Abstract

The successful biocontrol agent for crown gall disease, Agrobacterium radiobacter strain K84, is unable to protect grapevines from infection. We have identified a strain of Agrobacterium tumefaciens, J73, which produces an agrocin active both in vitro and in vivo against grapevine pathogens (Webster et al. 1986). We now report on the curing of this strain of its nopaline-type Ti plasmid and the location, by transposon mutagenesis, of the genes involved in the production of the agrocin. The Ti plasmid was cured by the introduction of selectable plasmids carrying the origins of replication of either the nopaline Ti plasmid, pTiC58, or the octopine Ti plasmid, pTi15955. Tn5 mutagenesis indicated that the genes responsible for agrocin production and/or export are located both on the chromosome and on a plasmid, pAgJ73, which co-migrated in agarose gels with pTiJ73. As the two plasmids were separable after transposon mutagenesis, we postulate that during or after mutagenesis of the agrocin plasmid, DNA rearrangements occurred between it and pTiJ73, resulting in an increase in size of pAgJ73. We provide evidence that the rearrangements involved the duplication of nopaline catabolism genes from pTiJ73 and their insertion into pAgJ73, which facilitated the resolution of the two plasmids. As expected pTiJ73 has homology with the nopaline Ti plasmid, pTiC58.

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