Article ID: 25.0515a
The agroinfiltration technique using sprouts as a host is one of the most cost-effective, efficient, and rapid methods for producing recombinant proteins. We previously reported that radish sprouts were the best host for this purpose. To find suitable alternative sprouts comparable to radish sprouts, we investigated rye sprouts using a wheat dwarf virus (a geminivirus) DNA-containing expression vector. Various rye cultivars were tested, and Raitaro and Ryokuhiyo sprouts exhibited the highest enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) productivity. When agroinfiltrated after a 5-d cultivation period, including 1 d of seed imbibition, approximately 1.8 mg of EGFP was produced per gram fresh weight of leaf in areas exhibiting EGFP fluorescence. This yield is comparable to that of mature leaves from Nicotiana benthamiana and radish sprouts. However, only a limited number of leaves produced the protein, and production was confined to areas near the leaf tips. Elevated production levels were observed in the guard cells of stomata and at wounded sites via microneedling, suggesting that the limiting factors for protein production may involve the entry of Agrobacterium into the leaves and/or the subsequent transfer of T-DNA into the plant cells.