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High growth rate and regeneration capacity of hypocotyl protoplasts in some Brassicaceae
Author(s) -
Glimelius Kristina
Publication year - 1984
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.1399-3054.1984.tb06097.x
Subject(s) - hypocotyl , protoplast , zeatin , callus , brassica , auxin , biology , brassica oleracea , botany , cytokinin , shoot , murashige and skoog medium , linum , cotyledon , tissue culture , in vitro , biochemistry , gene
Protoplasts isolated from 4‐day‐old hypocotyls of various species of Brassica (Brassica napus, B. campestris and B. oleracea ) produced callus with high efficiency in media containing casein hydrolysate and high concentrations of the auxin 2,4‐D (4.5 μM). Cell division began after 24 h and 60% of the cells had divided after 48 h. In contrast, protoplasts isolated from stem and mesophyll of plants grown in vitro or in the greenhouse began to divide after a delay of 3–5 days. In these cases 40–50% of the cells had divided after 5 days as compared to 70% for hypocotyl protoplasts. To obtain a high frequency of regeneration, rapidly growing calli were transferred to media having a high cytokinin:auxin ratio as early as possible, usually 3 weeks after protoplast isolation. The average regeneration frequency for calli obtained from mesophyll protoplasts was 50%, while as many as 70% of the calli derived from hypocotyl protoplasts of B. napus regenerated plantlets on a medium containing zeatin (9.1 μM) and IAA (0.6 μM). On the same medium regeneration of Brassica oleracea was obtained. A low percentage of calli (1%) from Brassica campestris formed shoots when cultured on a combination of zeatin (4.6 μM), BA (4.4 μM) and IAA (0.6 μM).