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Dive into the research topics where Philip J. Dix is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip J. Dix.


EMBO Reports | 2005

Molecular farming for new drugs and vaccines. Current perspectives on the production of pharmaceuticals in transgenic plants.

Julian K.-C. Ma; Eugenia Barros; Ralph Bock; Paul Christou; Philip J. Dale; Philip J. Dix; Rainer Fischer; Judith A. Irwin; Richard Mahoney; Mario Pezzotti; Stefan Schillberg; Penny Sparrow; Eva Stoger; Richard M. Twyman

The European Union Framework 6 Pharma–Planta Consortium The first recombinant plant‐derived pharmaceutical protein (PDP) was human serum albumin, initially produced in 1990 in transgenic tobacco and potato plants (Sijmons et al , 1990). Fifteen years on, the first technical proteins produced in transgenic plants are on the market, and proof of concept has been established for the production of many therapeutic proteins, including antibodies, blood products, cytokines, growth factors, hormones, recombinant enzymes and human and veterinary vaccines (Twyman et al , 2005). Furthermore, several PDP products for the treatment of human diseases are approaching commercialization (Table 1), including recombinant gastric lipase for the treatment of cystic fibrosis, and antibodies for the prevention of dental caries and the treatment of non‐Hodgkins lymphoma (Ma et al , 2003). There are also several veterinary vaccines in the pipeline; Dow AgroSciences (Indianapolis, IN, USA) announced recently their intention to produce plant‐based vaccines for the animal health industry. View this table: Table 1. Plant‐derived pharmaceutical proteins that are closest to commercialization for the treatment of human diseases As molecular farming has come of age, there have been technological developments on many levels, including transformation methods, control of gene expression, protein targeting and accumulation, the use of different crops as production platforms (Twyman et al , 2003), and modifications to alter the structural and functional properties of the product. One of the most important driving factors has been yield improvement, as product yield has a significant impact on economic feasibility. Strategies to improve the recombinant protein yield in plants include the development of novel promoters, the improvement of protein stability and accumulation through the use of signals that target the protein to intracellular compartments, and the improvement of downstream processing technologies (Menkhaus et al , 2004). Attention is now shifting from basic research towards commercial exploitation, and molecular farming is reaching the stage at which it could challenge established production technologies that use bacteria, yeast and cultured mammalian cells. …


Molecular Breeding | 2005

Particle bombardment and the genetic enhancement of crops: myths and realities

Fredy Altpeter; Niranjan Baisakh; Roger N. Beachy; Ralph Bock; Teresa Capell; Paul Christou; Henry Daniell; Karabi Datta; Swapan K. Datta; Philip J. Dix; Claude M. Fauquet; Ning Huang; Ajay Kohli; Hans Mooibroek; Liz Nicholson; Thi Thanh Binh Nguyen; Gregory D. Nugent; Krit Raemakers; Andrea Romano; David A. Somers; Eva Stoger; Nigel J. Taylor; Richard G. F. Visser

DNA transfer by particle bombardment makes use of physical processes to achieve the transformation of crop plants. There is no dependence on bacteria, so the limitations inherent in organisms such as Agrobacterium tumefaciens do not apply. The absence of biological constraints, at least until DNA has entered the plant cell, means that particle bombardment is a versatile and effective transformation method, not limited by cell type, species or genotype. There are no intrinsic vector requirements so transgenes of any size and arrangement can be introduced, and multiple gene cotransformation is straightforward. The perceived disadvantages of particle bombardment compared to Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, i.e. the tendency to generate large transgene arrays containing rearranged and broken transgene copies, are not borne out by the recent detailed structural analysis of transgene loci produced by each of the methods. There is also little evidence for major differences in the levels of transgene instability and silencing when these transformation methods are compared in agriculturally important cereals and legumes, and other non-model systems. Indeed, a major advantage of particle bombardment is that the delivered DNA can be manipulated to influence the quality and structure of the resultant transgene loci. This has been demonstrated in recently reported strategies that favor the recovery of transgenic plants containing intact, single-copy integration events, and demonstrating high-level transgene expression. At the current time, particle bombardment is the most efficient way to achieve plastid transformation in plants and is the only method so far used to achieve mitochondrial transformation. In this review, we discuss recent data highlighting the positive impact of particle bombardment on the genetic transformation of plants, focusing on the fate of exogenous DNA, its organization and its expression in the plant cell. We also discuss some of the most important applications of this technology including the deployment of transgenic plants under field conditions.


Plant Cell Reports | 1987

Stimulation of shoot regeneration in Triticum aestivum and Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. tissue cultures using the ethylene inhibitor AgNO3

László Purnhauser; Peter Medgyesy; Mihály Czakó; Philip J. Dix; László Márton

Silver nitrate effectively promoted shoot regeneration in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) callus cultures derived from immature embryos. This effect could be observed in both weakly and strongly regenerating cultivars, and in using material from both field and greenhouse grown plants. The role of silver ions as an inhibitor of ethylene action was supported by a reversal of the inhibitory effects of 2,4-D and ethylene on morphogenesis in wheat callus cultures.Enhancement of shoot regeneration by silver nitrate was also observed in callus cultures of non-regenerating or weakly regenerating mutants of Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. derived from cell cultures.


Plant Science Letters | 1975

Sodium chloride-resistant cultured cell lines from Nicotiana sylvestris and Capsicum annuum

Philip J. Dix; H.E. Street

Abstract A number of cell lines of Nicotiana sylvestris and Capsicum annuum have been obtained which are capable of growth in liquid media containing 1% and 2% w/v sodium chloride. The cells of the resistant lines have a characteristic growth form in the presence of NaCl and in certain instances have been shown to retain their salt resistance when sub-cultured for several passages in the absence of NaCl.


Zeitschrift für Pflanzenphysiologie | 1981

Proline Accumulation in NaCl-resistant and Sensitive Cell Lines of Nicotiana sylvestris

Philip J. Dix; R.S. Pearce

Summary Cell lines of Nicotiana sylvestris , both sensitive and resistant to growth inhibition by NaCl, rapidly accumulated free proline on transfer from NaCl-free medium to medium containing 1.5 0/o (w/v) NaCl. Proline accumulated more rapidly in the sensitive cell line and the levels detected did not seem sufficient for it to act as an effective cytoplasmic osmoticum. None of the other amino acids detected exhibited comparable changes and the total of free amino acids other than proline was similar, in both lines, in the presence or absence of NaCl. Proline accumulation is considered either to be symptomatic of salt-induced stress, or to have a protective role other than as an osmotic regulator.


Transgenic Research | 2011

High efficiency plastid transformation in potato and regulation of transgene expression in leaves and tubers by alternative 5′ and 3′ regulatory sequences

Vladimir T. Valkov; Daniela Gargano; Carmela Manna; Gelsomina Formisano; Philip J. Dix; John C. Gray; Nunzia Scotti; Teodoro Cardi

Transformation of potato plastids is limited by low transformation frequencies and low transgene expression in tubers. In order to improve the transformation efficiency, we modified the regeneration procedure and prepared novel vectors containing potato flanking sequences for transgene integration by homologous recombination in the Large Single Copy region of the plastome. Vector delivery was performed by the biolistic approach. By using the improved regeneration procedure and the potato flanking sequences, we regenerated about one shoot every bombardment. This efficiency corresponds to 15–18-fold improvement compared to previous results with potato and is comparable to that usually achieved with tobacco. Further, we tested five promoters and terminators, and four 5′-UTRs, to increase the expression of the gfp transgene in tubers. In leaves, accumulation of GFP to about 4% of total soluble protein (TSP) was obtained with the strong promoter of the rrn operon, a synthetic rbcL-derived 5′-UTR and the bacterial rrnB terminator. GFP protein was detected in tubers of plants transformed with only four constructs out of eleven. Best results (up to approximately 0.02% TSP) were achieved with the rrn promoter and rbcL 5′-UTR construct, described above, and another containing the same terminator, but with the promoter and 5′-UTR from the plastid clpP gene. The results obtained suggest the potential use of clpP as source of novel regulatory sequences in constructs aiming to express transgenes in amyloplasts and other non-green plastids. Furthermore, they represent a significant advancement of the plastid transformation technology in potato, of relevance to its implementation in potato breeding and biotechnology.


DNA Research | 2009

Complete chloroplast genome sequence of a major allogamous forage species, perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.).

Kerstin Diekmann; Trevor R. Hodkinson; Kenneth H. Wolfe; Rob van den Bekerom; Philip J. Dix; Susanne Barth

Lolium perenne L. (perennial ryegrass) is globally one of the most important forage and grassland crops. We sequenced the chloroplast (cp) genome of Lolium perenne cultivar Cashel. The L. perenne cp genome is 135 282 bp with a typical quadripartite structure. It contains genes for 76 unique proteins, 30 tRNAs and four rRNAs. As in other grasses, the genes accD, ycf1 and ycf2 are absent. The genome is of average size within its subfamily Pooideae and of medium size within the Poaceae. Genome size differences are mainly due to length variations in non-coding regions. However, considerable length differences of 1–27 codons in comparison of L. perenne to other Poaceae and 1–68 codons among all Poaceae were also detected. Within the cp genome of this outcrossing cultivar, 10 insertion/deletion polymorphisms and 40 single nucleotide polymorphisms were detected. Two of the polymorphisms involve tiny inversions within hairpin structures. By comparing the genome sequence with RT–PCR products of transcripts for 33 genes, 31 mRNA editing sites were identified, five of them unique to Lolium. The cp genome sequence of L. perenne is available under Accession number AM777385 at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory, National Center for Biotechnology Information and DNA DataBank of Japan.


Transgenic Research | 2008

Transplastomic tobacco plants expressing a fatty acid desaturase gene exhibit altered fatty acid profiles and improved cold tolerance

Wendy Craig; Paolo Lenzi; Nunzia Scotti; Monica De Palma; Paola Saggese; Virginia Carbone; Noreen McGrath Curran; Alan M. Magee; Peter Medgyesy; Tony A. Kavanagh; Philip J. Dix; Stefania Grillo; Teodoro Cardi

The possibility of altering the unsaturation level of fatty acids in plant lipids by genetic transformation has implications for the stress tolerance of higher plants as well as for their nutritional value and industrial utilisation. While the integration and expression of transgenes in the plastome has several potential advantages over nuclear transformation, very few attempts have been made to manipulate fatty acid biosynthesis using plastid transformation. We produced transplastomic tobacco plants that express a Δ9 desaturase gene from either the wild potato species Solanum commersonii or the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans, using PEG-mediated DNA uptake by protoplasts. Incorporation of chloroplast antibiotic-insensitive point mutations in the transforming DNA was used to select transformants. The presence of the transcript and the Δ9 desaturase protein in transplastomic plants was confirmed by northern and western blot analyses. In comparison with control plants, transplastomic plants showed altered fatty acid profiles and an increase in their unsaturation level both in leaves and seeds. The two transgenes produced comparable results. The results obtained demonstrate the feasibility of using plastid transformation to engineer lipid metabolic pathways in both vegetative and reproductive tissues and suggest an increase of cold tolerance in transplastomic plants showing altered leaf fatty acid profiles. This is the first example of transplastomic plants expressing an agronomically relevant gene produced with the “binding-type” vectors, which do not contain a heterologous marker gene. In fact, the transplastomic plants expressing the S. commersonii gene contain only plant-derived sequences, a clear attraction from a public acceptability perspective.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1977

A cell line of Nicotiana sylvestris with resistance to kanamycin and streptomycin

Philip J. Dix; Ferenc Jo; Pl Maliga

SummaryCell lines resistant to 50 μg ml-1 kanamycin sulphate were isolated from cell suspension cultures initiated from a haploid Nicotiana sylvestris plant. One line, KR103, has been studied in detail. Resistance of this line was shown to be stable in the absence of the drug. KR103 was found also to be resistant to streptomycin, another inhibitor of 70S ribosomal protein synthesis.Both KR103 and the sensitive line convert kanamycin, but not streptomycin, to a form which is no longer effective in a bacterial bioassay, while maintaining its toxicity for sensitive plant cells.KR103 is defective in morphogenesis and plastid development.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1989

A simple procedure for the isolation of streptomycin resistant plants in Solanaceae.

P. F. Mc Cabe; Aileen Mary Timmons; Philip J. Dix

SummaryA system has been developed for rapid selection of streptomycin resistant mutants, as adventitious shoots arising from explants of several Solanaceous species. Efficient mutagenesis was achieved by incubating shoot culture-derived leaf strips with 1 or 5 mM nitroso-methylurea, for 90 or 120 min. In Nicotiana tabacum and Lycopersicon peruvianum these treatments resulted in white or variegated adventitious shoots from up to 3.5% of explants placed on medium promoting shoot regeneration. Chlorophyll deficiencies were only observed very rarely in Solanum nigrum. Streptomycin resistant shoots were obtained from leaf explants placed on medium containing 500 mg l-1 streptomycin sulphate, under which conditions explants are bleached and adventitious shoot development suppressed. Green adventitious s shoots appeared at a frequency dependent both on the mutagenic treatment and on the species. The best response was with S. nigrum where >70% of the explants produced streptomycin resistant shoots, most of which retained their resistance on subsequent testing. Maternal inheritance of streptomycin resistance has been confirmed for several N. tabacum and S. nigrum mutants, and there is also evidence for paternal transmission in the latter species. The procedure has been successfully extended to other species, including N. sylvestris and N. plumbaginifolia, and also to obtain spectinomycin resistant mutants.

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Peter Medgyesy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Emma Burbridge

Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência

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Paul F. McCabe

University College Dublin

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Matthew S. McCabe

National University of Ireland

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