Abstract

Ten wild-type strains ofCorynebacterium fascians, which differed in degree of virulence as measured by ability to cause hyperplasias (multiple stems; fasciation) in pea seedlings, were examined for the presence of plasmids. Four strains were highly virulent, three were avirulent, and three were intermediate in virulence. All of these wild-type strains harbored one plasmid each of approximately 78 megadaltons, as estimated from electrophoretic mobilities in agarose gels capable of resolving reference plasmids ranging from 8.8 to 350 Mdal. Restriction endonuclease (EcoRI andBamHI) cleavage patterns of these nominally 78-MdalC. fascians plasmids suggest that the plasmids are not uniformly of high homology, although similar or identical in electrophoretic mobility in the system used. The relationship of the 78-Mdal plasmids to the phytopathogenicity ofC. fascians remains uncertain, although the restriction endonuclease cleavage patterns do indicate that the plasmids from the highly virulent strains are more closely related to the plasmids from the strains intermediate in virulence than they are to the plasmids from the avirulent strains.

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