T-DNA contains two types of genes: the
oncogenic genes, encoding for
enzymes involved in the synthesis of
auxins and
cytokinins and responsible for
tumor formation, and the genes encoding for the synthesis of
opines. These compounds, produced by the condensation between
amino acids and sugars, are synthesized and excreted by the crown gall cells, and they are consumed by A. tumefaciens as carbon and nitrogen sources. The genes involved in opine
catabolism, T-DNA transfer from the bacterium to the plant cell and
bacterium-bacterium plasmid conjugative transfer are located outside the T-DNA. The T-DNA fragment is flanked by 25-bp direct repeats, which act as a cis-element signal for the transfer apparatus. The process of T-DNA transfer is mediated by the cooperative action of
proteins encoded by genes determined in the Ti plasmid virulence region (vir genes) and in the bacterial chromosome. The Ti plasmid also contains the genes for opine catabolism produced by the crown gall cells and regions for conjugative transfer and for its own integrity and stability. The 30 kb virulence (vir) region is a
regulon organized in six
operons essential for the T-DNA transfer (virA, virB, virD, and virG) or for the increasing of transfer efficiency (virC and virE). Several chromosomal-determined genetic elements have shown their functional role in the attachment of
A. tumefaciens to the plant cell and bacterial colonization. The loci chvA and chvB are involved in the synthesis and excretion of the b -1,2
glucan, the required for the sugar enhancement of vir
genes induction and
bacterial chemotaxis. The cell locus is responsible for the synthesis of
cellulose fibrils. The locus is involved in the synthesis of both cyclic glucan and acid
succinoglycan. ==References==