Here, we present two protocols to transform potato plants. The Agrobacterium tumefaciens transformation leads to a complete transgenic plant while the Agrobacterium rhizogenes produces transgenic hairy roots in a wild type shoot that can be self-propagated. We then detect promoter activity by GUS staining in the transformed roots.
Agrobacterium sp. is one of the most widely used methods to obtain transgenic plants as it has the ability to transfer and integrate its own T-DNA into the plant's genome. Here, we present two transformation systems to genetically modify potato (Solanum tuberosum) plants. In A. tumefaciens transformation, leaves are infected, the transformed cells are selected and a new complete transformed plant is regenerated using phytohormones in 18 weeks. In A. rhizogenes transformation, stems are infected by injecting the bacteria with a needle, the new emerged transformed hairy roots are detected using a red fluorescent marker and the non-transformed roots are removed. In 5-6 weeks, the resulting plant is a composite of a wild type shoot with fully developed transformed hairy roots. To increase the biomass, the transformed hairy roots can be excised and self-propagated. We applied both Agrobacterium-mediated transformation methods to obtain roots expressing the GUS reporter gene driven by a suberin biosynthetic gene promoter. The GUS staining procedure is provided and allows the cell localization of the promoter induction. In both methods, the transformed potato roots showed GUS staining in the suberized endodermis and exodermis, and additionally, in A. rhizogenes transformed roots the GUS activity was also detected in the emergence of lateral roots. These results suggest that A. rhizogenes can be a fast alternative tool to study the genes that are expressed in roots.
Aside from economic interest, the generation of transgenic plants has its own relevance in research to demonstrate the ultimate function of genes and to better understand plant physiology and development. The most widely used method for plant DNA insertion is Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. Agrobacterium tumefaciens is able to generate crown galls in the infected tissue of many plant species by the action of its tumour-inducing (Ti) plasmid. The plasmid contains a T-DNA region with a set of genes that will be integrated in the plant genome and induce tissue dedifferentiation1,2. The exchange of these genes within the T-DNA by the transgene has allowed the generation of specific plant modifications avoiding phenotypic effects3. To facilitate the transgene cloning into the T-DNA, the T-DNA region has been excised in an independent plasmid called a binary plasmid, while the rest of the genes of the Ti plasmid (the virulence genes that allow the T-DNA transfer and insertion mechanisms) have been placed in a helper plasmid. For plant biotechnology research, transformation by A. tumefaciens has several advantages: it does not need expensive devices, is able to generate both stable and transient plant transformation, and low numbers of gene copies are integrated into the chromosome4. However, for most plants, but not Arabidopsis, the generation of stable transformants requires plant regeneration from a single or a few cells using exogenous phytohormones, making this process laborious and time consuming. A. rhizogenes is also able to modify the plant genome, producing hairy roots or adventitious roots at the infection sites due to the expression of rol (root loci) genes encoded in the root-inducing (Ri) plasmid5. Although less studied than A. tumefaciens, A. rhizogenes is also used for obtaining transgenic roots. In this case, the A. rhizogenes contains the original T-DNA in the Ri plasmid and a binary plasmid with a second T-DNA carrying the transgene. When the infection site is in stems or hypocotyls, a composite plant can be obtained, with new hairy transgenic roots emerging from wild type shoots. Alternatively, hairy transformed roots can grow autonomously in vitro in media with carbon source inputs. The use of A. rhizogenes instead of A. tumefaciens to produce transgenic tissue is gaining relevance when the root is the target organ, because plant regeneration is not required and hence it is faster and less costly. Previous studies have demonstrated this methodology appropriated for the phenotypic characterization of root specific genes6,7,8,9.
The potato (Solanum tuberosum) is the fourth most important crop in the world according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) since the tuber has nutritional relevance for human consumption for being a good source of vitamins and minerals. For that reason, potato has been placed in the spotlight of agricultural biotechnology and also is considered as a good biological model for genetic and developmental studies10,11. Potato transformation significantly contributed to the understanding of molecular mechanisms underlying suberized tissues through the characterization of genes involved in suberin and wax biosynthesis12,13,14,15,16,17, suberin monomer transport18 and transcription regulation19. The suberin feruloyl transferase gene, FHT, is one of these characterized biosynthetic genes; its downregulation gives rise to a strong impairment of the periderm protection, which is correlated with a strong decrease in ferulate esters of suberin and waxes in potato tubers14. Concomitantly, in roots and seeds of Arabidopsis, the knockout of its putative orthologue (ASFT/RWP1) also demonstrated its role in producing alkyl ferulates in suberin20,21. In potato, the FHT transcriptional reporter line and the FHT antibody showed respectively that the promoter activity and the protein are located in the exodermis, the endodermis, the phellogen-derivatives and in wounded tissues15.
In this work, we detail a protocol using A. rhizogenes to produce transgenic hairy roots that are maintained in a wild type shoot, generating composite potato plants, or excised to grow autonomously in vitro. We also provide the protocol using A. tumefaciens to obtain complete transgenic potato plants. As a case study, A. rhizogenes and A. tumefaciens transformed with the same binary vector are used to obtain roots with the FHT promoter driving GUS reporter gene expression. The results are reported and compared.
The A. rhizogenes transformation protocol was adapted and modified from Horn et al.7 and the genotype tested was S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum (cv. Désirée). The A. tumefaciens transformation protocol was adapted and modified from Banerjee et al.22 and the genotypes tested were S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum (cv. Désirée) and S. tuberosum ssp. andigena. The main steps of both procedures are summarized in Figure 1 and Figure 2, respectively.
NOTE: In all the steps of the procedure performing in vitro transfers, do so rapidly, and when possible, maintain the plates or pots closed, thus minimizing plant exposure to the air to avoid wilting and contamination. Otherwise stated, all the plant incubations were done in cabinets under the conditions of 12 h of 24 °C light/12 h of 20 °C dark and 67 µmol m-1 s-1. Otherwise stated, perform all the bacteria manipulation and in vitro plant transfers in aseptic conditions in a laminar flow hood. All the media recipes for Agrobacterium and in vitro plant cultures are provided in Table S1.
CAUTION: Deposit all the genetically modified bacteria and plants to the appropriated waste container.
1. Agrobacterium cultures used for transformation
NOTE: The strain used for A. rhizogenes transformation was the C58C1:Pri15837 (kindly provided by Dr. Inge Broer) and that for the A. tumefaciens was the GV2260 (kindly provided by Dr. Salomé Prat). A. rhizogenes was transformed with the binary vector PK7GWIWG2_II-RedRoot (VIB-Department of Plant Systems Biology at Universiteit Gent; http://gateway.psb.ugent.be) that contains a T-DNA carrying a transformation marker to monitor the hairy root formation. To compare the transformed roots generated by A. rhizogenes and A. tumefaciens, both were transformed with the binary vector pKGWFS7 which contains a T-DNA carrying the FHT promoter driving the β-glucoronidase (GUS) reporter gene and the Kanamycin resistance gene as a selectable marker15.
2. Plant material for transformation
3. Plant transformation using A. rhizogenes (Figure 1)
NOTE: This procedure allows the obtaining of transformed hairy roots. To evaluate the transgene expression, a negative control is needed. To prepare the negative control, follow the procedure using an A. rhizogenes strain either untransformed or transformed with the empty vector that includes the transformation marker gene.
Figure 1: Timeline to obtain potato transgenic hairy roots using A. rhizogenes. The cumulative weeks to reach each stage of the transformation process and the subsequent steps to grow the hairy roots are shown. Representative images of different stages are depicted: the initiation of the process using 3-week-old in vitro plants (A), then infection of the plants by injecting A. rhizogenes (B), the formation of the proliferative tissue (C, arrows) with emerging hairy roots (D), and the developed hairy roots expressing the red fluorescent transformation marker DsRed (E). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
4. Plant transformation using A. tumefaciens (Figure 2)
NOTE: This procedure allows the obtaining of transformed plants. To evaluate the transgene’s effect, a negative control is needed. One option is to follow the procedure using an A. tumefaciens transformed with the empty vector. Alternatively, wild type plants can be used.
Figure 2: Timeline to obtain potato transformed plants using A. tumefaciens. The cumulative weeks to reach each stage of the transformation process and the subsequent steps to grow the plants are shown. Representative images of different stages are depicted: the initiation of the process using leaves from 3-week old in vitro plants (A), the transfer of the wounded and infected leaves to the CIM media (B), the leaves when transferred to SIM media (C), the visualization of the callus around the wounded areas after 2-3 weeks in SIM media (D), the shoot formation after 9-11 weeks in SIM media (E), and the shoots after being transferred to MG media (F). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
5. Hydroponic culture
6. GUS histochemical reporter gene assay
NOTE: In our case the GUS analysis was performed with roots of 2-3 weeks grown in hydroponics or in vitro.
Table 1: GUS staining solution recipe.
Agrobacterium rhizogenes-mediated potato transformation
In this manuscript, the step-by-step procedure set up to obtain transformed root with A. rhizogenes is presented. Figure 1 presents an overview of the procedure, which altogether takes around 5-6 weeks (from injection of A. rhizogenes to obtaining fully developed hairy roots). Then, the plant can be studied as a composite (wild type shoot, transgenic root) or the transgenic hairy root clones can be excised and grown autonomously in solid Gamborg B5 medium supplemented with 2% sucrose. Alternatively, the hairy roots can be massively propagated using the liquid Gamborg B5 media. The procedure presented has been carried out with S. tuberosum spp. tuberosum (cv. Désirée).
The method to monitor the procedure and to obtain potato transgenic hairy roots has been validated using a binary vector with the DsRed as a transformation marker (PK7GWIWG2_II-RedRoot from VIB-Department of Plant Systems Biology at Universiteit Gent). This allowed the distinction of transgenic hairy roots from non-transgenic by the red fluorescence. According to that, in Figure 3 the transformed hairy roots exhibited red fluorescence when illuminated with green light. The negative control using the untransformed Agrobacterium showed no red fluorescence (Figure 3C), overall indicating the suitability of the DsRed transformation marker to identify the transgenic hairy roots (Figure 3D). Other transformation markers such as antibiotic resistance can be used as described by other authors23,24; however, the antibiotics in the media can produce a growth delay in transgenic roots containing the marker.
Figure 3: Fluorescent transgenic hairy roots of potato (cv. Désirée) transformed by A. rhizogenes. The hairy roots were obtained using a non-transformed A. rhizogenes (strain C58C1: pRI1583) (A and C) and with A. rhizogenes (strain C58C1:pRI1583) transformed with the empty vector pK7GWIWG2_II-Red-Root carrying a DsRed transformation marker (B and D). The hairy roots are formed in both infections (A, B) but red fluorescence is only observed in hairy roots transformed with the A. rhizogenes containing the binary vector. The images were taken with a stereomicroscope equipped with a lamp and a specific filter to visualize the red fluorescence. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated potato transformation
The second protocol described in this manuscript is set up to obtain, step-by-step, a complete potato plant transformed with A. tumefaciens. Figure 2 presents an overview of the procedure, which altogether takes between 15-18 weeks (from leaf infection with A. tumefaciens to obtaining fully regenerated plants). The most time-consuming part of the procedure is the plant regeneration by organogenesis. This particular step makes this method more laborious than using A. rhizogenes. The procedure has been carried out with S. tuberosum spp. tuberosum (cv. Désirée) and S. tuberosum ssp. andigena, the former being less dependent on short-day conditions to induce tuberization.
In the A. tumefaciens-mediated transformation, in contrast to the A. rhizogenes-mediated transformation, the regenerated plants are completely transgenic organisms. However, though the transgenic plants are regenerated in a Kanamycin selective media, not all the lines efficiently express the transgene. Hence, validation of the transgene expression is needed.
Comparison of the FHT promoter activity in roots obtained using A. tumefaciens and A. rhizogenes
The aforementioned procedures were applied to produce roots expressing the GUS gene under the promoter of FHT gene. The complete transformed plants with A. tumefaciens were previously reported15, using the binary vector pKGWFS7 containing the FHT promoter. Now, this binary vector has been used to produce new transformed hairy roots to compare the tissues where the promoter is active and therefore to test the hairy root system as a tool to study promoter activation.
Figure 4 shows GUS staining in roots of transgenic plants obtained by A. tumefaciens (Figure 4A,B) and transgenic hairy roots obtained by A. rhizogenes (Figure 4C,D,E,F), respectively. As can be seen, roots transformed with A. tumefaciens and grown in vitro show blue staining in the endodermis (Figure 4A), a cell layer between the cortex and the stele. In more developed roots, the blue labelling is patchy in the external layer corresponding to the exodermis (Figure 4B). In transformed hairy roots grown in hydroponics, the GUS marker was specifically located in the endodermis (Figure 4C,E), in the emergence of lateral roots (Figure 4D,E), in the wounded areas (Figure 4E) and in the exodermis (Figure 4F). The roots showed no GUS stain in negative controls that were either hairy roots without the PromFHT:GUS T-DNA cassette or wild type roots.
Figure 4: Histochemical observation of transgenic potato roots expressing the GUS reporter gene driven by the promoter of FHT. The roots from complete transgenic plants obtained by A. tumefaciens (S. tuberosum ssp. andigena) transformation (A-B) show blue staining in the endodermis (A) and exodermis (B). The transgenic hairy roots obtained by A. rhizogenes (S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum cv. Désirée) transformation (C-F) display GUS staining in the endodermis (C and E), in the lateral root emergence (D and E), in the wound-healing zone (E) and in the exodermis (F). Endodermis (EN); Exodermis (EX); Xylem (XL); Primordia of a lateral root (LR). The red arrow indicates the wounded area. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Table S1: Media recipes used for growing bacteria and in vitro plants. Please click here to download this table
Table S2: Half strength Hoagland’s solution for growing potato plants in hydroponics. Please click here to download this table
In potato, the most common system to obtain stable complete transgenic plants uses the transformation by Agrobacterium tumefaciens strains that require organogenesis using exogenous phytohormones. Although the Agrobacterium based protocols has the potential to integrate non-T-DNA vector sequence25, this methodology is still the easiest and less expensive available to transform potato plants. During last years, the interest in A. rhizogenes-mediated transformation has got the attention of researchers for allowing to obtain transgenic roots in shorter periods than using A. tumefaciens. The A. rhizogenes still preserves the root-inducing (Ri) plasmid that carries a set of genes encoding enzymes for the phytohormone auxin control and cytokinin biosynthesis, and encoding for opines26. Once the Ri T-DNA is inserted into the host genomic DNA, the new hormonal balance deregulates the infected cells inducing the formation of proliferating roots, called hairy roots, emerging at the points of infection27. When an additional binary vector is used for integrating a foreign DNA, the preservation of the Ri plasmid confers the possibility to obtain transformed hairy roots with no need of organogenesis using exogenously-applied phytohormones28. The hairy roots can be maintained attached to the wild type shoot generating a composite plant or can be self-propagated. This ability of hairy roots to self-propagate is being exploited to produce in several plants hairy roots as a biological system for mass-producing valuable metabolites or foreign proteins, generating interests in pharmaceutics and even phytoremediation areas (see for review29,30). In potato (var. Kufri Bahar), transgenic complete plants were infected with wild type A. rhizogenes strain to produce hairy roots expressing the Hepatitis B surface antigens (HBsAg)23. Alternatively, a complete transgenic plant regenerated from hairy roots can be obtained, but potato plant and tubers showed distinct development compared to the untransformed controls. These differences in the phenotype are due to the original Ri T-DNA integrated within the genome31,32.
In this work, the detailed procedures to obtain transgenic stable hairy roots using A. rhizogenes and transgenic stable plants using A. tumefaciens are presented (Figure 1 and Figure 2). The fully developed transgenic hairy roots were obtained in 5-6 weeks, while transgenic roots using A. tumefaciens needed 15-18 weeks due to the organogenesis requirement from transformed cells, and the selection and propagation of transformed plants. In our hands, the A. tumefaciens transformation procedure works efficiently in S. tuberosum ssp. andigena and ssp. tuberosum (cv. Désirée), with a reported transformation efficiency around 35%22 and 48%12, respectively. The described A. rhizogenes transformation procedure is based on that reported by Horn7, which showed a high (80-100%) transformation efficiency in cv. Désirée and other three potato cultivars (Albatros, Sabina and Saturna).
To present A. rhizogenes as an alternative transformation system for potato functional studies and to indicate whether the initial presence of Ri T-DNA was matter of concern, we used both systems to transform potato roots with the same binary vector that contained a T-DNA with a promoter of a suberin biosynthetic gene (FHT) driving the expression of the GUS reporter gene. The histochemical analysis revealed that in A. tumefaciens transformed plants, the activity of the FHT promoter was in the inner and outer suberized layers of the roots (endodermis and exodermis, respectively) (Figure 4A,B) and also in the wounded areas of the leaf, stem and tuber15. In A. rhizogenes transformed hairy roots, the activity was also detected in endodermis and exodermis and in the wounded root areas (Figure 4E). The co-occurrence of the suberin promoter activity in both types of transformed roots indicates that the Ri integrated T-DNA is not affecting the developmental processes related to suberization at least in these root tissues. In transformed hairy roots we also detected activity of the FHT promoter in the areas surrounding the emergence of lateral roots (Figure 4D,E). This agrees with the promoter activity reported by other genes involved in the transport of suberin monomers such as ABCG11 / WBC1133,34,35,36 or the regulator StNAC10319. The potato transformation by A. rhizogenes to study a suberin gene has already been reported recently37 and also in that case hairy roots have allowed to show the promoter activation of CYP86A33, a fatty acid ω-hydroxylase. However, the GUS staining in roots was bulk quantified using a fluorometric assay, hence the specific expression in suberized tissues was only presumed.
Altogether these results evidence that A. rhizogenes transformation is a faster alternative tool to explore the cell type-specific promoter activation of suberin-related genes in roots, which may be extended to studies based on other processes that occur in roots. In agreement, some other functional genetic studies have been successful in using A. rhizogenes in potato, tomato and eucalyptus to demonstrate the gene function6,7,8,9, to study the hormonal response38,39 or the promoter activity40,41. However, this strategy may still present limitations, especially when studying tightly-controlled developmental processes that may be deregulated by the Ri T-DNA or when the whole plant or the tubers or other organs different from roots want to be studied. In these situations, the A. tumefaciens transformation system is still preferred.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by the Ministerio de Innovación y Ciencia (AGL2009-13745, FPI grant to PB), the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad and FEDER funding (AGL2012-36725, AGL2015-67495-C2-1-R), and the University of Girona (PhD grant to SF, and grant SING11/1). The authors are grateful to Dr. Inge Broer (Institute for Land Use, University of Rostock, Rostock, Germany) and Dr. Salomé Prat (Centro Nacional de Biotecnología, Madrid, Spain) for providing the A. rhizogenes and the A. tumefaciens strain, respectively, and Dr. Marçal Soler and Dr. Anna Plasencia for the help and support received in initiating the A. rhizogenes transformation experiments (Toulouse III Paul Sabatier University—CNRS, Plant Research Laboratory (LRSV), Castanet Tolosan, France). The authors thank Sara Gómez (Departament de Biologia, UdG, Girona) for her valuable assistance in carrying out the laboratory work and taking care of plants, and Ferran Fontdecaba and Carla Sánchez who assisted with some of the experiments while they were doing their final degree projects.
Acetone |
Panreac |
1.310.071.21 |
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Acetosyringone |
Acros |
115540050 |
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Aquarium pump |
Prodac |
MP350 |
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Autoclave |
Ragpa Strelimatic |
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Bacteriological agar |
Lab Conda |
1800 |
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BAP |
Duchefa |
B0904 |
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Beef extract |
Lab Conda |
1700 |
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Plant growing cabinet |
Nuaire |
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Carbenicillin |
Duchefa |
C0109 |
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Cefotaxime sodium |
Duchefa |
C0111 |
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DMSO |
Merck |
1029310161 |
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Ecotron infors |
HT |
29378 |
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Ethanol |
Merck |
1,009,831,011 |
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Falcon tube |
Control tecnica |
CFT011500 |
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Ferricyanate |
Sigma |
101001081 |
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Ferrocyanate |
Sigma |
100979088 |
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Flask (8.06 cm diameter and 11.3 cm height) and plastic lid for in vitro culture |
Apiglass |
ref16 |
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GA3 |
Sigma |
G7645 |
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Gamborg B5 media |
Duchefa |
G0210 |
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Gelrite |
Duchefa |
G1101 |
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Glucosa |
Sigma |
G5767 |
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Kanamycin |
Sigma |
K1377 |
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Leukopor tape |
BSN Leukopor |
BDF47467 |
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Lupe |
Wild-Heerbrugg |
M420 |
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Magnetic shaker |
Agimatic |
7000243 |
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MES hydrate |
Sigma |
M2933-25G |
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MgSO4 |
Panreac |
131404 |
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Microscope |
Olympus |
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Minufugue centrifugue 5415R |
Eppendorf |
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Murashige and Skoog media |
Duchefa |
M0254.0050 |
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Na2HPO4 |
Panreac |
131679 |
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NAA |
Duchefa |
N0903 |
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NaCl |
Panreac |
131659 |
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NaH2PO4 |
Sigma |
58282 |
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NightSea Stereo |
SFA Moonting Adapter |
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Parafilm |
Anorsa |
PRFL-001-001 |
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Peptone |
Lab Conda |
1616 |
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Petri dishes (90 x 14) |
Anorsa |
200200 |
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pHmetre |
Crison |
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Phytotron |
Inkoa |
RFTI-R5485 |
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Plant Agar |
Duchefa |
P1001 |
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Refrigeratot |
Liebherr Medline |
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Rifampicin |
Duchefa |
R0146 |
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Spectinomycin |
Sigma |
59007 |
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Spectrophotometer |
Shimadzu |
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Square plates (120 x 120) |
Deltalab |
200204 |
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Streptomycin |
Sigma |
S6501 |
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Sucrose |
Panreac |
131621 |
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Surgical blades |
Swann-Morton |
201 |
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Surgical needle |
NIPRO |
015/0204 |
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Triptone |
Lab Conda |
1612 |
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Triton |
Serva |
37240 |
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Unimax 1010 shaker |
Heidolph |
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Vacuum |
Dinko |
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x-GlcA (5-Bromo-4-chloro-3-indoxyl-beta-D-glucuronic acid, sodium salt anhydrous) |
Biosynth |
B-7398 |
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Yeast extract |
Lab Conda |
1702.00 |
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Zeatin riboside |
Sigma |
1001042850 |