Artículos de revistas
Transgenic sweet orange plants expressing a dermaseptin coding sequence show reduced symptoms of citrus canker disease
Fecha
2013-10Registro en:
Furman, Nicolas; Kobayashi, Ken; Zanek, Maria Cecilia; Calcagno, Javier Angel; Garcia, Maria Laura; et al.; Transgenic sweet orange plants expressing a dermaseptin coding sequence show reduced symptoms of citrus canker disease; Elsevier Science; Journal Of Biotechnology; 167; 4; 10-2013; 412-419
0168-1656
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Furman, Nicolas
Kobayashi, Ken
Zanek, Maria Cecilia
Calcagno, Javier Angel
Garcia, Maria Laura
Mentaberry, Alejandro Nestor
Resumen
Citrus canker provoked by Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri is a bacterial disease causing severe losses in all citrus-producing areas around the world. Xanthomonas infection is considered as an endemic disease in Northeast and Northwest Argentina, affecting as much as 10% of commercial citrus plantations. There is not known natural resistance neither in orange varieties nor in rootstocks used for grafting of commercial cultivars. To introduce resistance to this disease, plants of Pineapple sweet orange were transformed with a genetic construct allowing constitutive accumulation of dermaseptin. In comparison with non-transformed plants, transgenic plants showed symptom reduction levels of up to 50% in in planta assays performed under controlled conditions.