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Journal ArticleDOI

Morphogenic response of the alginate-encapsulated axillary buds from in vitro shoot cultures of six mulberries

Sitakanta Pattnaik, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2000 - 
- Vol. 60, Iss: 3, pp 177-185
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TLDR
Of the six Morus species studied, the best shoot and root development was observed in M. alba, and one-step regeneration, i.e. both shoot andRoot formation, was recorded inM.
Abstract
Axillary buds obtained from in vitro shoot cultures of six mulberries (Morus alba L., M. australis Poir., M. bombycis Koidz., M. cathyana Hemsl., M. latifolia Poir., and M. nigra L.) were encapsulated in calcium alginate hydrogel containing Murashige and Skoog (1962) nutrients (MS) and 4.4 μM benzyladenine (BA). Morphogenic response of encapsulated buds to various planting media such as MS medium + 4.4 μM BA, MS basal medium, soilrite mix + half-strength MS medium, garden soil + half-strength MS medium, soilrite mix + tap water and garden soil + tap water was evaluated. Encapsulated buds of M. alba, M. bombycis, M. latifolia and M. nigra exhibited shoot development in each of the six media tested whereas that of M. australis and M. cathyana responded only to the first four media. Analysis of variance revealed that the planting medium exhibited the greatest influence on shoot development. Of the six planting media evaluated, shoot development was highest in MS medium containing 4.4 μM BA and lowest in garden soil moistened with water. Of the six Morus species studied, one-step regeneration, i.e. both shoot and root formation, was recorded in M. alba, M. bombycis and M. latifolia. Rooted shoots were retrieved from encapsulated buds of these species on all planting media tested except the one that contained BA. Root development was significantly affected by the planting medium and the plant species with planting medium contributing the maximum amount (82%) of the total variation observed. Of the five planting media tested, the percentage of root development was highest in MS basal medium. Of the six Morus species studied, the best shoot and root development was observed in M. alba. Encapsulated buds of M. bombycis, M. latifolia and M. nigra stored for 90 days and those of M. alba, M. australis and M. cathyana for 60 days at 4 °C still regenerated shoots. Plants regenerated from the encapsulated buds were hardened off and transferred to soil.

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Citations
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The encapsulation technology in fruit plants--a review.

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Encapsulation of nodal cuttings and shoot tips for storage and exchange of cassava germplasm

TL;DR: The high frequency of plant regrowth from alginate-coated micropropagules coupled with high viability percentage after 28 days of storage is highly encouraging for the exchange of cassava genetic resources.
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Priming for transplant stress resistance in in vitro propagation

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Propagation through alginate encapsulation of axillary buds of Cannabis sativa L. — an important medicinal plant

TL;DR: This paper reports a simple and efficient method for the in vitro propagation of a screened and selected high yielding drug type variety of Cannabis sativa, MX-1 using synthetic seed technology and the addition of antimicrobial substance — Plant Preservative Mixture had a positive effect on overall plantlet development.
References
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Somatic Seeds: Encapsulation of Asexual Plant Embryos

TL;DR: The production of seedling–quality plants from individual somatic seeds, as first reported here, has potential as a novel, universal delivery system.
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TL;DR: Part 1 Synthetic seed technology: desiccated synthetic seed, J.C. Janick, et al hydrated coatings for synthetic seeds, K. Redenbaugh, and the potential of dehydrated synthetic seeds for germplasm conservation and friend immobilization of whole cells and somatic embryos - coating process and cell-matrix interaction.
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