| Literature DB >> 18945103 |
Y Huang, R O Nordeen, M Di, L D Owens, J H McBeath.
Abstract
ABSTRACT A chimeric gene fusion cassette, consisting of a secretory sequence from barley alpha-amylase joined to a modified cecropin (MB39) coding sequence and placed under control of the promoter and terminator from the potato proteinase inhibitor II (PiII) gene, was introduced into tobacco by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. Transgenic and control plants reacted differently when inoculated with tobacco wildfire pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tabaci at various cell concentrations. With control plants (transformed with a PiII-GUS [beta-D-glucuronidase] gene fusion), necrosis was clearly visible in leaf tissue infiltrated with bacterial inoculum levels of 10(2), 10(3), 10(4), 10(5), and 10(6) CFU/ml. With MB39-transgenic plants, however, necrosis was observed only in the areas infiltrated with the two highest levels (10(5) and 10(6) CFU/ml). No necrosis was evident in areas infiltrated with bacterial concentrations of 10(4) CFU/ml or less. Bacterial multiplication in leaves of MB39-transgenic plants was suppressed more than 10-fold compared to control plants, and absence of disease symptom development was associated with this growth suppression. We conclude that the pathogen-induced promoter and the secretory sequence were competent elements for transforming a cecropin gene into an effective disease-control gene for plants.Entities:
Year: 1997 PMID: 18945103 DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO.1997.87.5.494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phytopathology ISSN: 0031-949X Impact factor: 4.025