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Callus and shoot formation in organ and tissue cultures of Hedera helix L., English ivy
Authors:Marianne S. Banks  Mary R. Christensen  Wesley P. Hackett
Affiliation:(1) K.A. Timiriazev Institute of Plant Physiology, Academy of Sciences of USSR, Botanicheskaya ul. 35, 127106 Moscow, USSR
Abstract:When shoots of young plants of hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) and spinach (Spinacea oleracea L.) were cultured as cuttings and allowed to regenerate advenitious roots, ca. 80–85% became female (formed pistillate flowers) regardless of whether the leaves were left on the plants or were cut off (except for the 2–3 uppermost ones) after the beginning of adventitious-root formation. But when the leaves were cut off and the cuttings treated with gibberellic acid (GA3, 25 mg/l) ca. 77–80% of the plants became male (formed staminate flowers). The result was quite similar when roots and leaves of young hemp plants were removed at the same time and the cuttings treated with GA3. It is suggested that the leaves play an essential role in sex expression in hemp and spinach and that this role is related to gibberellin synthesis in the leaves.
Keywords:Cannabis  Flowers(sex)  Gibberellin  Sex expression  Spinacia
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