1. Somatic embryogenesis in loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.): improving culture initiation with abscisic acid and silver nitrate.
- Author
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Pullman GS, Namjoshi K, and Zhang Y
- Subjects
- Carbon pharmacology, Culture Media pharmacology, Culture Techniques, Cyclic GMP pharmacology, Cytokinins pharmacology, Germination drug effects, Pinus taeda drug effects, Pinus taeda growth & development, Seeds drug effects, Seeds growth & development, Abscisic Acid pharmacology, Cyclic GMP analogs & derivatives, Pinus taeda embryology, Seeds embryology, Silver Nitrate pharmacology
- Abstract
Loblolly pine ( Pinus taeda L.) culture initiation was improved by the addition of abscisic acid (ABA) (3.7 micro M), silver nitrate (20 micro M), and guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate, 8-bromo-, sodium salt (10 micro M) to the medium and by raising cytokinin levels in the presence of 50 mg/l activated carbon (AC). Basal medium contained modified 1/2-P6 salts, 50 mg/l AC, Cu and Zn added to compensate for adsorption by AC, 1.5% maltose, 2% myo-inositol, 500 mg/l casamino acids, 450 mg/l glutamine, 2 mg/l alpha-naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA), 0.55 mg/l 6-benzylaminopurine (BA), 0.53 mg/l kinetin, and 2 g/l Gelrite. Across 32 open-pollinated families initiation ranged from 0 to 53.4%, with an average of 17.9%. Further optimization of cytokinins to 0.63 mg/l BA and 0.61 mg/l kinetin along with the removal of ABA maintained initiation at 18.2% across 19 families. Survival of 2001 new initiations was tracked for 4-6 months. Survival averaged 28.8%. A test of 68 new initiations tracked closely for 4 months demonstrated that at least 80% of the cultures lost did not grow after transfer to the multiplication media, suggesting that many new initiations abort during the initiation process.
- Published
- 2003
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