Abstract

The oncogenic plasmids of Agrobacterium, the Ti-plasmids, carry genes that enable their bacterial host to catabolize opines. Opines are unusual amino acid derivatives that are only produced in crown gall tumours incited by oncogenic strains of Agrobacterium. The 2 opines, octopine and nopaline, are degraded by Agrobacterium strains carrying the octopine or the nopoline Ti-plasmid, respectively, to arginine and pyruvic acid, and to arginine and α-ketoglutaric acid. In this paper it is shown that the Ti-plasmids carry gene(s) involved in the utilisation of arginine as a carbon source. Strains harbouring wild type octopine or nopaline Ti-plasmids in the chromosomal context of strain C58C1 do not grow on arginine as a carbon source. However, they are able to grow on arginine provided that they are induced, or constitutive for opine catabolism. The features of ornithine utilisation are identical. The gene(s) involved in arginine and ornithine utilization in C58C1 (pTi-oct) or C58C1 (pTi-nop) are under the control of the regulator gene that controls octopine or nopaline catabolism. A tentative pathway of octopine utilization is proposed, in which at least two steps are Ti-plasmid coded, and probably belong to the same operon: 1-scission of octopine into arginine and pyruvic acid 2-transformation of an arginine derivative (GSA?) to glutamic acid.

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