Role of exogenous reduced nitrogen and sucrose in rapid high frequency somatic embryogenesis in Medicago sativa |
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Authors: | Eltjo G. M. Meijer Daniel C. W. Brown |
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Affiliation: | (1) Genetic Engineering Section, Plant Research Centre, Agriculture Canada, K1A OC6 Ottawa, Ontario, Canada;(2) Present address: Department of Plant Molecular Biology, Leiden University, Wassenaarseweg 64, 2333 AL Leiden, the Netherlands |
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Abstract: | The effect of exogenously supplied reduced nitrogen and sucrose on high-frequency somatic embryogenesis in petiole-derived tissue cultures of a diploid and a tetraploid regenerable clone of Medicago sativa ssp. falcata was investigated. There was an absolute requirement for ammonium during embryo induction and differentiation, with 5mM being the optimum for induction and 10–20 mM the optimum for differentiation of somatic embryos. Exogenous amino acids were not essential for differentiation and often even inhibitory, except 1 or 2 g/l casein hydrolysate or 4.4 mM glutamine with 3.1 mM proline which, under certain conditions, resulted in increases of 20–30% in the number of embryos obtained. High and low sucrose concentrations inhibited somatic embryogenesis and there was no reason to deviate from the 3% (0.088 M) sucrose level commonly used in plant tissue culture media. Selected clones from three M. sativa cultivars showed a response similar to the highly regenerable ssp. falcata clone F1.1. |
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Keywords: | amino acids ammonium somatic embryogenesis tissue culture Medicago sativa |
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