Ames, Iowa
June 23, 2006A
biopharmaceutical corn created at
Iowa State University (ISU)
is getting a makeover. Researchers are developing the corn into
a variety that keeps the therapeutic protein, but eliminates the
pollen. And they're using traditional breeding to do it.
ISU researchers have had
promising results using the biopharmaceutical corn to treat
bacterial diarrhea in pigs.
Now they are shifting their
focus. They are developing a male sterile corn that carries the
transgene. Because male sterile corn plants do not produce
pollen, the new biopharmaceutical variety could be grown in
corn-producing states without risk of pollinating traditional
corn varieties.
"Pollen movement is the issue,"
said Kendall Lamkey, interim chair of agronomy and Pioneer
Distinguished Chair in Maize Breeding. "And that's the most
controllable part of the corn production system."
Lamkey, who also directs the
Raymond F. Baker Center for Plant Breeding, leads the breeding
portion of the research. Kan Wang, the principal researcher, who
successfully transformed the corn, is professor of agronomy and
director of the Center for Plant Transformation. Both centers
are part of Iowa State's Plant Sciences Institute, which
initiated the research. The ongoing project is supported by the
institute and the College of Agriculture.
Lamkey and Wang say it will
take about five growing seasons to make all the breeding crosses
needed. The first season took place last winter in the Plant
Sciences Institute's Roy J. Carver Co-Laboratory biosafe
greenhouse. The biopharmaceutical corn was crossed with the
non-transgenic, male-fertile corn line to produce a transgenic
F1 hybrid.
Seeds from that cross are being
used this summer in a field trial on remote land owned by Iowa
State.
The breeding process in the
field trial will not shed transgenic pollen. The transgenic crop
will be detasseled. It will be surrounded by rows of
non-transgenic corn, which will pollinate the detasseled
transgenic plants.
Iowa State received permit
approval from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) and from the state for
the research.
The research plot is located on
less than one-half acre of university land in Marshall county.
It is about a half mile away from and was planted 28 days later
than the nearest commercial corn. A fence will keep out
wildlife. The research exceeds APHIS requirements for field
trials of regulated plants.
The seed harvested in the fall
will be used in the winter again in the high containment
greenhouse. Another field trial is expected to take place next
summer.
The 2006 field trial is the
latest in a series of transgenic corn experiments led by Iowa
State researchers. All have received federal and state approval.
The trials have taken place three times in Iowa and once in
Colorado.
The research is part of Iowa
State's work to evaluate the safe use of plants for the
production of proteins for pharmaceuticals and industrial
products.
Wang engineered the corn to
produce LT-B, a protein subunit produced by some strains of E.
coli. Research has shown the ability of the protein to stimulate
protective immune antibodies. Other Iowa State scientists have
been evaluating grain from previous years' studies to understand
how the corn-based pharmaceutical can help protect livestock
from bacterial infections.
The system being developed in
corn will work with other proteins. Corn is the preferred plant
for producing proteins for non-food products.
"It's so easy to manipulate
from a breeding perspective, and the pollen can be controlled,"
Lamkey said. "You can't control the pollen easily in
self-pollinating crops like soybeans."
"And from a molecular biology
and biochemistry point of view, we know so much about corn,"
Wang said. "Corn seed is such a good reservoir for foreign
protein. And the grain, from a pharmacological standpoint, is
the grain best tolerated by humans and animals both. Almost
nobody is allergic to corn protein."
Lamkey said Iowa State is
uniquely qualified to pursue this research because of access to
germplasm and "not many places have the genetic transformation
capabilities that Iowa State has."
Lamkey and Wang are considering
breeding the transgene into a higher yielding, better seed
producing, transformable corn inbred line.
"The line that has been used
for this corn is really hard to work with in terms of
pollination and seed production. It was bred for the purpose of
transformation not the field," Lamkey said.
"The best part of this project
is that finally conventional breeders like me are now working
with molecular biologists like Dr. Wang," Lamkey said. "We're
trying to get something that's mutually beneficial. This hasn't
happened enough in the public sector." |