Differences in susceptibility of arabidopsis ecotypes to crown gall disease may result from a deficiency in T-DNA integration

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Abstract

We show that among ecotypes of Arabidopsis, there is considerable variation in their susceptibility to crown gall disease. Differences in susceptibility are heritable and, in one ecotype, segregate as a single major contributing locus. In several ecotypes, recalcitrance to tumorigenesis results from decreased binding of Agrobacterium to inoculated root explants. The recalcitrance of another ecotype occurs at a late step in T-DNA transfer. Transient expression of a T-DNA-encoded β-glucuronidase gusA gene is efficient, but the ecotype is deficient in crown gall tumorigenesis, transformation to kanamycin resistance, and stable GUS expression. This ecotype is also more sensitive to γ radiation than is a susceptible ecotype. DNA gel blot analysis showed that after infection by Agrobacterium, less T-DNA was integrated into the genome of the recalcitrant ecotype than was integrated into the genome of a highly susceptible ecotype.

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Nam, J., Matthysse, A. G., & Gelvin, S. B. (1997). Differences in susceptibility of arabidopsis ecotypes to crown gall disease may result from a deficiency in T-DNA integration. Plant Cell, 9(3), 317–333. https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.9.3.317

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