skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Nanotechnology Approaches for Chloroplast Biotechnology Advancements
Photosynthetic organisms are sources of sustainable foods, renewable biofuels, novel biopharmaceuticals, and next-generation biomaterials essential for modern society. Efforts to improve the yield, variety, and sustainability of products dependent on chloroplasts are limited by the need for biotechnological approaches for high-throughput chloroplast transformation, monitoring chloroplast function, and engineering photosynthesis across diverse plant species. The use of nanotechnology has emerged as a novel approach to overcome some of these limitations. Nanotechnology is enabling advances in the targeted delivery of chemicals and genetic elements to chloroplasts, nanosensors for chloroplast biomolecules, and nanotherapeutics for enhancing chloroplast performance. Nanotechnology-mediated delivery of DNA to the chloroplast has the potential to revolutionize chloroplast synthetic biology by allowing transgenes, or even synthesized DNA libraries, to be delivered to a variety of photosynthetic species. Crop yield improvements could be enabled by nanomaterials that enhance photosynthesis, increase tolerance to stresses, and act as nanosensors for biomolecules associated with chloroplast function. Engineering isolated chloroplasts through nanotechnology and synthetic biology approaches are leading to a new generation of plant-based biomaterials able to self-repair using abundant CO 2 and water sources and are powered by renewable sunlight energy. Current knowledge gaps of nanotechnology-enabled approaches for chloroplast biotechnology include precise mechanisms for entry into plant cells and organelles, limited understanding about nanoparticle-based chloroplast transformations, and the translation of lab-based nanotechnology tools to the agricultural field with crop plants. Future research in chloroplast biotechnology mediated by the merging of synthetic biology and nanotechnology approaches can yield tools for precise control and monitoring of chloroplast function in vivo and ex vivo across diverse plant species, allowing increased plant productivity and turning plants into widely available sustainable technologies.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1911763
PAR ID:
10331263
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Frontiers in Plant Science
Volume:
12
ISSN:
1664-462X
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Chloroplast are sites of photosynthesis that have been bioengineered to produce food, biopharmaceuticals, and biomaterials. Current approaches for altering the chloroplast genome rely on inefficient DNA delivery methods, leading to low chloroplast transformation efficiency rates. For algal chloroplasts, there is no modifiable, customizable, and efficient in situ DNA delivery chassis. Herein, we investigated polyethylenimine-coated single-walled carbon nanotubes (PEI-SWCNT) as delivery vehicles for DNA to algal chloroplasts. We examined the impact of PEI-SWCNT charge and PEI polymer size (25k vs 10k) on the uptake into chloroplasts of wildtype and cell wall knockout mutant strains of the green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. To assess the delivery of DNA bound to PEI-SWCNT, we used confocal microscopy and colocalization analysis of chloroplast autofluorescence with fluorophore-labeled single-stranded GT15 DNA. We found that highly charged DNA-PEI25k-SWNCT have a statistically significant higher percentage of DNA colocalization events with algal chloroplasts (22.28% ± 6.42, 1 hr) over 1-3 hours than DNA-PEI10k-SWNCT (7.23% ± 0.68, 1 hr) (P<0.01). We determined the biocompatibility of DNA-PEI-SWCNT through assays for living algae cells, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, and in vivo chlorophyll assays. Through these assays, it was shown that algae exposed to DNA-PEI25k-SWCNT (30 fg/cell) and DNA-PEI10k-SWCNT (300 fg/cell) were viable over 4 days and had little impact on oxidative stress levels. DNA coated PEI-SWCNT transiently increased ROS levels within one hour of exposure to nanomaterials (30- 300 fg/cell) both in the wildtype strain and cell-wall knockout strain, followed by ROS decline to normal levels due to reaction with antioxidant glutathione and lipid membranes. PEI-SWCNT can act as biological carriers for delivering biomolecules such as DNA and have the potential to become novel tools for chloroplast biotechnology and synthetic biology. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract Current approaches for nanomaterial delivery in plants are unable to target specific subcellular compartments with high precision, limiting our ability to engineer plant function. We demonstrate a nanoscale platform that targets and delivers nanomaterials with biochemicals to plant photosynthetic organelles (chloroplasts) using a guiding peptide recognition motif. Quantum dot (QD) fluorescence emission in a low background window allows confocal microscopy imaging and quantitative detection by elemental analysis in plant cells and organelles. QD functionalization with β-cyclodextrin molecular baskets enables loading and delivery of diverse chemicals, and nanoparticle coating with a rationally designed and conserved guiding peptide targets their delivery to chloroplasts. Peptide biorecognition provides high delivery efficiency and specificity of QD with chemical cargoes to chloroplasts in plant cells in vivo (74.6 ± 10.8%) and more specific tunable changes of chloroplast redox function than chemicals alone. Targeted delivery of nanomaterials with chemical cargoes guided by biorecognition motifs has a broad range of nanotechnology applications in plant biology and bioengineering, nanoparticle-plant interactions, and nano-enabled agriculture. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract At the dawn of new millennium, policy makers and researchers focused on sustainable agricultural growth, aiming for food security and enhanced food quality. Several emerging scientific innovations hold the promise to meet the future challenges. Nanotechnology presents a promising avenue to tackle the diverse challenges in agriculture. By leveraging nanomaterials, including nano fertilizers, pesticides, and sensors, it provides targeted delivery methods, enhancing efficacy in both crop production and protection. This integration of nanotechnology with agriculture introduces innovations like disease diagnostics, improved nutrient uptake in plants, and advanced delivery systems for agrochemicals. These precision-based approaches not only optimize resource utilization but also reduce environmental impact, aligning well with sustainability objectives. Concurrently, genetic innovations, including genome editing and advanced breeding techniques, enable the development of crops with improved yield, resilience, and nutritional content. The emergence of precision gene-editing technologies, exemplified by CRISPR/Cas9, can transform the realm of genetic modification and enabled precise manipulation of plant genomes while avoiding the incorporation of external DNAs. Integration of nanotechnology and genetic innovations in agriculture presents a transformative approach. Leveraging nanoparticles for targeted genetic modifications, nanosensors for early plant health monitoring, and precision nanomaterials for controlled delivery of inputs offers a sustainable pathway towards enhanced crop productivity, resource efficiency, and food safety throughout the agricultural lifecycle. This comprehensive review outlines the pivotal role of nanotechnology in precision agriculture, emphasizing soil health improvement, stress resilience against biotic and abiotic factors, environmental sustainability, and genetic engineering. 
    more » « less
  4. Mechanisms of nanomaterial delivery to plant chloroplasts have been explored to improve plant stress tolerance, promote photosynthesis, facilitate genetic engineering, and manufacture self-repairing biomaterials, fuels, and biopharmaceuticals. However, the molecular interactions of nanomaterials with chloroplast membranes are not well understood. In this study, we examine the interactions of an important set of chloroplast membrane lipids including sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerols with carbon nanodots varying in functional group charge. To accomplish this objective, we constructed a novel model chloroplast membrane and interrogated the influence of carbon nanodot functional group charge, model chloroplast membrane composition, and ionic strength on the carbon nanodot-chloroplast membrane interactions using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring. We further examined the interaction of carbon nanodots with native chloroplasts isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana using confocal laser-scanning microscopy. Our results indicate that carbon nanodot–chloroplast membrane interactions are dictated primarily by electrostatics. Despite being the least abundant lipids in chloroplast membranes, we find that the relative abundance of sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerol in model membranes is a critical factor governing both the affinity and capacity of the membrane for positively charged carbon nanodots. Rates of carbon nanodot attachment to model chloroplast membranes varied with ionic strength in a manner consistent with electrical double layer compression on carbon nanodots. Our findings elucidate chemical interactions between nanomaterials and plant biosurfaces at the molecular level and potentially contribute to establishing structure–property–interaction relationships of sustainable nanomaterials with plant organelle membranes. 
    more » « less
  5. Chloroplasts are endosymbiotic organelles derived from cyanobacteria. They have a double envelope membrane, including the outer envelope and the inner envelope. A complex membrane system, thylakoids, exists inside the chloroplast. It is the site of the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis. The stroma is the main site of the carbon fixation reactions. Although photosynthesis is a very complicated process with many proteins involved, there are many other important processes that occur in chloroplasts, including the regulation of photosynthesis, the biogenesis and maintenance of the structures, carbohydrate, lipid, tetrapyrrole, amino acid, and isoprenoid metabolism, production of some phytohormones, production of specialized metabolites, regulation of redox, and interactions with other parts of the cell (Sabater, 2018). During evolution, most of the cyanobacterial genes were lost and many of them were transferred into the nuclear genome. A majority of chloroplast proteins are nuclear-encoded and possess an N-terminal transit peptide which helps the protein to be targeted into chloroplasts. Chloroplasts have their own highly reduced genome which works coordinately with the nuclear genome for the biogenesis and function of chloroplasts (Liebers et al., 2022). This Research Topic presents studies covering different aspects of chloroplast function, including photosynthesis, biogenesis, structure, and maintenance. These works push the frontiers of chloroplast research further in the field of plant biology. 
    more » « less