David Vincent Negrotto
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Featured researches published by David Vincent Negrotto.
Science | 1993
Thomas Gaffney; Leslie Friedrich; Bernard Vernooij; David Vincent Negrotto; Gordon Nye; Scott Uknes; Eric Ward; Helmut Kessmann; John Ryals
It has been proposed that salicylic acid acts as an endogenous signal responsible for inducing systemic acquired resistance in plants. The contribution of salicylic acid to systemic acquired resistance was investigated in transgenic tobacco plants harboring a bacterial gene encoding salicylate hydroxylase, which converts salicylic acid to catechol. Transgenic plants that express salicylate hydroxylase accumulated little or no salicylic acid and were defective in their ability to induce acquired resistance against tobacco mosaic virus. Thus, salicylic acid is essential for the development of systemic acquired resistance in tobacco.
Science | 1994
Terrence P. Delaney; Scott Uknes; Bernard Vernooij; Leslie Friedrich; Kris Weymann; David Vincent Negrotto; Thomas Gaffney; Manuela Gut-Rella; Helmut Kessmann; Eric Ward; John Ryals
Transgenic tobacco and Arabidopsis thaliana expressing the bacterial enzyme salicylate hydroxylase cannot accumulate salicylic acid (SA). This defect not only makes the plants unable to induce systemic acquired resistance, but also leads to increased susceptibility to viral, fungal, and bacterial pathogens. The enhanced susceptibility extends even to host-pathogen combinations that would normally result in genetic resistance. Therefore, SA accumulation is essential for expression of multiple modes of plant disease resistance.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1992
Christian Harms; Susan Armour; Joseph J. DiMaio; Laura A. Middlesteadt; David Murray; David Vincent Negrotto; Hope Thompson-Taylor; Kris Weymann; Alice Montoya; Raymond D. Shillito; George C. Jen
SummaryWe have selected a tobacco cell line, SU-27D5, that is highly resistant to sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides. This line was developed by selection first on a lethal concentration of cinosulfuron and then on increasing concentrations of primisulfuron, both sulfonylurea herbicides. SU-27D5 was tested against five sulfonylureas and one imidazolinone herbicide and was shown, in every case, to be two to three orders of magnitude more resistant than wild-type cells. The acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) of SU-27D5 was 50- to 780-fold less sensitive than that of wild-type cells to herbicide inhibition. The specific activity of AHAS in the SU-27D5 cell lysate was 6 to 7 times greater than that in wild-type cells. Using Southern analysis, we showed that cell line SU-27D5 had amplified its SuRB AHAS gene about 20-fold while maintaining a normal diploid complement of the SuRA AHAS gene. Genomic clones of both AHAS genes were isolated and used to transform wild-type tobacco protoplasts. SuRB clones gave rise to herbicide-resistant transformants, whereas SuRA clones did not. DNA sequencing showed that all SuRB clones contained a point mutation at nucleotide 588 that converted amino acid 196 of AHAS from proline to serine. In contrast, no mutations were found in the SuRA clones. The stability of SuRB gene amplification was variable in the absence of selection. In one experiment, the withdrawal of selection reduced the copy number of the amplified SuRB gene to the normal level within 30 days. In another experiment, amplification remained stable after extended cultivation on herbicide-free medium. This is the first report of amplification of a mutant herbicide target gene that resulted in broad and strong herbicide resistance.
Plant Science | 1991
Christian Harms; Joseph J. DiMaio; Susan M. Jayne; Laura A. Middlesteadt; David Vincent Negrotto; Hope Thompson-Taylor; Alice Montoya
Abstract A simple procedure has been developed for the rapid and direct selection of herbicide-resistant mutant plants. The procedure uses adventitious shoot formation from suitable explants, such as leaf discs, on a shoot-inducing culture medium containing a toxic herbicide concentration. Resistant green shoots were thus isolated from tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaf explants cultured on medium containing 100 μg 1 −1 primisulfuron, a new sulfonylurea herbicide. Resistant shoots were recovered from both haploid and diploid explants after UV mutagenesis, as well as without mutagenic treatment. Three mutant plants of separate origin were further analyzed biochemically and genetically. Their acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) enzyme activity was less inhibited by sulfonylurea herbicides than that of unselected, sensitive wild type plants. The extent of inhibition of the AHAS enzyme among the three mutants was different for different sulfonylurea and imidazolinone herbicides suggesting different sites were affected by each mutation. Herbicide tolerance was scored for germinating seedling populations and was found to be inherited as a single dominant nuclear gene. Adventitious shoot formation from cultured leaf discs was used to determine the cross tolerance of mutant plants to various herbicidal AHAS inhibitors. The usefulness of this rapid and direct scheme for mutant selection based on adventitious shoot formation or embryogenesis is discussed.
The Plant Cell | 1993
Scott Uknes; Sandra Dincher; Leslie Friedrich; David Vincent Negrotto; Shericca Williams; Hope Thompson-Taylor; Sharon Potter; Eric Ward; John Ryals
Archive | 2004
David Vincent Negrotto; Frank Shotkoski; Wenjin Yu
New Phytologist | 1996
Scott Uknes; Bernard Vernooij; Shericca W. Morris; Danielle Chandler; Henry York Steiner; Nicole Specker; Michelle Denise Hunt; Urs Neuenschwander; Kay A. Lawton; Mark Starrett; Leslie Friedrich; Kris Weymann; David Vincent Negrotto; Jorn Gorlach; Mike Lanahan; John Salmeron; Eric Ward; Helmut Kessmann; John Ryals
Archive | 1993
Scott Uknes; Sandra Dincher; Leslie Friedrich; David Vincent Negrotto; Shericca Williams; Hope Thompson-Taylor; Sharon Potter; Eric Ward; John Ryals
Archive | 2017
Carla Randall Thomas; Daniel Murray Ellis; David Vincent Negrotto; Frank Arthur Shotkoski; Liang Shi
Archive | 2004
David Vincent Negrotto; Frank Arthur Shotkoski; Wenjin Yu