Opine synthesis in wild-type plant tissue

Plant Physiol. 1986 Sep;82(1):218-21. doi: 10.1104/pp.82.1.218.

Abstract

Opine production is associated with crown gall tissue, a neoplastic growth caused by infection of dicotyledonous plants with Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Recent publications have claimed that tissues of certain monocotyledonous plants can also be infected by Agrobacterium. Following infection, a part of the Agrobacterium Ti plasmid, T-DNA, is integrated into the chromosome of the infected plant. T-DNA, which codes for opine-synthesizing enzymes, is now used to add foreign genes to plants. A number of laboratories have used opine production in plant tissue, often after arginine feeding or preincubation as evidence for plant transformation by T-DNA vectors. In this report we provide microbiological, chromatographic, spectroscopic and chemical evidence indicating that opines can be formed in normal callus and plant tissue as a result of arginine metabolism. Therefore, researchers studying T-DNA should be aware of the capability of plant tissue to metabolize arginine to opines. Opine production following infection with T-DNA may not always be sufficient evidence to indicate transformation by the Agrobacterium Ti plasmid.