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Organogenesis and plant regeneration from immature embryos of Rosa hybrida L.
Authors:D. W. Burger  L. Liu  K. W. Zary  C. I. Lee
Affiliation:(1) Department of Environmental Horticulture, University of California, 95616 Davis, CA, USA;(2) Bear Creek Gardens Inc., P.O. Box 2000, 93066 Somis, CA, USA
Abstract:Intact, flowering, rose plants have been regenerated in vitro from excised embryos of crosses between lsquoBridal Pinkrsquo (the maternal parent) and several pollen parents. Explanted embryonic tissues developed into an organogenic callus which formed adventitious shoots after several months only on a modified half-strength Murashige & Skoog medium containing 1.0 mgrM BA and 0.05 mgrM NAA. These shoots could be separated, grown individually, rooted in a medium with no BA or NAA, with 1.0 mgrM IBA, and transplanted to greenhouse media. Embryos ranging in age from 21 to 35 days post-pollination formed organogenic callus that eventually regenerated adventitious shoots. Histological examination of normally-developing embryos showed that well-defined embryonic axes were beginning to develop at approximately 20–25 days postpollination. Analysis of populations of regenerated plants from different crosses showed differences in flower color, growth habit, peduncle length, and petal number. This system may be useful for irradiation-mutation breeding and/or for the development of transgenic rose plants using Agrobacterium tumefaciens.Abbreviations BA 6-benzyladenine - IAA 3-indoleacetic acid - IBA 3-indolebutanoic acid - MS Murashige & Skoog - NAA agr-naphthaleneacetic acid - 2iP N6-(2-isopentenyl)adenosine
Keywords:adventitious shoots  histology  Rosaceae  tissue culture
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