Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (Feb 2001)

De novo Cortical Cell Division Triggered by the Phytopathogen Rhodococcus fascians in Tobacco

  • Carmem-Lara de O. Manes,
  • Marc Van Montagu,
  • Els Prinsen,
  • Koen Goethals,
  • Marcelle Holsters

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI.2001.14.2.189
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2
pp. 189 – 195

Abstract

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Plant growth, development, and morphology can be affected by several environmental stimuli and by specific interactions with phytopathogens. In many cases, plants respond to pathogenic stimuli by adapting their hormone levels. Here, the interaction between the phytopathogen Rhodococcus fascians and one of its host plants, tobacco, was analyzed phenotypically and molecularly. To elucidate the basis of the cell division modulation and shoot primordia initiation caused by R. fascians, tobacco plants were infected at leaf axils and shoot apices. Adventitious meristems that gave rise to multiple-shoot primordia (leafy galls) were formed. The use of a transgenic line carrying the mitotic CycB1 promoter fused to the reporter gene coding for β-glucuronidase from Escherichia coli (uidA), revealed that stem cortical cells were stimulated to divide in an initial phase of the leafy gall ontogenesis. Local cytokinin and auxin levels throughout the infection process as well as modulation of expression of the cell cycle regulator gene Nicta;CycD3;2 are discussed.

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