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Dive into the research topics where Fatima Naim is active.

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Featured researches published by Fatima Naim.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Advanced engineering of lipid metabolism in Nicotiana benthamiana using a draft genome and the V2 viral silencing-suppressor protein.

Fatima Naim; Kenlee Nakasugi; Ross N. Crowhurst; Elena Hilario; Alexander B. Zwart; Roger P. Hellens; Jennifer M. Taylor; Peter M. Waterhouse; Craig C. Wood

The transient leaf assay in Nicotiana benthamiana is widely used in plant sciences, with one application being the rapid assembly of complex multigene pathways that produce new fatty acid profiles. This rapid and facile assay would be further improved if it were possible to simultaneously overexpress transgenes while accurately silencing endogenes. Here, we report a draft genome resource for N. benthamiana spanning over 75% of the 3.1 Gb haploid genome. This resource revealed a two-member NbFAD2 family, NbFAD2.1 and NbFAD2.2, and quantitative RT-PCR (qRT-PCR) confirmed their expression in leaves. FAD2 activities were silenced using hairpin RNAi as monitored by qRT-PCR and biochemical assays. Silencing of endogenous FAD2 activities was combined with overexpression of transgenes via the use of the alternative viral silencing-suppressor protein, V2, from Tomato yellow leaf curl virus. We show that V2 permits maximal overexpression of transgenes but, crucially, also allows hairpin RNAi to operate unimpeded. To illustrate the efficacy of the V2-based leaf assay system, endogenous lipids were shunted from the desaturation of 18∶1 to elongation reactions beginning with 18∶1 as substrate. These V2-based leaf assays produced ∼50% more elongated fatty acid products than p19-based assays. Analyses of small RNA populations generated from hairpin RNAi against NbFAD2 confirm that the siRNA population is dominated by 21 and 22 nt species derived from the hairpin. Collectively, these new tools expand the range of uses and possibilities for metabolic engineering in transient leaf assays.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

In-Plant Protection against Helicoverpa armigera by Production of Long hpRNA in Chloroplasts

Julia Bally; Glen J. McIntyre; Rachel L. Doran; Karen Lee; Alicia Perez; Hyungtaek Jung; Fatima Naim; Ignacio M. Larrinua; Kenneth E. Narva; Peter M. Waterhouse

Expressing double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) in transgenic plants to silence essential genes within herbivorous pests is referred to as trans-kingdom RNA interference (TK-RNAi) and has emerged as a promising strategy for crop protection. However, the dicing of dsRNA into siRNAs by the plant’s intrinsic RNAi machinery may reduce this pesticidal activity. Therefore, genetic constructs, encoding ∼200 nt duplex-stemmed-hairpin (hp) RNAs, targeting the acetylcholinesterase gene of the cotton bollworm, Helicoverpa armigera, were integrated into either the nuclear or the chloroplast genome of Nicotiana benthamiana. Undiced, full-length hpRNAs accumulated in transplastomic lines of N. benthamiana and conferred strong protection against H. armigera herbivory while the hpRNAs of nuclear-transformed plants were processed into siRNAs and gave more modest anti-feeding activity. This suggests that there is little or no RNAi machinery or activity in the chloroplast, that hpRNAs produced within this organelle do not enter the cytoplasm, and that oral delivery of chloroplast-packaged intact hpRNA is a more effective means of delivering TK-RNAi than using nuclear encoded hpRNAs. This contrasts with a recently reported correlation between siRNA expression and effectiveness of TK-RNAi targeting the chitinase gene of H. armigera, but is consistent with reports of efficient TK-RNAi by dsRNA generated in chloroplasts by converging promoters flanking a pest gene sequence and from very small (21 nt-stem) hpRNAs resembling artificial miRNAs. Here we demonstrate that hpRNAs, constructed along the conventional design principles of plant RNAi constructs but integrated into the chloroplast genome, are stable and effective over multiple generations, and hold the promise of providing durable pest resistance in crops.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2016

Stable expression of silencing‐suppressor protein enhances the performance and longevity of an engineered metabolic pathway

Fatima Naim; Pushkar Shrestha; Surinder Singh; Peter M. Waterhouse; Craig C. Wood

Summary Transgenic engineering of plants is important in both basic and applied research. However, the expression of a transgene can dwindle over time as the plants small (s)RNA‐guided silencing pathways shut it down. The silencing pathways have evolved as antiviral defence mechanisms, and viruses have co‐evolved viral silencing‐suppressor proteins (VSPs) to block them. Therefore, VSPs have been routinely used alongside desired transgene constructs to enhance their expression in transient assays. However, constitutive, stable expression of a VSP in a plant usually causes pronounced developmental abnormalities, as their actions interfere with endogenous microRNA‐regulated processes, and has largely precluded the use of VSPs as an aid to stable transgene expression. In an attempt to avoid the deleterious effects but obtain the enhancing effect, a number of different VSPs were expressed exclusively in the seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana alongside a three‐step transgenic pathway for the synthesis of arachidonic acid (AA), an ω‐6 long chain polyunsaturated fatty acid. Results from independent transgenic events, maintained for four generations, showed that the VSP‐AA‐transformed plants were developmentally normal, apart from minor phenotypes at the cotyledon stage, and could produce 40% more AA than plants transformed with the AA transgene cassette alone. Intriguingly, a geminivirus VSP, V2, was constitutively expressed without causing developmental defects, as it acts on the siRNA amplification step that is not part of the miRNA pathway, and gave strong transgene enhancement. These results demonstrate that VSP expression can be used to protect and enhance stable transgene performance and has significant biotechnological application.


Transgenic Research | 2018

Gene editing the phytoene desaturase alleles of Cavendish banana using CRISPR/Cas9

Fatima Naim; Benjamin Dugdale; Jennifer Kleidon; Anthony Brinin; Kylie Shand; Peter M. Waterhouse; James L. Dale

Bananas are a staple food source and a major export commodity worldwide. The Cavendish dessert banana is a triploid AAA genome type and accounts for around 47% of global production. Being essentially sterile, genetic modification is perhaps the only pathway available to improve this cultivar. In this study, we used the CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing system to deliver a self-cleaving polycistronic guide RNA (gRNA) designed to target exon 1 of the Phytoene desaturase (PDS) gene in the Cavendish cultivar “Williams”. Genotyping of 19 independent events showed a 100% PDS modification rate primarily in the form of insertions (1–105 nt) or deletions (1–55 nt) (indels) at the predicted cleavage site. Tri-allelic disruptive modifications were observed in 63% of plants and resulted in both albinism and dwarfing. Pale green (16%) and wildtype green (21%) phenotypes generally correlated with in-frame indels in at least one of the three PDS alleles. Editing efficiency was dependent on both target site selection and Cas9 abundance. This is the first report of a highly effective CRISPR/Cas9 modification system using a polycistronic gRNA in Cavendish banana. Such an editing platform will be of considerable utility for the development of disease resistance and novel agro-traits in this commercially important cultivar into the future.


Nature plants | 2015

The extremophile Nicotiana benthamiana has traded viral defence for early vigour.

Julia Bally; Kenlee Nakasugi; Fangzhi Jia; Hyungtaek Jung; Simon Y. W. Ho; Mei Wong; Chloe M. Paul; Fatima Naim; Craig C. Wood; Ross N. Crowhurst; Roger P. Hellens; James L. Dale; Peter M. Waterhouse


Minerals Engineering | 2009

Mechanisms of sulfide ion oxidation during cyanidation. Part II: Surface catalysis by pyrite

D.M. Hewitt; P.L. Breuer; M.I. Jeffrey; Fatima Naim


Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2012

Production of dihydrosterculic acid and derivatives thereof

Craig C. Wood; Fatima Naim; Surinder Pal Singh; Shoko Okada


Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities; Institute for Future Environments; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2016

In-plant protection against Helicoverpa armigera by production of long hpRNA in chloroplasts

Julia Bally; Glen J. McIntyre; Rachel L. Doran; Karen Lee; Alicia Perez; Hyungtaek Jung; Fatima Naim; Ignacio M. Larrinua; Kenneth E. Narva; Peter M. Waterhouse


Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2010

THE ROLES OF ADSORPTION IN HYDRATE PRECIPITATION

Joanne Loh; Greta Brodie; Fatima Naim


Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2012

Simultaneous gene silencing and supressing gene silencing in the same cell

Craig C. Wood; Fatima Naim; Surinder Pal Singh

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Peter M. Waterhouse

Queensland University of Technology

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Craig C. Wood

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Roger P. Hellens

Queensland University of Technology

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Hyungtaek Jung

Queensland University of Technology

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Alexander B. Zwart

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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James L. Dale

Queensland University of Technology

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Jennifer M. Taylor

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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