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Crown-gall-resistant transgenic apple trees that Silence Agrobacterium tumefaciens oncogenes

Walter J. Viss1, Jennifer Pitrak2, Jodi Humann2, Mike Cook1, John Driver1 and Walt ReamContact Information

(1) Dry Creek Laboratory, 1618 Baldwin Road, Hughson, California 95326, USA
(2) Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA

Abstract  Crown gall disease is an economically significant problem in fruit and nut orchards, vineyards, and nurseries worldwide. Tumors on stems and leaves result from excessive production of the phytohormones auxin and cytokinin in plant cells genetically transformed by Agrobacterium tumefaciens. High phytohormone levels result from expression of three oncogenes transferred stably into the plant genome from A. tumefaciens: iaaM, iaaH, and ipt. The iaaM and iaaH oncogenes direct auxin biosynthesis, and the ipt oncogene causes cytokinin production. In contrast to other tissues, roots do not respond to high cytokinin levels, and auxin overproduction is sufficient to cause tumor growth on roots. Inactivation of iaaM abolished gall formation on apple tree roots. Transgenes designed to express double-stranded RNA from iaaM and ipt sequences prevented crown gall disease on roots of transgenic apple trees.

Agrobacterium - Auxin - Crown gall - Gene silencing

these authors contributed equally to this work
these authors contributed equally to this work

Contact InformationWalt Ream
Email: reamw@orst.edu
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