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A Highly Selectable and Highly Transferable Ti Plasmid to Study Conjugal Host Range and Ti Plasmid Dissemination in Complex Ecosystems

  • S. Teyssier-Cuvelle [1] ; P. Oger [2] ; C. Mougel [1] ; K. Groud [1] ; S.K. Farrand [2] [2] ; X. Nesme [1]
    1. [1] Claude Bernard University Lyon 1

      Claude Bernard University Lyon 1

      Arrondissement de Lyon, Francia

    2. [2] University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

      University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

      Township of Cunningham, Estados Unidos

  • Localización: Microbial ecology, ISSN-e 1432-184X, ISSN 0095-3628, Vol. 48, Nº. 1, 2004, págs. 10-18
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • A conjugal donor system, ST2, was constructed to study the conjugal dissemination of a Ti plasmid to wild-type recipient bacteria in vitro and in situ. The system consisted of a polyauxotrophic derivative of C58 harboring a hyperconjugative and highly selectable Ti plasmid, pSTiEGK, which was constructed by inserting a multiple antibiotic resistance cassette in the traM-mcpA region of pTiC58ΔaccR. ST2 transfers pSTiEGK constitutively at frequencies up to 10−1 to plasmidless Agrobacterium recipients. The host range of pSTiEGK includes all the known genomic species of Agrobacterium, indigenous soil agrobacteria and some Rhizobium and Phyllobacterium spp. All transconjugants became pathogenic upon acquisition of the Ti plasmid and were also able to transfer pSTiEGK by conjugation. This host range was indistinguishable from that of its wild-type parent pTiC58, and therefore pSTiEGK constitute a valid proxy to study the dissemination of Ti plasmids directly in the environment. Transconjugants can be selected on a combination of four antibiotics, which efficiently prevents the growth of the indigenous microbiota present in complex environments. The transfer of pSTiEGK to members of the genus Agrobacterium was affected primarily by the plasmid content of the recipient strain (103- to 105-fold reduction), e.g., the presence of incompatible plasmids. As a consequence, a species should be considered permissive to Ti transfer whenever one permissive isolate is found.


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