- Alamos, Simon;
- Szarzanowicz, Matthew J;
- Thompson, Mitchell G;
- Stevens, Danielle M;
- Kirkpatrick, Liam D;
- Dee, Amanda;
- Pannu, Hamreet;
- Cui, Ruoming;
- Liu, Shuying;
- Nimavat, Monikaben;
- Krasileva, Ksenia;
- Baidoo, Edward EK;
- Shih, Patrick M
Agrobacterium pathogenesis, which involves transferring T-DNA into plant cells, is the cornerstone of plant genetic engineering. As the applications that rely on Agrobacterium increase in sophistication, it becomes critical to achieve a quantitative and predictive understanding of T-DNA expression at the level of single plant cells. Here we examine if a classic Poisson model of interactions between pathogens and host cells holds true for Agrobacterium infecting Nicotiana benthamiana. Systematically challenging this model revealed antagonistic and synergistic density-dependent interactions between bacteria that do not require quorum sensing. Using various approaches, we studied the molecular basis of these interactions. To overcome the engineering constraints imposed by antagonism, we created a dual binary vector system termed 'BiBi', which can improve the efficiency of a reconstituted complex metabolic pathway in a predictive fashion. Our findings illustrate how combining theoretical models with quantitative experiments can reveal new principles of bacterial pathogenesis, impacting both fundamental and applied plant biology.