VIEW ARTICLE | DOI: 10.1094/MPMI-7-0792
Acquisition and Transmission
of Agrobacterium by the Whitef ly Bemisia tabaci . Muhammad Zeldan. Department of Field and Vegetable Crops and The Otto Warburg Center for Biotechnology in Agriculture, The
Faculty of Agriculture of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, P.O.Box 12, Rehovot 76100, Israel. Henryk Czosnek.
Department of Field and Vegetable Crops and The Otto Warburg Center for Biotechnology in Agriculture, The
Faculty of Agriculture of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, P.O.Box 12, Rehovot 76100, Israel. MPMI 7:792-798. Accepted 31 August 1994. Copyright 1994 The American Phytopathological Society.
Whiteflies transmit many different plant pathogens. We show here that the whitefly Bemisia tabaci can also acquire Agrobacterium tumefaciens from liquid cultures and from crown galls, and transmit it to plants. Cloned tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) DNA and A. tumefaciens tumor-inducing functions were used as reporter genes. Whiteflies were fed through membranes on cultures of Agrobacterium At::pTY4 containing a dimeric copy of an infectious TYLCV genomic clone between the T-DNA borders of a binary vector. One hour of feeding was sufficient for the insects to be able to transmit TYLCV to tomato test plants. Infectious Agrobacterium was recovered from whiteflies that fed on At::pTY4 cultures, indicating that bacteria was acquired and remained intact in the insects. Whiteflies also acquired the virulent A. tumefaciens strain C58 from crown galls and induced tumors in tomato test plants. PCR and Southern blot analyses indicated that the target plant tissues were transformed. These results show that an insect can transfer foreign genes to plants by acquiring and delivering transforming bacteria.