Agrobacterium Virulence Gene Induction
The ability of Agrobacterium to transform plants and other organisms is under highly regulated genetic control. Two Virulence (Vir) proteins, VirA and VirG, function as a two-component regulatory system to sense particular phenolic compounds synthesized by wounded plant tissues. Induction by these phenolic compounds, in the presence of certain neutral or acid sugars, results in activation of other vir genes, leading to the processing of T-DNA from the Ti-plasmid and transfer of T-DNA to recipient host cells. Many plant, and most nonplant, species do not provide sufficient quantities of the correct phenolic compounds to permit efficient Agrobacterium -mediated genetic transformation to occur. In order to transform these species, phenolic inducing compounds must be added to agrobacteria before and/or during cocultivation of recipient cells with the bacteria. This chapter discusses conditions for efficient induction of Agrobacterium virulence genes by phenolic compounds.
- 古植物學(xué) (Palaeobatany)
- CRES-T, An Effective Gene Silencing System Utilizing Chimeric Repressors
- Translating Ribosome Affinity Purification (TRAP) for Cell-Specific Translation Profiling in Developing Flowers
- 濕生植物(hygrophyte)
- 環(huán)藻屬(Sphaeroplea)
- 花粉敗育(pollen abortion)
- 胚(embryo)
- LEAF GUI: Analyzing the Geometry of Veins and Areoles Using Image Segmentation Algorithms
- Transcript Profiling and Expression Level Mapping
- In Vivo Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Metabolite Profiling in Plant Seeds