Transformation of Soybean Cells Using Mixed Strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens and Phenolic Compounds

  • Owens L
  • Smigocki A
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Abstract

Cotyledon explants from germinated 1-day-old soybean seedling were inoculated with single or mixed strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Mixed-strain infections with the supervirulent L,L-succinamopine type strain A281 (pTiBo542) and strain LBA4404 carrying an octopine type virulence (vir) region and a binary vector (pBin6) with a chimeric gene for kanamycin detoxification gave rise to tumors of which 25% were both kanamycin resistant and capable of hormone-independent growth. Singlestrain inoculations with LBA4404 (pBin6) failed to give rise to kanamycin-resistant callus. Syringaldehyde, a compound which induces vir genes carried on the Ti plasmid, increased the number of galls incited on excised cotyledons by the weakly virulent octopine type strain A348 (pTiA6). Similar results were obtained with whole plants treated with this strain in the presence of the vir-inducing compound acetosyringone. Our results indicate that the recovery of transformed soybean cells can be enabled in some instances by coinfecting with a supervirulent strain or in other instances promoted by adding a phenolic compound to the inoculum.

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Owens, L. D., & Smigocki, A. C. (1988). Transformation of Soybean Cells Using Mixed Strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens and Phenolic Compounds. Plant Physiology, 88(3), 570–573. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.88.3.570

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