetonitrile solution prepared with 0.05% TFA. Elution of the peptide is carried out with 60% acetonitrile solution prepared in 0.05% TFA. The section eluted with 60% acetonitrile is lyophilized and then restored to sterile ultrapure water before the first purification step.
Second solid phase extraction step on cation-exchange gel: 60% of the pre-purified compartments containing the mutated heliomycin are restored in 25 mM ammonium acetate solution, pH 3.4. The sample is placed in a CM cation-exchange Sep-Pak Vac 35 cc cartridge equilibrated with pH 3.4, 25 mM ammonium acetate (Waters Associates, 10 g phase). The mutated heliomycin is eluted using a 1 M sodium chloride (NaCl) solution prepared in pH 3.4, 25 mM ammonium acetate. A 1 M NaCl compartment containing mutated heliomycin is recovered and dried in vacuo and restored with 20 ml of acidified ultrapure water (1% TFA). The mutated heliomycin is then purified by reverse phase HPLC.
Final purification step by HPLC: mutated heliomycin with at least a flow rate of 2.5 ml / min of 2% to 23% over 10 minutes in 0.05% TFA and 23% to 33% acetonitrile over 80 minutes Using a biphasic linear gradient, it is homogeneously purified by chromatography on the production reversed phase column Aquapo re RP-300 C8 (Brownlee , 220 × 10 mm, 300 mm 3). The combined compartments are dried under vacuum, restored to ultra high purity water and analyzed by MALDI mass spectrometer to confirm purity and type. Other mutated heliomycins measure their antimicrobial activity under the conditions described for reference heliomycin against the following strains: Neurospora crassa, Fusarium culmorum and Netria haematococa ( Nectria haematococca). The activity of mutants of heliomycin is also measured for bacteria. The experimental conditions used are described below.
In vitro activity test: Determination of antibacterial and antibacterial activity by microscopy
This method is used for the determination of the activity spectrum of peptides and the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) at which the mutated peptide is active. MIC is shown by the concentration range [a]-[b] which [a] is the minimum density | concentration in which the onset of growth is observed, and [b] is the density | concentration without growth. Table 3 shows examples of specific activity of mutated heliomycin against bacteria and filamentous fungi.
Antibacterial activity is detected by growth inhibition test in liquid medium. The bacteria to be tested are suspended in "deficient broth" type medium. Preferably, a 1% bactotryptone solution supplemented with 1% NaCl in w / v, prepared in demineralized water, is used. 10 μl of each compartment to be analyzed is placed in a microtiter plate in the presence of 90 μl of culture medium containing bacteria (final concentration equal to 1 mOD at 600 nm). Incubation is carried out at 25 ° C. for 12-24 hours. Bacteria growth was measured by measuring absorbance at 600 nm using a microtiter plate measurement spectrometer.
Bacteria tested: Bacillus megaterium (collection de Institut Pasteur), Micrococcus luteus (collection de l'Institut Pasteur), Staphylococcus aureus (H. Monteil, Institut of bacteriology (Strabourg), Aerococcus viridans (H. Monteil, Institute of bacteriology, Strasbourg), and Escherichia coli 22 (PL Boquet, Center for nuclear studies, Sacley).
Activity of Mutant Heliomycin Against Filamentous Fungi and Bacteria microbe MIC (μg) for mutants of heliomycin L28L29 R48 L28L29R48 A6A7A8A9 Helio Fungus Neusfora Krasiapusarium Kummorumnectaria Haematococa 0.8-1.63.1-6.33.1-6.2 0.4 to 0.80.4 to 0.80.4 to 0.8 0.8 to 1.60.8 to 1.60.8 to 1.6 1.6 to 3.13.1 to 6.2 ND 0.1 to 0.20.2 to 0.40.4 to 0.8 Bacteria Bacillus megaterium micrococcus Lateus Staphylococcus aureus Aerococcus vilidans Escherichia coli D22 50-10012.5-25NDNDND ND25 to 50NDNDND NDNDNDNDND 6.2 to 12.5NDND 12.5 to 25ND NDNDNDNDND ND: No activity detected
Example VII: Toxicity Study
Groups of four female mice were treated by intravenous infusion with a solution of heliomycin (SEQ ID NO 2) in saline solution in amounts of 1 and 10 mg / kg. A corresponding solution of melittin is prepared as a negative control (no effect at 2 doses) and aprotinin and positive control (100% mortality at 10 mg for 5 days, significant effect at 1 mg for 5 days). Heliomycin solution injected at 2 doses showed no toxicity.
references
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权利要求:
Claims (46)
[1" claim-type="Currently amended] Peptides essentially containing the peptide sequence of formula (I):
Xaa-Cys-Xab-Cys-Xac-Cys-Xad-Cys-Xae-Cys-Xaf-Cys-Xag
Food,
Xaa is a peptide moiety containing -NH 2 or 1 to 10 amino acids, preferably 1 to 6 amino acids,
Xab is a peptide residue containing 1 to 10 amino acids, preferably 10 amino acids,
Xac is a peptide residue of three amino acids,
Xad is a peptide residue containing 1 to 9 amino acids, preferably 9 amino acids,
Xae is a peptide residue containing 1 to 7 amino acids, preferably 7 amino acids,
Xaf is a peptide residue of 1 amino acid,
Xag is -OH or a peptide residue containing 1 to 5 amino acids, preferably 1 or 2 amino acids.
[2" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide of claim 1, wherein Xaa contains at least one basic amino acid and / or Xad contains at least one basic amino acid.
[3" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide of claim 2, wherein Xad contains 1,2,3, or 4 basic amino acids.
[4" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide according to claim 2 or 3, wherein the basic amino acid is selected from lysine, arginine or homoarginine.
[5" claim-type="Currently amended] Xad 'according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein Xad represents the peptide sequence -Lys-Xad'-Xad'-Gly-His-, wherein Xad' represents a peptide residue of one basic amino acid, Is a peptide representing a peptide residue containing 0-5 amino acids, preferably 5 amino acids.
[6" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide according to any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein Xad represents the peptide sequence -Lys-Arg-Arg-Gly-Tyr-Lys-Gly-Gly-His-.
[7" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide according to claim 1, wherein Xac contains at least one acidic amino acid, preferably one acidic amino acid.
[8" claim-type="Currently amended] 8. The peptide moiety according to any one of claims 1 to 7, wherein Xac represents a peptide sequence -Asn-Xac'-Xac ', wherein Xac' represents a peptide residue of one amino acid and Xac 'represents a peptide residue of a monoacidic amino acid. Peptides characterized in that.
[9" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide according to claim 7 or 8, wherein the acidic amino acid is selected from glutamic acid (Glu) or aspartic acid (Asp).
[10" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide according to any one of claims 1 to 10, wherein Xac represents the peptide sequence -Asn-Gly-Glu-.
[11" claim-type="Currently amended] The process according to claim 1, wherein Xaa represents the peptide sequence Xaa'-Gly-Xaa ', wherein Xaa' represents NH 2 or 1 to 9 amino acids, preferably 1 to 5 amino acids. A peptide residue containing, Xaa 'represents a peptide residue containing one or more amino acids, preferably an amino acid selected from Leu, Ile, Val, Pro, Ser or Thr,
Xab represents the peptide sequence -Val-Xab'-Asp-, wherein Xab 'represents a peptide residue containing 0 to 8 amino acids, preferably 8 amino acids, and / or
Xae represents the peptide sequence -Gly-Xae'-Asn-, wherein Xae 'represents a peptide residue containing 0 to 5 amino acids, preferably 5 amino acids, and / or
Xaf represents one of Trp, Phe, Leu, Ile or Val amino acids, and / or
Xag represents a peptide sequence -Glu-Xag ', wherein Xag' represents various moieties having OH or a sequence containing 1 to 4 amino acids, preferably 1 amino acid.
[12" claim-type="Currently amended] Xa represents peptide sequence NH 2 -Asp-Lys-Leu-Ile-Gly-Ser-, and / or Xab represents peptide sequence -Val-Trp-Gly-Ala-Val. -Asn-Tyr-Thr-Ser-Asp- and / or Xae represents the peptide sequence -Gly-Ser-Phe-Ala-Asn-Val-Asn- and / or Xaf represents the amino acid -Trp- Is a peptide sequence -Glu-Thr-OH.
[13" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide according to any one of claims 1 to 12, wherein the peptide is represented by Identity No. 2 (SEQ ID NO 2).
[14" claim-type="Currently amended] 14. Peptides according to any one of the preceding claims, characterized in that at one or both ends of the termini contains peptide residues necessary for its expression and targeting in the host organism.
[15" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide according to any one of claims 1 to 14, wherein the cysteine residue of the peptide of formula (I) forms one or more intramolecular disulfide bridges.
[16" claim-type="Currently amended] 16. The peptide of claim 15 which contains three disulfide bridges established between cysteine residues 1 and 4, 2 and 5, and 3 and 6.
[17" claim-type="Currently amended] A "peptide-heliomycin" fusion peptide, wherein the heliomycin is a peptide as defined in any one of claims 1 to 16.
[18" claim-type="Currently amended] 18. The fusion peptide of claim 17, wherein the peptide fused with heliomycin is a signal peptide or a transit peptide.
[19" claim-type="Currently amended] 19. The fusion peptide of claim 18, wherein the transit peptide is a signal peptide of the tobacco PR-1α gene or a precursor of factor Mat alpha 1 or a signal peptide of the corn polygalacturonase PG1 gene.
[20" claim-type="Currently amended] The method of claim 19, wherein the sequence identifier No. 1 (SEQ ID NO 1), sequence identifier No. 3 (SEQ ID NO 3), or sequence identifier No. Fusion peptide, characterized by 18 (SEQ ID NO 18).
[21" claim-type="Currently amended] The peptide according to any one of claims 1 to 20 as a medicament.
[22" claim-type="Currently amended] A composition comprising the peptide according to any one of claims 1 to 20 and a suitable vehicle.
[23" claim-type="Currently amended] A nucleic acid fragment comprising a nucleic acid sequence encoding a peptide according to any one of claims 1 to 20.
[24" claim-type="Currently amended] The nucleic acid fragment according to claim 23, which is a nucleotide sequence of DNA type.
[25" claim-type="Currently amended] The nucleotide sequence of claim 24, wherein the nucleotide sequence of the DNA type is SEQ ID NO: Base 16 to 147 of SEQ ID NO 1 (SEQ ID NO 1); 2 (SEQ ID NO 2), the sequence identifier No. 3 to 224 of SEQ ID NO 3, or to SEQ ID NO: 18. A nucleic acid fragment comprising a DNA sequence as set forth in bases 7 to 205 of SEQ ID NO 18, a homologous sequence or a sequence complementary to said sequence.
[26" claim-type="Currently amended] Coding sequences contain one or more DNA fragments as defined in claims 23 to 25, wherein the coding sequences and heterologous regulatory elements are 5 'and 3' positions capable of functioning in host organisms, particularly plants. Chimeric genes contained in.
[27" claim-type="Currently amended] 27. The chimeric gene of claim 26, wherein the host organism is a microorganism.
[28" claim-type="Currently amended] 27. The chimeric gene of claim 26, wherein the host organism is selected from plant cells and plants.
[29" claim-type="Currently amended] A cloning or expression vector for transformation of a host organism, characterized by containing at least one origin of replication and a chimeric gene as defined in any one of claims 26 to 28.
[30" claim-type="Currently amended] A transformed host organism characterized by containing a nucleic acid fragment according to claims 23 to 25 or a chimeric gene according to claims 26 to 28.
[31" claim-type="Currently amended] 31. The transformed host organism of claim 30, comprising a microorganism, plant cell or plant.
[32" claim-type="Currently amended] 31. The transformed host organism of claim 30, which is a plant containing the transformed cells.
[33" claim-type="Currently amended] 33. The host organism of claim 32, wherein the plant is regenerated from the transformed cells.
[34" claim-type="Currently amended] 31. The transformation according to claim 30, wherein the microorganism is selected from bacteria, in particular E. coli, yeast, in particular Saccharomyces or Kluyveromyces, yeasts of the genus Pichia, fungi, in particular Aspergillus or baculovirus. Host organisms.
[35" claim-type="Currently amended] A transformed plant cell comprising a nucleic acid fragment according to claims 23 to 25 or a chimeric gene according to claims 26 to 28.
[36" claim-type="Currently amended] A transformed plant, characterized in that it contains one or more transformed plant cells according to claim 35.
[37" claim-type="Currently amended] 37. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 36, wherein Cercospora, in particular Cercospora beticola, Cladosporium, in particular Cladosporium herbarum, Fusarium Resistant to diseases caused by, in particular, Fusarium culmorum or Fusarium graminearum or Phytophthora, in particular Phytophthora cinnamomi. Characterized by a transformed plant.
[38" claim-type="Currently amended] 38. A transformed plant, which is derived from the culture and / or hybridization of the plant according to any one of claims 36 and 37.
[39" claim-type="Currently amended] Seed of the transformed plant according to any one of claims 36 to 38.
[40" claim-type="Currently amended] A host organism, in particular a plant cell or plant, characterized in that it inserts at least one nucleic acid fragment according to any one of claims 23 to 25 or a chimeric gene according to any one of claims 26 to 28 into a host organism. How to transform.
[41" claim-type="Currently amended] 41. The method of claim 40, wherein the host organism is a plant cell or plant.
[42" claim-type="Currently amended] 42. The method of claim 41, wherein the plant is regenerated from plant cells or transformed plants.
[43" claim-type="Currently amended] The seed of the transformed plant is planted in a small compartment suitable for cultivating the plant, in which the agrochemical composition is applied without substantially affecting the transformed plant or the seed, followed by the plant's desired 39. A method of culturing the transformed plant according to any one of claims 36 to 38, characterized in that when the maturity is reached, the cultured plant is harvested and the seed is separated from the plant which is ripened.
[44" claim-type="Currently amended] 34. The method of claim 33, wherein the agrochemical composition contains one or more fungicides and / or one or more active products having bactericidal properties.
[45" claim-type="Currently amended] 45. The method of claim 44, wherein the active product exhibits complementary activity to the activity of the peptide according to any one of claims 1 to 20.
[46" claim-type="Currently amended] 35. The method according to any one of claims 1 to 20, characterized in that the transformed organism according to any one of claims 30 to 34 is cultured in a suitable culture medium, and then all or part of the heliomycin extracted and obtained is purified. A process for the preparation of heliomycin as defined in claim 1.
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日
AT366811T|2007-08-15|
AU754856B2|2002-11-28|
NO20005173L|2000-12-15|
CN1305526A|2001-07-25|
IL139011D0|2001-11-25|
EP1071767A1|2001-01-31|
ZA200006567B|2002-01-14|
CY1106926T1|2012-09-26|
JP2002511260A|2002-04-16|
PL198979B1|2008-08-29|
FR2777568B1|2002-10-31|
CA2325658A1|1999-10-21|
DK1071767T3|2007-11-05|
TR200002989T2|2000-12-21|
CZ20003785A3|2001-03-14|
HU0102302A2|2001-09-28|
DE69936514D1|2007-08-23|
US6916782B1|2005-07-12|
ES2291021T3|2008-02-16|
AU3152599A|1999-11-01|
AR019066A1|2001-12-26|
NO20005173D0|2000-10-13|
DE69936514T2|2008-03-20|
HU225803B1|2007-09-28|
HU0102302A3|2003-03-28|
BR9909745A|2000-12-26|
PT1071767E|2007-10-23|
WO1999053053A1|1999-10-21|
FR2777568A1|1999-10-22|
EP1071767B1|2007-07-11|
PL345243A1|2001-12-03|
CZ297645B6|2007-02-21|
引用文献:
公开号 | 申请日 | 公开日 | 申请人 | 专利标题
法律状态:
1998-04-15|Priority to FR98/04933
1998-04-15|Priority to FR9804933A
1999-04-12|Application filed by 아벤티스 크롭사이언스 에스.에이.
1999-04-12|Priority to PCT/FR1999/000843
2001-05-25|Publication of KR20010042735A
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
FR98/04933|1998-04-15|
FR9804933A|FR2777568B1|1998-04-15|1998-04-15|Gene encoding heliomicin, protein obtained, vector containing same, transformed organisms obtained, and preparation method|
PCT/FR1999/000843|WO1999053053A1|1998-04-15|1999-04-12|Gene coding for heliomicine and use thereof|
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