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Protoplast

About: Protoplast is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5474 publications have been published within this topic receiving 122468 citations.


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TL;DR: Cell suspension-derived protoplasts of a chlorsulfuron-resistant (GH50) strain of Arabidopsis thaliana cv Columbia were X-irradiated at 60 or 90 krad, to facilitate the elimination of GH50 donor chromosomes in fusion products.
Abstract: Cell suspension-derived protoplasts of a chlorsulfuron-resistant (GH50) strain of Arabidopsis thaliana cv Columbia were X-irradiated at 60 or 90 krad, to facilitate the elimination of GH50 donor chromosomes in fusion products. Irradiated GH50 protoplasts were fused, with polyethylene glycol, to protoplasts derived from stem epidermal strips of Brassica napus cv Westar. Chlorsulfuron-resistant colonies were selected in vitro and then transferred to shoot and root regeneration medium. Seventeen hybrid lines were regenerated in vitro, and eight were successfully established in the greenhouse, where they flowered. These eight asymmetric hybrids were intermediate in vegetative morphology between Arabidopsis and Brassica. The flowers from these hybrids were male-sterile with abnormal petal and pistil structures. Zymograms for phosphoglucomutase, esterase, and peroxidase showed the presence of all parental isozymes in each of the hybrids tested. Nuclear hybridity was also confirmed for the ribosomal RNA genes using a wheat rDNA probe; however, the chloroplast genome in each of the hybrids was derived solely from the Brassica parent. All selected somatic hybrids were capable of rooting at levels of chlorsulfuron which were inhibitory to unfused Brassica plantlets. The degree of herbicide resistance in the hybrid shoots is presently being evaluated.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An improved system involving a modification of the bead culture system was developed for culturing pea protoplasts, and sustained divisions and callus growth could be obtained in all 10 cultivars tested.
Abstract: An improved system involving a modification of the bead culture system was developed for culturing pea protoplasts. Using this method, sustained divisions and callus growth could be obtained in all 10 cultivars tested. In the best responding cultivar division frequency could be raised from 17% in liquid culture to 80% in the bead system. Shoot regeneration with a reproducible frequency of about 1% could be obtained from protoplast-derived calli in two of the tested cultivars.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was shown that 3 hybrids contained mitochondria of the Japanese radish, with some modification, while 7 hybrids had either parental or new patterns, and all of the hybrid-type plants showed resistance to clubroot disease as high as that found in the Japanese Radish.
Abstract: Somatic hybrids between the Japanese radish and cauliflower (Brassica oleracea) were produced by protoplast electrofusion in order to introduce clubroot disease resistance in the Japanese radish (Raphanus sativus) into Brassica crops. After electrofusion of iodoacetamide-treated cauliflower protoplasts with untreated radish ones, culture was performed under conditions, that allowed only cauliflower protoplasts to regenerate. Out of 40 regenerated plants, 37 were morphologically of a hybrid type and 3 of a cauliflower type. On the basis of isozyme and RFLP analysis, all of the hybrid-type plants tested proved to be true hybrids. Of the 10 true hybrids tested, 9 were found to contain chloroplasts similar to those found in the Japanese radish, while only 1 contained those of the cauliflower. Using two mitochondrial genes as probes, we were able to show that 3 hybrids contained mitochondria of the Japanese radish, with some modification, while 7 hybrids had either parental or new patterns. All of the hybrid-type plants showed resistance to clubroot disease as high as that found in the Japanese radish. Some hybrids were self-fertile. All of the self-fertile hybrids were found to contain 36 chromosomes, indicating that they were amphidiploids. In addition, a few seeds were obtained from a backcross of the self-fertile hybrids to both parents.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The myo-inositol pathway is operative in cell wall regenerating tobacco protoplasts in comparison with that derived from tobacco mesophyll and tobacco tissue cultured on solid agar or in suspension, indicating the secretion of pectic material into the culture medium.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that at least three enzymes, alginate lyase, cellulase, and protease, are essential for effective protoplast isolation from L. japonica.
Abstract: Functional recombinant abalone alginate lyase (rHdAly) and β-1,4-endoglucanase (rHdEG66) were expressed as secreted proteins with baculoviral expression systems. The specific activity of each recombinant enzyme, 2,490 and 18.2 U/mg for rHdAly and rHdEG66, respectively, was comparable to its native form at 30°C. Purified rHdAly and rHdEG66 showed the highest specific activity both at 35°C and optimum pH 8.7 and 5.9, respectively. These properties were also comparable to those of the native enzymes. Protoplast isolation was attempted from Laminaria japonica using both rHdAly and rHdEG66. When L. japonica blades were incubated in artificial seawater containing rHdAly and rHdEG66, very low numbers of protoplasts (<1 × 103 protoplasts/g fresh weight) resulted. However, using blades pretreated with proteinase K, the protoplast was increased up to 5 × 106 protoplasts/g fresh weight. Since the average diameter of isolated protoplasts was 11.6 μm, these cells were mostly derived from the epidermal layer rather than the cortical layer. Our results suggest that at least three enzymes, alginate lyase, cellulase, and protease, are essential for effective protoplast isolation from L. japonica. The protoplast isolation method in this study is more useful than earlier methods because it preferentially yielded protoplasts of the epidermal layer, which are known to be able to be regenerated.

43 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202358
2022153
202160
202060
201978
201855