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Kinetin

About: Kinetin is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7856 publications have been published within this topic receiving 135550 citations. The topic is also known as: Kinetin.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Enhanced amylase activity was observed during a 7-day-growth period in the cotyledons of PEG imposed water stressed chickpea seedlings grown in the presence of GA3 and kinetin, when compared with stressed seedlings.
Abstract: Enhanced amylase activity was observed during a 7-day-growth period in the cotyledons of PEG imposed water stressed chickpea seedlings grown in the presence of GA3 and kinetin, when compared with stressed seedlings. During the first 5 days of seedling growth, the seedlings growing under water deficit conditions as well as those growing in the presence of PGRs had a higher amylase activity in shoots than that of control seedlings. Neither GA3 nor kinetin increased the amylase activity of roots whereas IAA reduced root amylase activity. Activity of acid and alkaline invertases was maximum in shoots and at a minimum in cotyledons. Compared with alkaline invertase, acid invertase activity was higher in all the tissues. The reduced acid and alkaline invertase activities in shoots of stressed seedlings were enhanced by GA3 and kinetin. Roots of stressed seedlings had higher alkaline invertase activity and GA3 and IAA helped in bringing the level near to those in the controls. GA3 and kinetin increased the sucrose synthase (SS) and sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) activities in cotyledons of stressed seedlings, whereas they brought the elevated level of SPS of stressed roots to near normal level. The higher level of reducing sugars in the shoots of GA3 and kinetin treated stressed seedlings could be due to the high acid invertase activity observed in the shoots, and the high level of bound fructose in the cotyledons of stressed seedlings could be due to the high activity of SPS in this tissue.

88 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The developed micropropagation protocol has the potential for producing more than 60,000 transplantable shoots per year from a single shoot-tip explant of this critically endangered plant with horticultural potential.
Abstract: Low shoot multiplication, morphological abnormalities, poor rooting frequency and high cost of production are among the factors challenging the micropropagation of ornamental perennials and garden plants. Most of these problems can be alleviated by using the appropriate type and concentration of plant growth regulator(s) (especially cytokinins) in developing efficient micropropagation protocols. In this study, we investigated the effects of five different aromatic cytokinins (BA, Kin, mT, mTR and MemTR) on adventitious shoot production from shoot-tip explants of B. greenii, a critically endangered plant with horticultural potential. Of all the cytokinin concentrations evaluated, the highest adventitious shoot production (5.88 ± 0.73 shoots/explant) was observed in cultures containing 7 μM MemTR. Low adventitious shoot production, which was not significantly different from that of the control, was observed at all the concentrations of kinetin (Kin), suggesting that it is a weak cytokinin for shoot production in this species. All the treatments with BA alone showed higher adventitious shoot production when compared to the BA treatments supplemented with NAA concentrations. At equimolar concentrations, however, all the BA concentrations had a higher abnormality index than the other cytokinins. It is noteworthy that the abnormality index in all the topolin treatments was much lower than that recorded at the lowest BA concentration. Almost all the abnormality indices recorded with mTR and MemTR concentrations were lower than that of the control. Given that the explants used were from BA-containing cultures, it is likely that the abnormalities recorded using mTR and MemTR were carry-over effects of BA. Culturing under 16 h light/8 h dark conditions resulted in a higher production of adventitious shoots with lengths greater than 10 mm compared to culturing under continuous light. This measure could help reduce the cost of production. Regenerated shoots were successfully rooted and acclimatized with a 65% survival frequency and no observable morphological variation. The developed micropropagation protocol has the potential for producing more than 60,000 transplantable shoots per year from a single shoot-tip explant of this critically endangered species.

88 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using a protocol for high rate shoot multiplication, certain morphological abnormalities observed during proliferation of shoot buds in vitro were not observed during acclimatization ex vitro, and the genetic stability of plantlets was assessed using RAPD and ISSR markers.
Abstract: Use of high levels of growth regulators during micropropagation results in undesirable clonal variability in important commercial crops such as banana. The present study investigated the effects of high levels of cytokinins on micropropagation in banana (genotype AAB), and the genetic stability of plantlets was assessed using RAPD and ISSR markers. Cytokinins, such as BA and kinetin were added to the routine shoot multiplication medium at concentrations up to 10 mg l−1. After 12 weeks of culture involving three subcultures, the maximum number of shoot buds were produced in cultures receiving either 5 mg l−1 BA (80 shoot buds) or 4 mg l−1 kinetin (62 shoot buds). Certain morphological abnormalities observed during proliferation of shoot buds in vitro were not observed during acclimatization ex vitro. To check the genetic stability, RAPD and ISSR profiles of micropropagated plantlets obtained from different cytokinin-treatments were compared with control microplants maintained on MS medium as well as the field-grown mother plant. A total of 50 RAPD and 12 ISSR primers resulted in 625 distinct and reproducible bands. Thus a total of 17,400 bands were generated showing homogeneous RAPD and ISSR patterns. Band intensity histogram of each gel confirmed their monomorphic nature with no genetic variation in all the plantlets analysed. Based on these results a protocol for high rate shoot multiplication was worked out leading to uniform shoot production.

88 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Haploid callus and plants were cultured from the anthers of diploid A. thaliana and attempts to produce embryoids directly from' anothers were unsuccessful.
Abstract: Haploid callus and plants were cultured from the anthers of diploid A. thaliana. This depends on removing anthers during late prophase of meiosis, selecting a genotype favouring callus formation from dividing sporocytes on a high auxin-low kinetin concentration, fully defined medium, then inducing differentiation by transfer to a low auxin-high kinetin concentration, fully defined medium, with a light-dark cycle. Attempts to produce embryoids directly from' anthers were unsuccessful. The view that our approach may have Ii. more general application is discussed in relation to the work of others and our culture of haploid callus and plantlets from tomato (LycoperBicon eBculentum) and haploid callus from barley (Hordeum vulgare).

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Under these two sets of conditions, yam shoot cultures consistently produced microtubers with individual weights in excess of 100 mg which were large enough to be capable of direct planting and subsequent growth in unsterilized soils.
Abstract: The effects of photoperiod (8, 12 or 16 h), mineral medium strength (dilutions of a tuberization medium, the T medium), sucrose (0, 2, 4, 8% w/v) and kinetin (0, 2.5μM) on the development of roots, shoots and microtubers in shoot cultures of Dioscorea alata L. and D. bulbifera L. yams were evaluated. All of the factors were found to have substantial effects on microtuber induction in these two species. The effects of high and low inorganic ammonium containing media on microtuberization of yam shoot cultures indicated that ammonium ions inhibited microtuber induction in D. alata but not in D. bulbifera. Microtubers of D. alata were only formed on shoot cultures if these were held under 8-h days. D. bulbifera cultures on the other hand produced microtubers under this photoperiod treatment as well as under 16-h photoperiods provided that kinetin was present in media at 2.5μM. Most microtuberization in D. alata shoot cultures occurred on full-strength T medium supplemented with 2% sucrose, 2.5μM kinetin held under 8-h photoperiod at 25°C, whereas most microtuberization in D. bulbifera shoot cultures occurred on full-strength MS medium supplemented with 4% sucrose, 2.5μM kinetin held under 8-h photoperiods at 25°C. Under these two sets of conditions, yam shoot cultures consistently produced microtubers with individual weights in excess of 100 mg which were large enough to be capable of direct planting and subsequent growth in unsterilized soils.

87 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023115
2022243
2021139
2020137
2019156
2018189