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In vitro phyllomorphic regeneration of shoot buds and shoots in Picea abies
Author(s) -
JANSSON EVA,
BORNMAN CHRIS H.
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-3054.1980.tb08656.x
Subject(s) - shoot , picea abies , auxin , botany , biology , horticulture , in vitro , chemistry , biochemistry , gene
Needles (10–15 mm) of frost‐hardened 20–22‐week‐old (physiological age equivalent to 1 year) plants of Picea abies L. excised just after flushing, were induced to form adventitious shoot buds and shoots on media supplemented with BAP (6‐benzylaminopurine) and NAA (1‐napthaleneacetic acid). The addition of nanomolar concentrations (0.5–50) of NAA combined with 1–10 μ M BAP considerably stimulated formation of pseudobulbils on the basal to mid‐part of the needle axis, as well as their subsequent development into shoot buds and shoots. On a medium containing 10 μ M BAP, pseudobulbils that formed at the needle base did not develop further, but became necrotic and died with the omission of NAA. With 5 μ M BAP + 50 n M NAA the initial phase of development was slow, but later showed good response and up to 22% of the needles produced shoot buds. Two to three shoots per needle could be excised and subcultured individually onto fresh media. It is concluded that the level of endogenous auxin decreases progressively from the needle's base to its tip, so that that concentration of exogenous auxin (50 nM NAA) which promotes pseudobulbil and shoot‐bud formation part‐way along the needle axis, simultaneously inhibits their induction at the needle base.

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