| Literature DB >> 21060684 |
Claire J Knight1, Andy M Bailey, Gary D Foster.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Agrobacterium tumefaciens has long been known to transform plant tissue in nature as part of its infection process. This natural mechanism has been utilised over the last few decades in laboratories world wide to genetically manipulate many species of plants. More recently this technology has been successfully applied to non-plant organisms in the laboratory, including fungi, where the plant wound hormone acetosyringone, an inducer of transformation, is supplied exogenously. In the natural environment it is possible that Agrobacterium and fungi may encounter each other at plant wound sites, where acetosyringone would be present, raising the possibility of natural gene transfer from bacterium to fungus. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21060684 PMCID: PMC2965119 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1PCR analysis of 3 V. albo-atrum transformants obtained from ATMT experiments on potato.
Lane 1, DNA Hyperladder I (Bioline), lanes 2–7, PCR with DsRed primers; 3 transformants (2–4), wild type V. albo-atrum (5), pCAMDsRed (6), water (7). Lanes 8–13, PCR with hygromycin B primers; 3 transformants (8–10), wild type V. albo-atrum (11), pCAMDsRed (12), water (13). Lanes 14–19, PCR with wild type V. albo-atrum ITS primers; 3 transformants (14–16), wild type V. albo-atrum (17), pCAMDsRed (18), water (19).
Figure 2Autoradiograph showing Southern analysis of 3 transformants obtained from potato slice hosts.
10 µg genomic DNA was digested with XbaI and probed with the 414 bp fragment of the DsRed gene obtained via PCR of pCAMDsRed using primers DsRed forward and reverse. Lanes 1–3, transformants, lane 4, wild type V. albo-atrum.
Figure 3ATMT of V. albo-atrum on stems.
Stem section prior to inoculation (Panel A), (Panel B) stem section showing a transformed V. albo-atrum colony emerging from the stem onto the selection medium ten days after transfer to selection (stems were co-cultivated on no media for 12–22 days prior to selection), (Panel C) white light microscopy of plant/PDA interface circled in B, (Panel D) the same region viewed under the DsRed TRITC filter.