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Optimizing Promoters and Subcellular Localization for Constitutive Transgene Expression in Marchantia polymorpha.

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Abstract

Marchantia polymorpha has become an important model system for comparative studies and synthetic biology. The systematic characterization of genetic elements would make heterologous gene expression more predictable in this test bed for gene circuit assembly and bioproduction. Yet, the toolbox of genetic parts for Marchantia includes only a few constitutive promoters that need benchmarking to assess their utility. We compared the expression patterns of previously characterized and new constitutive promoters. We found that driving expression with the double enhancer version of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter (pro35S × 2) provided the highest yield of proteins, although it also inhibits the growth of transformants. In contrast, promoters derived from the Marchantia genes for ETHYLENE RESPONSE FACTOR 1 and the CLASS II HOMEODOMAIN-LEUCINE ZIPPER protein drove expression to higher levels across all tissues without a growth penalty and can provide intermediate levels of gene expression. In addition, we showed that the cytosol is the best subcellular compartment to target heterologous proteins for higher levels of expression without a significant growth burden. To demonstrate the potential of these promoters in Marchantia, we expressed RUBY, a polycistronic betalain synthesis cassette linked by P2A sequences, to demonstrate coordinated expression of metabolic enzymes. A heat-shock-inducible promoter was used to further mitigate growth burdens associated with high amounts of betalain accumulation. We have expanded the existing tool kit for gene expression in Marchantia and provided new resources for the Marchantia research community.

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Journal Title

Plant Cell Physiol

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Journal ISSN

0032-0781
1471-9053

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Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
BBSRC (via John Innes Centre) (24896)
Leverhulme Trust (ECF-2023-534)
BBSRC (BB/T007117/1)
BBSRC (BB/Y007808/1)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/L014130/1)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/F011458/1)
This work was funded as part of the BBSRC/EPSRC OpenPlant Synthetic Biology Research Centre Grant BB/L014130/1 to J.H., BBSRC BB/F011458/1 for confocal microscopy, BBSRC BB/T007117/1 to J.H. SWT is funded by the Doris Zimmern HKU-Cambridge Hughes Hall Scholarship