Limited-host-range plasmid of Agrobacterium tumefaciens: molecular and genetic analyses of transferred DNA. 1985

M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester

A tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid from a strain of Agrobacterium tumefaciens that induces tumors on only a limited range of plants was characterized and compared with the Ti plasmids from strains that induce tumors on a wide range of plants. Whereas all wide-host-range Ti plasmids characterized to date contain closely linked oncogenic loci within a single transferred DNA (T-DNA) region, homology to these loci is divided into two widely separated T-DNA regions on the limited-host-range plasmid. These two plasmid regions, TA-DNA and TB-DNA, are separated by approximately 25 kilobases of DNA which is not maintained in the tumor. The TA-DNA region resembles a deleted form of the wide-host-range TL-DNA and contains a region homologous to the cytokinin biosynthetic gene. However, a region homologous to the two auxin biosynthetic loci of the wide-host-range plasmid mapped within the TB-DNA region. These latter genes play an important role in tumor formation because mutations in these loci result in a loss of virulence on Nicotiana plants. Furthermore, the TB-DNA region alone conferred tumorigenicity onto strains with an intact set of vir genes. Our results suggest that factors within both the T-DNA and the vir regions contribute to the expression of host range in Agrobacterium species. There was a tremendous variation among plants in susceptibility to tumor formation by various A. tumefaciens strains. This variation occurred not only among different plant species, but also among different varieties of plants within the same genus.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D009154 Mutation Any detectable and heritable change in the genetic material that causes a change in the GENOTYPE and which is transmitted to daughter cells and to succeeding generations. Mutations
D010941 Plant Tumors A localized proliferation of plant tissue forming a swelling or outgrowth, commonly with a characteristic shape and unlike any organ of the normal plant. Plant tumors or galls usually form in response to the action of a pathogen or a pest. (Holliday, P., A Dictionary of Plant Pathology, 1989, p330) Crown Gall,Galls, Plant,Plant Galls,Crown Galls,Gall, Crown,Gall, Plant,Galls, Crown,Plant Gall,Plant Tumor,Tumor, Plant,Tumors, Plant
D010957 Plasmids Extrachromosomal, usually CIRCULAR DNA molecules that are self-replicating and transferable from one organism to another. They are found in a variety of bacterial, archaeal, fungal, algal, and plant species. They are used in GENETIC ENGINEERING as CLONING VECTORS. Episomes,Episome,Plasmid
D004269 DNA, Bacterial Deoxyribonucleic acid that makes up the genetic material of bacteria. Bacterial DNA
D005786 Gene Expression Regulation Any of the processes by which nuclear, cytoplasmic, or intercellular factors influence the differential control (induction or repression) of gene action at the level of transcription or translation. Gene Action Regulation,Regulation of Gene Expression,Expression Regulation, Gene,Regulation, Gene Action,Regulation, Gene Expression
D005798 Genes, Bacterial The functional hereditary units of BACTERIA. Bacterial Gene,Bacterial Genes,Gene, Bacterial
D012231 Rhizobium A genus of gram-negative, aerobic, rod-shaped bacteria that activate PLANT ROOT NODULATION in leguminous plants. Members of this genus are nitrogen-fixing and common soil inhabitants.
D013045 Species Specificity The restriction of a characteristic behavior, anatomical structure or physical system, such as immune response; metabolic response, or gene or gene variant to the members of one species. It refers to that property which differentiates one species from another but it is also used for phylogenetic levels higher or lower than the species. Species Specificities,Specificities, Species,Specificity, Species

Related Publications

M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
August 1979, Journal of bacteriology,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
November 1985, Journal of bacteriology,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
May 1983, Applied and environmental microbiology,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
October 1986, Journal of bacteriology,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
May 1998, Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
May 1981, Journal of bacteriology,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
October 1985, Journal of bacteriology,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
April 1979, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
December 1984, The EMBO journal,
M Yanofsky, and A Montoya, and V Knauf, and B Lowe, and M Gordon, and E Nester
April 1990, Plant physiology,
Copied contents to your clipboard!