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Do leaf surface characteristics affect Agrobacterium infection in tea [Camellia sinensis (L.) O Kuntze]? | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated how Agrobacterium infects five tea cultivars and an unrelated species, focusing on leaf surface characteristics.
  • Leaves with wettable surfaces, particularly from certain tea cultivars, showed a higher rate of Agrobacterium infection compared to non-wettable leaves of Artemisia parviflora.
  • The findings highlight that leaf surface features, including wax and phenol content, play a crucial role in Agrobacterium infection, which is essential for genetic transformation processes in tea plants.

Article Abstract

The host range specificity of Agrobacterium with five tea cultivars and an unrelated species (Artemisia parviflora) having extreme surface characteristics was evaluated in the present study. The degree of Agrobacterium infection in the five cultivars of tea was affected by leaf wetness, micro-morphology and surface chemistry. Wettable leaf surfaces of TV1, Upasi-9 and Kangra jat showed higher rate (75%) of Agrobacterium infection compared to Upasi-10 and ST-449, whereas non-wettable leaves of A. parviflora showed minimum (25%) infection. This indicated that the leaves with glabrous surface having lower q (larger surface area covered by water droplet), higher phenol and wax content were more suitable for Agrobacterium infection. Caffeine fraction of tea promoted Agrobacterium infection even in leaves poor in wax (Upasi-10), whereas caffeine-free wax inhibited both Agrobacterium growth and infection. Thus, study suggests the importance of leaf surface features in influencing the Agrobacterium infection in tea leaf explants. Our study also provides a basis for the screening of a clone/cultivar of a particular species most suitable for Agrobacterium infection the first step in Agrobacterium-mediated genetic transformation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02702613DOI Listing

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