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Characterization of Agrobacterium vitis Strains Isolated from Feral Vitis riparia

February 1999 , Volume 83 , Number  2
Pages  102 - 107

T. J. Burr , C. L. Reid , C. E. Adams , and E. A. Momol , Department of Plant Pathology, New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, Cornell University, Geneva 14456



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Accepted for publication 5 October 1998.
ABSTRACT

Agrobacterium vitis was isolated from roots of 41 of 66 feral Vitis riparia vines collected in three different regions of New York State. Two of the regions were more than 150 km from commercial vineyards. The strains were highly diverse as determined by DNA fingerprinting of the chromosomal region lying between the 16S and 23S rRNA genes. Of 24 strains examined, 15 different fingerprints were generated, and none was identical to fingerprints generated by previously identified groups of tumorigenic A. vitis strains. Results of physiological tests that were done to characterize strains from V. riparia conformed closely to those expected for A. vitis, except that 23 of 26 strains did not utilize tartrate. All strains were nontumorigenic, did not hybridize with a probe consisting of T-DNA genes, did not utilize octopine or nopaline, and carried zero to three plasmids. Of 26 strains, 7 inhibited A. vitis strain K306 from causing galls at wound sites on grape as well as or better than a previously studied nontumorigenic A. vitis strain, F2/5, that is known to have biological control activity.



© 1999 The American Phytopathological Society