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Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer
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Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Jan 11, 2016

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Page 1: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Agrobacterium tumefaciens

Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer

Page 2: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

A range of interactions exist between bacteria and plants

• Bacteria associate with plants in ways that benefit both partners - symbiosis.

• Other bacteria have no beneficial effects - disease.

Rhizobium-legume symbiosis

Page 3: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Cell division sites in the plant are restricted

• Cells in small regions at the tips of shoots and roots contain cells that expand and divide to increase the size of the plant.

• These are called apical meristems

Page 4: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Apical meristems• Dividing cells lie at the tip of

the root below the region where root hairs emerge. They expand and then divide controlled by 2 hormones -auxin and cytokinin

Cell expansion and division

Apical meristem producing auxin and cytokinin

Page 5: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

The view inside a root

Root hairs

Expanding cells

Dividing cells

Page 6: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Some bacteria release the controls on cell division causing a cancerous growth

This happens in crown gall disease, producing large masses of disorganised cells.

Infection usually follows wounding.

Page 7: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Broad host range

• The disease affects many different plants including economically important species such as these peach trees

Page 8: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

There are few limits on the final size!

• Crown gall on the trunk of an ash tree

Page 9: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

All this from one bacterium

• The production of these millions of extra cells is caused by a bacterium

Agrobacteriumtumefaciens

Page 10: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Agrobacterium is very common in the soil around roots

• Agrobacterium is a close relative of Rhizobium species that form nodules on legumes

• Like Rhizobium, it is common in the rhizosphere, the region around roots

Page 11: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Another molecular conversation but a different outcome

• Just like Rhizobium exchanging signals with its legume host, Agrobacterium and its future host exchange signals

• These activate a mechanism in the bacterium that transfers some bacterial DNA to take control of the plant

Page 12: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

DNA - information carrier• DNA carries the genetic instructions all organisms

(including us) receive from our parents• Those instructions determine all inherited features -

that make us different ( hair colour, eye colour, blood group etc) and all the features we share

• DNA directs activities in all cells• One enormously long DNA molecule forms each

chromosome• The information on each chromosome is broken

down into many genes • Each gene provides the information to make one

protein

Page 13: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Agrobacterium controls its plant host by putting a small piece of T-DNA into one of the

plant chromosomes• The transferred genes form

the T-DNA (transferred DNA) region of the Ti plasmid (tumour inducing).

• T-DNA is less than 10% of the whole plasmid, encodes only 3 or so genes and enters a plant that has at least 25000 genes

Page 14: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

But these few genes are enough to take control of the plant

• Changes the plant’s metabolism to produce food materials (opines) that only the bacterium can use

• Produces the plant hormones auxin and cytokinin that remove the controls that normally limit cell division and cell expansion.

• Result - cells showing altered metabolism multiply uncontrollably

Page 15: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Hence the massive disorganised growths

Page 16: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

T-DNA, a small region of the Ti plasmid is transferred

T-DNA

Functions for DNA transfer and using opines

Page 17: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Even if the T-DNA originally change only one cell in the plant, because that cell divides uncontrollably and passes on those bacterial genes to all the new cells, there are soon millions of cells feeding the bacterium at the expense of the plant.

SUMMARY

Page 18: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Plant scientists can use Agrobacterium to put other genes into plant chromosomes and

so understand what they do

Page 19: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Disarming the Ti plasmidRemove and replace

these genes

Page 20: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

New genes in the Ti plasmidNew genes inserted

between borders

Page 21: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

“Floral dip” to transfer genes

Page 22: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

How my research uses Agrobacterium

• Mutants have a fault in one gene which stops it directing the cell’s activities in the normal way.

• Mutants tell us what function a gene normally serves.

Page 23: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Albino mutants have a faulty gene needed to make leaves green

Page 24: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Plants with a downturned branches have a defective gene needed to make them

grow upright

Page 25: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Our mutants have defective genes needed to make cellulose

• We selected mutants unable to make the plant’s major structural material - cellulose.

• Cellulose makes vegetables crisp, wood strong, paper thin but strong and cotton fibres tough enough to make jeans

Page 26: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Cellulose forms the walls that surround all plant cells

When cellulose production stops, the restraint imposed by the wall is removed and the root swells instead of increasing in length

Page 27: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Cellulose structure and appearance in em

Page 28: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

The cotton boll

• Cotton fibres are very long hair cells that form on the cotton seed.

• They develop thick walls that are almost pure (>95%) cellulose.

• The fibres are spun into threads to make cotton garments

Page 29: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Our mutants have defective genes needed to make cellulose

• We selected mutants unable to make the plant’s major structural material - cellulose.

• Cellulose makes vegetables crisp, wood strong, paper thin but strong and cotton fibres tough enough to make jeans

Page 30: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

“Which of the 25,000 genes has the fault?”

• Preliminary work narrows the choice of genes

• Agrobacterium puts a new copy of each of the suspected genes into the mutant.

• If the mutant now looks normal, the introduced gene has repaired the fault and the mutant had a faulty copy of the gene delivered by Agrobacterium.

Page 31: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

With a new copy of the faulty gene, the mutant looks normal

Page 32: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

WITH THE RIGHT GENE, THE CHANGE IS

DRAMATIC

Mutant - swelling not elongating

Normal plant Mutant + 1 gene introduced by Agrobacterium

Page 33: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

GFP making organelles visible

Endoplasmic reticulum Golgi bodies

Page 34: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

Some T-DNA insertions inactivate genes in the host plant

Gene 1 Gene 2

Inactivates Gene 2

No effect

This makes a new insertional mutant

Page 35: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

From disease agent to research tool

• With some changes to the Ti-plasmid, Agrobacterium has been brought from the field to make possible new experiments to understand the function of plant genes

Page 36: Agrobacterium tumefaciens Unusual disease agent brought into use as plant genetic engineer.

“Floral dip” and seed selection