Abstract

Plants bind solar energy to organic matter via photosynthesis and assimilation of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and comprise the major source of nutrition and bioenergy. Plant biotechnology contributes to solution of important constraints in food and feed production and creates new technologies and applications for the sustainable use of plant resources. Genome-wide approaches such as massive parallel sequencing and microarrays to study gene expression, molecular markers for selection of important traits in breeding, characterization of genetic diversity with the aforementioned approaches, and somatic hybridization and genetic transformation are important tools in plant biotechnology. In this paper, studies carried out on enhanced resistance to viruses and tolerance of cold stress in potato, genetic modification of flower pigmentation and morphology in gerbera, production of edible vaccines in transgenic barley seeds, and expression of heterologous proteins for pharmaceutical purposes from vector viruses were chosen to exemplify the general utility of biotechnological approaches and also how plant biotechnology research has developed on cultivated plants at University of Helsinki. The studies reveal cellular and genetic mechanisms and provide scientific information that can be used for widening the uses of crop plants. They can also be used to detect any putative risks associated with the use of the biotechnological application in agriculture and horticulture and to develop practises which reduce any inadvertent negative consequences that plant production may have to the environment.;

Highlights

  • The photosynthesizing organisms, notably plants, are responsible for binding solar energy to organic matter and provide the source of food and bioenergy on earth

  • Studies carried out on enhanced resistance to viruses and tolerance of cold stress in potato, genetic modification of flower pigmentation and morphology in gerbera, production of edible vaccines in transgenic barley seeds, and expression of heterologous proteins for pharmaceutical purposes from vector viruses were chosen to exemplify the general utility of biotechnological approaches and how plant biotechnology research has developed on cultivated plants at University of Helsinki

  • Plant biotechnology became an integral part of teaching and research at AF-University of Helsinki (UH) soon after the relevant, fundamental key discoveries in plant molecular biology had been made abroad in the early 1980’s

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Summary

Review article

Plant biotechnology for deeper understanding, wider use and further development of agricultural and horticultural crops. Studies carried out on enhanced resistance to viruses and tolerance of cold stress in potato, genetic modification of flower pigmentation and morphology in gerbera, production of edible vaccines in transgenic barley seeds, and expression of heterologous proteins for pharmaceutical purposes from vector viruses were chosen to exemplify the general utility of biotechnological approaches and how plant biotechnology research has developed on cultivated plants at University of Helsinki. The studies reveal cellular and genetic mechanisms and provide scientific information that can be used for widening the uses of crop plants. They can be used to detect any putative risks associated with the use of the biotechnological application in agriculture and horticulture and to develop practises which reduce any inadvertent negative consequences that plant production may have to the environment. Key-words: plant biotechnology, molecular biology, crop production, horticulture, disease resistance, stress tolerance, metabolic pathway, biopharming, edible vaccine, cryotherapy

Introduction
Potato biotechnology
These developments have their backgound in the
Biotechnology in horticultural species
Production of heterologous proteins in plants
Production of edible vaccines in transgenic plants
Expression of heterologous proteins from a vector virus
Molecular markers and their multiple uses
Structures facilitating progress in plant biotechnology research
Findings
Helsingin yliopisto

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