Abstract
A gene was cloned from Pseudomonas syringae pv. glycinea that hybridized avirulence gene D (avrD), previously cloned from P. s. pv. tomato. Unlike avrD, the hypersensitive response (HR) was not elicited when the P. s. pv. glycinea gene was reintroduced into P. s. pv. glycinea race 4 on a broad host range plasmid and the bacteria were inoculated into the soybean leaves. DNA sequence data disclosed that the P. s. pv. glycinea homologue of avrD encoded a protein containing 86% identical amino acids to avrD, with substitutions distributed throughout the protein. Two ORFs immediately downstream from the avrD homologue were more similar in P. s. pv. tomato and P. s. pv. glycinea, with 98 and 99% identical amino acids. Expression of the wild-type P. s. pv. glycinea gene and recombinant genes constructed between the P. s. pv. tomato avrD gene and its P. s. pv. glycinea homologue in both Escherichia coli and P. s. pv. glycinea indicated that the P. s. pv. glycinea gene product was formed less efficiently or was less stable than was the P. s. pv. tomato protein encoded by avrD. The data indicated that the P. s. pv. glycinea homologue represents a recessive allele of the P. s. pv. tomato avrD gnee which has been modified by mutation such that it does not lead to an avirulence phenotype on the normal host plant, soybean.