Abstract

Abstract Variations in the expression of the oncogenic power of Agrobacterium tumefaciens due to interactions between bacteria.The effects of the virulent strain A6 of Agrobacterium tumefaciens after co‐culture with non‐virulent variants of the same bacterium, or even with other bacterial species (e.g. Escherichia coli), showed that interactions between different strains of bacteria exist. These interactions are expressed as a phenomenon of either enhancement or inhibition, as shown by an increase or a decrease in the weights of tumors induced in decapitated stems of Pisum sativum L. cv. Annonay. These two phenomena depend on the contact time between the bacteria in mixed cultures (type I). With a short contact time between the two bacterial types (one or two generations), infections in decapitated pea stems produced by mixed inocula caused an increase in tumor weight compared with infections induced by inocula of virulent bacteria only. If the contact time was increased to the end of the log phase, a decrease in tumor weight was observed. Clarified supernatant fluids of spent media were also used as culture media (type II) for the virulent A6 bacteria. The stimulatory or inhibitory activity of (a) substance(s) present in these supernatant fluids depended on two variables: culture time of the bacteria A6 in the supernatant fluids and the “age” of the bacterial culture used to prepare them. Weight increase of the tumors was obtained if the proliferating time of the A6 bacteria in the supernatant fluids was short (4 h), or if the super natants were obtained from “young” cultures. Inhibition of the tumor expression occurred if the contact time of A6 bacteria in the supernatant fluids was increased or if the supernatants originated from bacterial cultures at the end of their growth. The in vitro interactions between the two bacterial strains in a mixed culture (type I or type II) were suppressed in the presence of pancreatic ribonuclease. Deoxyribonuclease had no effect. This provides indirect evidence for the action of a ribonucleic acid in the expression of the oncogenic power of a bacterial population of Agrobacterium tumefaciens.

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