These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Induction and growth properties of carrot roots with different complements of Agrobacterium rhizogenes T-DNA.
    Author: Capone I, Spanò L, Cardarelli M, Bellincampi D, Petit A, Costantino P.
    Journal: Plant Mol Biol; 1989 Jul; 13(1):43-52. PubMed ID: 2562759.
    Abstract:
    Single and multiple infections of carrot discs were carried out with Agrobacterium strains harbouring different segments of pRi1855 TL-DNA cloned in the binary vector Bin 19 and with a strain carrying the TR-DNA from the same Ri plasmid. Roots induced by the various co-inoculations were cultured and their growth patterns were followed. Abundant roots could be induced by TL-DNA rol genes A, B and C as a single insert (rolA + B + C) and by rolB alone provided an extended segment beyond its 5' non-coding region was included in the construction. A depression of rooting capability was caused by the inclusion of rolC together with rolB (rolB + C). In all cases co-inoculation with the Agrobacterium carrying TR-DNA-borne auxin genes was necessary for root induction since none of the rol constructions was in itself capable of eliciting any response; an exceeding majority of these roots were however shown to contain rol genes but no TR-DNA. Rooting was also elicited if rol constructions were co-inoculated with a strain carrying TL-DNA genes 13 and 14 (ORF13 + 14) instead of the TR-DNA strain. These roots were shown to contain both rol genes and ORF13 + 14. Striking differences in growth properties were shown by roots containing different complements of TL-DNA genes. Typical hairy root traits, high growth rate, branching and, most noticeably, absence of geotropism, were shown by roots containing rolB alone, while roots with rolA + B + C were geotropic as normal carrot roots. Hairy root traits were conferred to rolA + B + C roots by the concomitant presence of ORF13 + 14 and by the addition of auxin to the culture medium. A model is presented which attempts to rationalize the growth patterns by assigning interplaying roles to the various TL-DNA genes involved.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]