Abstract

A germinating-seed assay was developed to determine the susceptibility of dry bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) to infection by Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Seedlings infected one to three days after germination were more susceptible to A. tumefaciens infection than seedlings germinated for five to seven days and the galls that formed on the one to three day seedlings were significantly larger. Nineteen genotypes of dry bean were screened with this assay and all were equally susceptible to nopaline, octopine and agropine biotypes of A. tumefaciens. In addition, cotyledonary nodes and hypocotyls of P. vulgaris were inoculated with disarmed strain A. tumefaciens strain C58Z707 and the avirulent A. rhizogenes strain A4RS (pRiB278b), respectively. Both strains contain the binary plasmid pGA482 which has the neomycin phosphotransferase II (NPT II) gene nested between T-DNA borders. From these infected tissues, callus and root tissues, respectively capable of growing in the presence of kanamycin were obtained. These tissues displayed NPT II activity and integrated copies of the NPT II gene were detected from putative transformed root cultures by genomic blot hybridization.

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