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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Light It Up: Using Firefly Genes to Understand Cannabis Biology

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Cannabis, a plant gaining ever-increasing attention for its  wide-ranging medicinal properties, contains dozens of compounds known as  cannabinoids.

One of the best-known cannabinoids is cannabidiolic acid (CBD), which is used to treat pain, inflammation, nausea and more.

Cannabinoids are produced by trichomes, small spikey protrusions on  the surface of cannabis flowers. Beyond this fact, scientists know very  little about how cannabinoid biosynthesis is controlled.

Yi Ma, research assistant professor, and Gerry Berkowitz, professor in the https://cahnr.uconn.edu received funding through the National Research Initiative from the U.S.  Department of Agriculture to discover the underlying molecular  mechanisms behind trichrome development and cannabinoid synthesis.

Berkowitz and Ma, along with former graduate students Samuel Haiden  and Peter Apicella, discovered transcription factors responsible for  trichome initiation and cannabinoid biosynthesis. Transcription factors  are molecules that determine if a piece of an organism’s DNA will be  transcribed into RNA, and thus expressed.

In this case, the transcription factors cause epidermal cells on the  flowers to morph into trichomes. The team’s discovery was recently  published as a feature article in Plants. Related trichome research was also published in Plant Direct. Due to the gene’s potential economic impact, UConn has filed https://uconn.flintbox.com/technologies/c1993516-eef4-427d-9506-ea209929f1a4

With this new grant, the researchers will continue to explore how  these transcription factors play a role in trichome development during  flower maturation.

Berkowitz and Ma will clone the promoters (the part of DNA that  transcription factors bind to) of interest. They will then put the  promoters into the cells of a model plant along with a copy of the gene  that makes fireflies light up, known as firefly luciferase; the  luciferase is fused to the cannabis promoter so if the promoter is  activated by a signal, the luciferase reporter will generate light.  “It’s a nifty way to evaluate signals that orchestrate cannabinoid  synthesis and trichome development,” says Berkowitz.

The researchers will load the cloned promoters and luciferase into a  plasmid. Plasmids are circular DNA molecules that can replicate  independently of the chromosomes. This allows the scientists to express  the genes of interest even though they aren’t part of the plant’s  genomic DNA. They will deliver these plasmids into the plant leaves or  protoplasts, plant cells without the cell wall.

When the promoter controlling luciferase expression comes into  contact with the transcription factors responsible for trichome  development (or triggered by other signals such as plant hormones), the  luciferase ‘reporter’ will produce light. Ma and Berkowitz will use an  instrument called a luminometer, which measures how much light comes  from the sample. This will tell the researchers if the promoter regions  they are looking at are controlled by transcription factors responsible  for increasing trichome development or modulating genes that code for  cannabinoid biosynthetic enzymes. They can also learn if the promoters  respond to hormonal signals.

In prior work underlying the rationale for this experimental  approach, Ma and Berkowitz along with graduate student Peter Apicella  found that the enzyme that makes THC in cannabis trichomes may not be  the critical limiting step regulating THC production, but rather the  generation of the precursor for THC (and CBD) production and the  transporter-facilitated shuttling of the precursor to the extracellular  bulb might be key determinants in developing cannabis strains with high  THC or CBD.

Most cannabis farmers grow hemp, a variety of cannabis with naturally  lower THC levels than marijuana. Currently, most hemp varieties that  have high CBD levels also contain unacceptably high levels of THC. This  is likely because the hemp plants still make the enzyme that produces  THC. If the plant contains over 0.3% THC, it is considered federally  illegal and, in many cases, must be destroyed. A better understanding of  how the plant produces THC means scientists could selectively knock out  the enzyme that synthesizes THC using genome editing techniques such as  CRISPR. This would produce plants with lower levels of or no THC.

“We envision that the fundamental knowledge obtained can be  translated into novel genetic tools and strategies to improve the  cannabinoid profile, aid hemp farmers with the common problem of  overproducing THC, and benefit human health,” the researchers say.

On the other hand, this knowledge could lead to the production of  cannabis plants that produce more of a desired cannabinoid, making it  more valuable and profitable.

In addition to sharing these findings with cannabis scientists,  industry, and growers, the researchers will incorporate this new  knowledge into UConn https://today.uconn.edu/2021/04/non-degree-cannabis-courses-open-doors-to-growing-industry/.

This grant will also support the training of undergraduates  interested in cannabis research, providing them with the skills to enter  the workforce.

 

This research was bolstered by preliminary data Berkowitz gathered through an https://today.uconn.edu/2021/10/a-tiny-part-of-cannabis-biology-has-a-big-impact/. For more information about commercialization opportunities, contact techcomm@uconn.edu. 

Follow https://linktr.ee/uconncahnr_social on social media

Source: https://today.uconn.edu/2022/06/light-it-up-using-firefly-genes-to-understand-cannabis-biology/

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