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Dive into the research topics where Cara L. Mortimer is active.

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Featured researches published by Cara L. Mortimer.


The Plant Cell | 2013

In Plant Activation: An Inducible, Hyperexpression Platform for Recombinant Protein Production in Plants

Benjamin Dugdale; Cara L. Mortimer; Maiko Kato; Tess A. James; Robert M. Harding; James L. Dale

This work describes a novel platform for recombinant protein production that is essentially transient expression from a stably transformed plant. The system provides both activation and amplification of transgene expression in planta and in this study was exemplified using both a therapeutic and industrial protein. The platform is not host limited and can be adapted to large-scale production. In this study, we describe a novel protein production platform that provides both activation and amplification of transgene expression in planta. The In Plant Activation (INPACT) system is based on the replication machinery of tobacco yellow dwarf mastrevirus (TYDV) and is essentially transient gene expression from a stably transformed plant, thus combining the advantages of both means of expression. The INPACT cassette is uniquely arranged such that the gene of interest is split and only reconstituted in the presence of the TYDV-encoded Rep/RepA proteins. Rep/RepA expression is placed under the control of the AlcA:AlcR gene switch, which is responsive to trace levels of ethanol. Transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Samsun) plants containing an INPACT cassette encoding the β-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter had negligible background expression but accumulated very high GUS levels (up to 10% total soluble protein) throughout the plant, within 3 d of a 1% ethanol application. The GUS reporter was replaced with a gene encoding a lethal ribonuclease, barnase, demonstrating that the INPACT system provides exquisite control of transgene expression and can be adapted to potentially toxic or inhibitory compounds. The INPACT gene expression platform is scalable, not host-limited, and has been used to express both a therapeutic and an industrial protein.


Nature Protocols | 2014

Design and construction of an in-plant activation cassette for transgene expression and recombinant protein production in plants

Benjamin Dugdale; Cara L. Mortimer; Maiko Kato; Tess A. James; Robert M. Harding; James L. Dale

Virus-based transgene expression systems have become particularly valuable for recombinant protein production in plants. The dual-module in-plant activation (INPACT) expression platform consists of a uniquely designed split-gene cassette incorporating the cis replication elements of Tobacco yellow dwarf geminivirus (TYDV) and an ethanol-inducible activation cassette encoding the TYDV Rep and RepA replication-associated proteins. The INPACT system is essentially tailored for recombinant protein production in stably transformed plants and provides both inducible and high-level transient transgene expression with the potential to be adapted to diverse crop species. The construction of a novel split-gene cassette, the inducible nature of the system and the ability to amplify transgene expression via rolling-circle replication differentiates this system from other DNA- and RNA-based virus vector systems used for stable or transient recombinant protein production in plants. Here we provide a detailed protocol describing the design and construction of a split-gene INPACT cassette, and we highlight factors that may influence optimal activation and amplification of gene expression in transgenic plants. By using Nicotiana tabacum, the protocol takes 6–9 months to complete, and recombinant proteins expressed using INPACT can accumulate to up to 10% of the leaf total soluble protein.


Plant Science | 2015

Optimising ketocarotenoid production in potato tubers: Effect of genetic background, transgene combinations and environment

Raymond Campbell; Wayne L. Morris; Cara L. Mortimer; Norihiko Misawa; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Jenny Morris; Peter E. Hedley; Paul D. Fraser; Mark A. Taylor

Astaxanthin is a high value carotenoid produced by some bacteria, a few green algae, several fungi but only a limited number of plants from the genus Adonis. Astaxanthin has been industrially exploited as a feed supplement in poultry farming and aquaculture. Consumption of ketocarotenoids, most notably astaxanthin, is also increasingly associated with a wide range of health benefits, as demonstrated in numerous clinical studies. Currently astaxanthin is produced commercially by chemical synthesis or from algal production systems. Several studies have used a metabolic engineering approach to produce astaxanthin in transgenic plants. Previous attempts to produce transgenic potato tubers biofortified with astaxanthin have met with limited success. In this study we have investigated approaches to optimising tuber astaxanthin content. It is demonstrated that the selection of appropriate parental genotype for transgenic approaches and stacking carotenoid biosynthetic pathway genes with the cauliflower Or gene result in enhanced astaxanthin content, to give six-fold higher tuber astaxanthin content than has been achieved previously. Additionally we demonstrate the effects of growth environment on tuber carotenoid content in both wild type and astaxanthin-producing transgenic lines and describe the associated transcriptome and metabolome restructuring.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2015

Updates in inducible transgene expression using viral vectors: from transient to stable expression

Cara L. Mortimer; Benjamin Dugdale; James L. Dale

The prospect of economically producing useful biologics in plants has greatly increased with the advent of viral vectors. The ability of viral vectors to amplify transgene expression has seen them develop into robust transient platforms for the high-level, rapid production of recombinant proteins. To adapt these systems to stably transformed plants, new ways of deconstructing the virus machinery and linking its expression and replication to chemically controlled promoters have been developed. The more advanced of these stable, inducible hyper-expression vectors provide both activated and amplified heterologous transgene expression. Such systems could be deployed in broad acre crops and provide a pathway to fully exploit the advantages of plants as a platform for the manufacture of a wide spectrum of products.


Plant Physiology | 2017

The Formation and Sequestration of Nonendogenous Ketocarotenoids in Transgenic Nicotiana glauca

Cara L. Mortimer; Norihiko Misawa; Laura Perez-Fons; Francesca P. Robertson; Hisashi Harada; Peter M. Bramley; Paul D. Fraser

In Nicotiana glauca, plastids adapt to sequester nonendogenous carotenoids, demonstrating the robustness of plant metabolism to these changes. Ketolated and hydroxylated carotenoids are high-value compounds with industrial, food, and feed applications. Chemical synthesis is currently the production method of choice for these compounds, with no amenable plant sources readily available. In this study, the 4,4′ β-oxygenase (crtW) and 3,3′ β-hydroxylase (crtZ) genes from Brevundimonas sp. SD-212 were expressed under constitutive transcriptional control in Nicotiana glauca, which has an emerging potential as a biofuel and biorefining feedstock. The transgenic lines produced significant levels of nonendogenous carotenoids in all tissues. In leaf and flower, the carotenoids (∼0.5% dry weight) included 0.3% and 0.48%, respectively, of nonendogenous ketolated and hydroxylated carotenoids. These were 4-ketolutein, echinenone (and its 3-hydroxy derivatives), canthaxanthin, phoenicoxanthin, 4-ketozeaxanthin, and astaxanthin. Stable, homozygous genotypes expressing both transgenes inherited the chemotype. Subcellular fractionation of vegetative tissues and microscopic analysis revealed the presence of ketocarotenoids in thylakoid membranes, not predominantly in the photosynthetic complexes but in plastoglobules. Despite ketocarotenoid production and changes in cellular ultrastructure, intermediary metabolite levels were not dramatically affected. The study illustrates the utility of Brevundimonas sp. SD-212 CRTZ and CRTW to produce ketocarotenoids in a plant species that is being evaluated as a biorefining feedstock, the adaptation of the plastid to sequester nonendogenous carotenoids, and the robustness of plant metabolism to these changes.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2014

Transcript and metabolite profiling for the evaluation of tobacco tree and poplar as feedstock for the bio-based industry.

Colin Ruprecht; Takayuki Tohge; Alisdair R. Fernie; Cara L. Mortimer; Amanda Kozlo; Paul D. Fraser; Norma Funke; Igor Cesarino; Ruben Vanholme; Wout Boerjan; Kris Morreel; Ingo Burgert; Notburga Gierlinger; Vincent Bulone; Vera Schneider; Andrea Stockero; Juan Pedro Navarro; Frank Pudel; James Hygate; Jon Bumstead; Louis Notley; Staffan Persson

The global demand for food, feed, energy, and water poses extraordinary challenges for future generations. It is evident that robust platforms for the exploration of renewable resources are necessary to overcome these challenges. Within the multinational framework MultiBioPro we are developing biorefinery pipelines to maximize the use of plant biomass. More specifically, we use poplar and tobacco tree (Nicotiana glauca) as target crop species for improving saccharification, isoprenoid, long chain hydrocarbon contents, fiber quality, and suberin and lignin contents. The methods used to obtain these outputs include GC-MS, LC-MS and RNA sequencing platforms. The metabolite pipelines are well established tools to generate these types of data, but also have the limitations in that only well characterized metabolites can be used. The deep sequencing will allow us to include all transcripts present during the developmental stages of the tobacco tree leaf, but has to be mapped back to the sequence of Nicotiana tabacum. With these set-ups, we aim at a basic understanding for underlying processes and at establishing an industrial framework to exploit the outcomes. In a more long term perspective, we believe that data generated here will provide means for a sustainable biorefinery process using poplar and tobacco tree as raw material. To date the basal level of metabolites in the samples have been analyzed and the protocols utilized are provided in this article.


Annals of Botany | 2007

Formation of Specialized Propagules Resistant to Desiccation and Cryopreservation in the Threatened Moss Ditrichum plumbicola (Ditrichales, Bryopsida)

Jennifer K. Rowntree; Jeffrey G. Duckett; Cara L. Mortimer; Margaret M. Ramsay; Silvia Pressel


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2016

The Quest for Golden Bananas: Investigating Carotenoid Regulation in a Fe’i Group Musa Cultivar

Stephen Buah; Bulukani Mlalazi; Harjeet Khanna; James L. Dale; Cara L. Mortimer


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2016

Product stability and sequestration mechanisms in Solanum tuberosum engineered to biosynthesize high value ketocarotenoids.

Cara L. Mortimer; Norihiko Misawa; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Raymond Campbell; Peter M. Bramley; Mark A. Taylor; Paul D. Fraser


Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities; Institute for Future Environments; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2015

Updates in inducible transgene expression using viral vectors : from transient to stable expression

Cara L. Mortimer; Benjamin Dugdale; James L. Dale

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Norihiko Misawa

Ishikawa Prefectural University

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James L. Dale

Queensland University of Technology

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Benjamin Dugdale

Queensland University of Technology

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Maiko Kato

Queensland University of Technology

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Robert M. Harding

Queensland University of Technology

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