An Agrobacterium-mediated transformation protocol for grapevine cv. Crimson Seedless using sonication and anti-necrotic agents has been optimized, and transgenic lines carrying wheat chitinase and β-1,3-glucanase genes have exhibited enhanced tolerance to downy mildew incited by Plasmoparaviticola. cDNA clones encoding chitinase and β-1,3-glucanase have been isolated from a cDNA library, constructed from scab-infected Sumai-3 wheat, and introduced into a plant cloning vector to generate the plasmids pCAMBAR.chi.11 and pCAMBAR.638. Embryogenic cultures, established from in vitro-derived leaves, of Crimson Seedless were used as explants for Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation studies. Sonication of somatic embryos in a bacterial suspension of A. tumefaciens and incorporation of anti-necrotic agents in the co-cultivation medium significantly enhanced transformation efficiency. Transformation efficiency of embryos with either chitinase or β-1,3-glucanase gene was highest when embryos were suspended in a bacterial cell suspension at 0.5 OD600 and sonicated for 2 or 3 s at 60 kHz. Transformation efficiency with chitinase was highest on incorporation of 2 or 3 mg l−1 phenylalanine, 1 or 2 mg l−1 silver nitrate or 400 mg l−1l-cysteine in co-cultivation medium while incorporation of 20 mg l−1 sodium thiosulphate produced highest transformation efficiency with β-1,3-glucanase. Confirmed transgenic grapevine lines harboring anti-fungal genes exhibited higher levels of chitinase and β-1,3-glucanase transcripts as well as enzymatic activities. Moreover, transgenic lines showed enhanced tolerance to P. viticola infection following detached leaf assays.