Hey!
I am doing a project on the genetic modification of soybeans (to transform the soybean to be immune to herbicides) using Agrobacterium tumefaciens. I was wondering whether I needed to grow the Agrobacterium tumefaciens or if i could buy it somewhere?
Thanks so much!
Sorry I should have said that I live in australia and I can't find any stock here and i don't think you can ship bacteria overseas.
For my project I was hoping to grow a round-up ready soybean crop (tolerant to glyphosate) however I am not sure what the method would be to genetically engineer the agrobacterium tumefaceins so that it would insert the round up ready gene into the soybean (I also am not sure what the would be and where to get this gene from). Please please can you help
The best option I think is to get in touch with a lab (preferably in Australia or elsewhere) that performs research using Agrobacterium and request them for the reagents you need. Most academic labs are usually willing to share reagents with others and it is possible to ship non-pathogenic bacteria (also yeast, worms etc) with specific declarations. You might want to check with your school for a letter and it may be best to have samples shipped to a school address.
Regarding the actual experiment, it sounds like you need the resistance gene on a plasmid which you can then transform competent Agrobacterium with. The transformed bacterium is what will infect the plant and pass on the resistance gene. If you find a lab/mentor that does these kind of experiments, you can also ask them to share a protocol if they send you the bacteria.
Good luck and do reach out again if you have more questions!
MS
Last edited by deleted-674917 on Wed Jul 24, 2019 9:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
I found crown gall growing on my rose tree at home so I was wondering if I would be able to cut off the crown gall and isolate a strain of agrobacterium tumefaciens to use??
You will need specialized selective medium to grown bacteria from the crown gall isolates so you have to find a way to source that (maybe from a local university lab?)