Sonti R V, Chiurazzi M, Wong D, Davies C S, Harlow G R, Mount D W, Signer E R
Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 02139, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1995 Dec 5;92(25):11786-90. doi: 10.1073/pnas.92.25.11786.
Arabidopsis thaliana mutants originally isolated as hypersensitive to irradiation were screened for the ability to be transformed by Agrobacterium transferred DNA (T-DNA). One of four UV-hypersensitive mutants and one of two gamma-hypersensitive mutants tested showed a significant reduction in the frequency of stable transformants compared with radioresistant controls. In a transient assay for T-DNA transfer independent of genomic integration, both mutant lines took up and expressed T-DNA as efficiently as parental lines. These lines are therefore deficient specifically in stable T-DNA integration and thus provide direct evidence for the role of a plant function in that process. As radiation hypersensitivity suggests a deficiency in repair of DNA damage, that plant function may be one that is also involved in DNA repair, possibly, from other evidence, in repair of double-strand DNA breaks.