The <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> Transcriptome in Response to <i>Agrobacterium tumefaciens</i>

Renata Fava Ditt(University of Washington), Kathleen F. Kerr(University of Washington), Paul de Figueiredo(University of Washington), Jeff Delrow(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Luca Comai(ActionAid), Eugene W. Nester(University of Washington)
Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions
June 1, 2006
Cited by 127

Abstract

The pathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens infects a broad range of plants, introducing the T-DNA into their genome. Contrary to all known bacterial phytopathogens, A. tumefaciens lacks the hypersensitive response-inducing hrp genes, although it introduces numerous proteins into the plant cell through a type IV secretion system. To understand the timing and extent of the plant transcriptional response to this unusual pathogen, we used an Arabidopsis 26,000-gene oligonucleotide microarray. We inoculated Arabidopsis cell cultures with an oncogenic Agrobacterium strain and analyzed four biological replicates to identify two robust sets of regulated genes, one induced and the other suppressed. In both cases, the response was distinct at 48 h after infection, but not at 24 h or earlier. The induced set includes genes encoding known defense proteins, and the repressed set is enriched with genes characteristic of cell proliferation even though a growth arrest was not visible in the inoculated cultures. The analysis of the repressed genes revealed that the conserved upstream regulatory elements Frankiebox (also known as "site II") and Telobox are associated with the suppression of gene expression. The regulated gene sets should be useful in dissecting the signaling pathways in this plant-pathogen interaction.


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