Morphogenesis in Isolated Microspore Cultures of Brassica juncea |
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Authors: | Nidhi?P.?Chanana mailto:nidhi@teri.res.in" title=" nidhi@teri.res.in" itemprop=" email" data-track=" click" data-track-action=" Email author" data-track-label=" " >Email author,Vibha?Dhawan,Sant?S.?Bhojwani |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Botany, University of Delhi, 110 007 Delhi, India;(2) The Energy and Resources Institute, Darbari Seth Block, Habitat Place, Lodhi Road, 110 003 New Delhi, India;(3) Dayalbagh Educational Institute, 282 005 Agra, Dayalbagh, Uttar Pradesh, India;(4) Present address: The Energy and Resources Institute, Darbari Seth Block, Habitat Place, Lodhi Road, 110 003 New Delhi, India |
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Abstract: | Androgenesis is a phenomenon in which microspores are made to bypass the sexual pathway and follow the sporophytic mode of development to generate new plants without the intervention of fertilization under specialized in vitro conditions. Microspore culture provides an ideal system, with a large, relatively uniform population of haploid cells, for use in mutant selection, genetic transformation and in studies on the molecular mechanism of induction of androgenesis and embryogenesis. This paper involves a study on establishing a reproducible and efficient protocol for microspore embryogenesis in various varieties of Brassica juncea. The genotype had a pronounced effect on androgenic response in microspore cultures. The cultivar Rajat exhibited the most response, producing around 3500 embryos/100 buds. The microspores of B. juncea cv. PR-45 from ed plants maintained at a day/night temperature of 10 °C/5 °C form embryos with suspensors with varied morphology. The microspore embryos germinated to produce plants with frequencies. These plants exhibited 52% survival and 74% fertility. |
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Keywords: | androgenesis Brassica juncea germination haploid mustard microspore embryogenesis suspensor |
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