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Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a Gram-negative soil phytopathogen. Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Agrobacterium affect most dicotyledonous plants in nature, resulting in crown gall tumors at the soil-air junction upon tissue wounding.
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Agrobacterium tumefaciens • Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a Gram-negative soil phytopathogen.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens • Agrobacterium affect most dicotyledonous plants in nature, resulting in crown gall tumors at the soil-air junction upon tissue wounding.
Agrobacteria that causes neoplastic diseases in plants • Agrobacterium rhizogenes (hairy root disease). • Agrobacteriumrubi (cane gall disease) • Agrobacteriumtumefaciens (crown gall disease) • Agrobacteriumvitis (crown gall of grape)
What will Agrobacterium tumefaciens affect in plants? • Crown gall disease is not generally fatal, but it will reduce plant vigor and crop yield, and crown galls will attract other phytopathogens or pests. • In some cases, necrosis or apoptosis is observed after Agrobacterium infection.
Host range of Agrobacterium • Agrobacterium has the broadest host range of any plant pathogenic bacterium. • Angiosperms: numerous species, including monocots and dicots. • Gymnosperms: mostly genus Pinus. There was a report about transforming larch (Larix) • Microorganisms: fungi, yeasts, ascomycetes, and blasidiomycetes. • Human cells: Hela cells
The discovery of Agrobacterium • In 1897, Fridiano Cavara identified a flagellate, bacilloid bacterium as a casual agent of crown gall of grape. • This organism is Agrobacterium vitis, causing the growth of neoplastic tumors on the stem and crown of grapevines and inducing necrotic lesions on grape roots.
The initiation of Agrobacterium infection • Agrobacteria usually infects plants from their wounds, which occurred quite frequent after frost. • In practice, protection from subfreezing winter temperatures and control of chewing insects and nematodes can prevent infection by agrobacteria. • Avirulent Agrobacterium strains like Agrobacterium radiobacter K84 and its plasmid-transfer-deficient derivative K1026 strains were proven to be effective in controlling infection.
Agrobacterium infect the ovaries of flowers • Agrobacterium infects flowers that were developmentally young at the time (6-11 days away from anthesis; equivalent to 5-10 days after inoculation).
Agrobacterium infect the ovaries of flowers • GUS staining can only be observed in ovaries 5 days after inoculation and is vanished 12 days after inoculation.
How can Agrobacterium infects the ovaries of flowers? • Because the gynoecium of Arabidopsis were formed by two carpels and they remained separated until three days before anthesis (flowering).
transfer Left Border and Right Border (Tumor-inducing)
Steps of Agrobacterium-plant cell interaction • Cell-cell recognition • Signal transduction and transcriptional activation of vir genes • Conjugal DNA metabolism • Intercellular transport • Nuclear import • T-DNA integration
T-pilus usually wind into compact coils to bring the bacterium and host cell closer
CaMV 35S PR Right T-DNA border MCS nptII(KanR) Neomycin phosphotransferase Left T-DNA border