The performance of pathogenic bacterial phytosensing transgenic tobacco in the field |
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Authors: | Michael H Fethe Wusheng Liu Jason N Burris Reginald J Millwood Mitra Mazarei Mary R Rudis Duncan G Yeaman Marion Dubosquielle Charles Neal Stewart Jr |
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Institution: | Department of Plant Sciences, The University of Tennessee, , Knoxville, TN, USA |
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Abstract: | Phytosensors are useful for rapid‐on‐the‐plant detection of contaminants and agents that cause plant stress. Previously, we produced a series of plant pathogen‐inducible synthetic promoters fused to an orange fluorescent protein (OFP) reporter gene and transformed them into tobacco and Arabidopsis thaliana plants; in these transgenic lines, an OFP signal is expressed commensurate with the presence of plant pathogens. We report here the results of 2 years of field experiments using a subset of these bacterial phytosensing tobacco plants. Time‐course analysis of field‐grown phytosensors showed that a subset of plants responded predictably to treatments with Pseudomonas phytopathogens. There was a twofold induction in the OFP fluorescence driven by two distinct salicylic acid‐responsive synthetic promoters, 4 × PR1 and 4 × SARE. Most notably, transgenic plants containing 4 × PR1 displayed the earliest and highest OFP induction at 48 and 72 h postinoculation (h p.i.) upon inoculation with two phytopathogens Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato and P. syringae pv. tabaci, respectively. These results demonstrate transgenic tobacco harbouring a synthetic inducible promoter‐driven OFP could be used to facilitate monitoring and early‐warning reporting of phytopathogen infections in agricultural fields. |
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Keywords: | transgenic plants phytosensor synthetic promoters phytopathogen sensing phytobacterial pathogens field tested |
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