Morphological Response of Witchweed (Striga asiatica) to In Vitro Culture |
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Authors: | CAI, T. BABIKER, A. G. EJETA, G. BUTLER, L. G. |
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Abstract: | Excised sorghum root segments (510 mm in length) werecultured for 50 d in four different liquid media containingmineral salts, vitamins, amino acids, glucose, and IAA. Theroots were removed and the remaining medium was solidified withan equal volume of warm 16% water agar. Dry unconditionedor conditioned Striga asiatica seeds were transferred to themedium. Some of the seeds germinated and developed into parasitic-typeseedlings. These seedlings had haustoria, tubercles, dense roothairs, branched shoots, and multiple shoot-borne adventitiousroots. The plumule pole developed into a shoot, but the radiclepole displayed only rudimentary development. On the same media,but which had not previously been used to grow sorghum roots,the seedlings displayed a well-developed radicle-derived rootsystem, but the plumule did not grow. Shoots began to appearon the roots only after 3550 d of culture. These seedlingshad no haustoria, no tubercles, few or scattered root hairs,no shoot-borne adventitious roots and few shoot branches, andappeared to be non-parasitic-type seedlings. Shoots grew ina medium supplemented with IAA and kinetin, but did not in amedium containing NAA plus IBA. On replacement of glucose andIAA with sucrose and 2,4-D, respectively, Striga seeds germinated,and the heart-shaped embryos dedifferentiated into calli. Thecalli have been maintained by subculturing for over 9 months.The results demonstrated that a host signal, in addition tothose for germination and haustorium formation, is requiredfor further development. Moreover, morphogenesis of culturedS. asiatica is influenced by exogenous growth regulators. Key words: Striga asiatica, parasitic weeds, haustoria, Sorghum bicolor, in vitro culture |
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