Culture of shoot apices of Theobroma cacao

Surface sterilized buds of young cocoa plants (Theobroma cacao L.) taken at particular stages of the flush cycle were placed in Linsmaier and Skoog agar medium supplemented with a range of growth regulators. Only buds taken at the I-2 (dormant) stage of the flush cycle and treated with gibberellic acid (GA3) alone and GA3 plus kinetin (KN) supplement showed bud opening. In liquid Linsmaier and Skoog medium buds isolated at the I-2 stage also responded to GA3 and KN. In this case addition of KN caused bud opening, while GA3 either initiated bud opening only or opening followed by leaf expansion depending on the concentration of GA3 supplied. Bud development was inhibited when ABA was included in the medium but this was overcome by the presence of GA3 but not KN. Since a hormonal supplement was required for any response from the excised buds, it is suggested that the intermittent growth of the shoot apex in the intact plant may be determined by hormonal stimuli derived from other parts of the plant. The findings also indicate that the bud apices could be maintained in culture for long periods which may provide a basis for the development of a micropropagation procedure for cocoa

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 101290 Orchard, J.E., 58370 Collin, H.A., 76097 Hardwick, K.
Format: biblioteca
Published: 1979
Subjects:CULTIVO DE TEJIDOS, THEOBROMA CACAO, APICE VEGETATIVO, BROTACION, MICROPROPAGACION, GERMINACION, DESARROLLO EMBRIONARIO, SUSTANCIAS DE CRECIMIENTO VEGETAL,
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id KOHA-OAI-BVE:67129
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:671292020-02-03T21:34:15ZCulture of shoot apices of Theobroma cacao 101290 Orchard, J.E. 58370 Collin, H.A. 76097 Hardwick, K. 1979Surface sterilized buds of young cocoa plants (Theobroma cacao L.) taken at particular stages of the flush cycle were placed in Linsmaier and Skoog agar medium supplemented with a range of growth regulators. Only buds taken at the I-2 (dormant) stage of the flush cycle and treated with gibberellic acid (GA3) alone and GA3 plus kinetin (KN) supplement showed bud opening. In liquid Linsmaier and Skoog medium buds isolated at the I-2 stage also responded to GA3 and KN. In this case addition of KN caused bud opening, while GA3 either initiated bud opening only or opening followed by leaf expansion depending on the concentration of GA3 supplied. Bud development was inhibited when ABA was included in the medium but this was overcome by the presence of GA3 but not KN. Since a hormonal supplement was required for any response from the excised buds, it is suggested that the intermittent growth of the shoot apex in the intact plant may be determined by hormonal stimuli derived from other parts of the plant. The findings also indicate that the bud apices could be maintained in culture for long periods which may provide a basis for the development of a micropropagation procedure for cocoaSurface sterilized buds of young cocoa plants (Theobroma cacao L.) taken at particular stages of the flush cycle were placed in Linsmaier and Skoog agar medium supplemented with a range of growth regulators. Only buds taken at the I-2 (dormant) stage of the flush cycle and treated with gibberellic acid (GA3) alone and GA3 plus kinetin (KN) supplement showed bud opening. In liquid Linsmaier and Skoog medium buds isolated at the I-2 stage also responded to GA3 and KN. In this case addition of KN caused bud opening, while GA3 either initiated bud opening only or opening followed by leaf expansion depending on the concentration of GA3 supplied. Bud development was inhibited when ABA was included in the medium but this was overcome by the presence of GA3 but not KN. Since a hormonal supplement was required for any response from the excised buds, it is suggested that the intermittent growth of the shoot apex in the intact plant may be determined by hormonal stimuli derived from other parts of the plant. The findings also indicate that the bud apices could be maintained in culture for long periods which may provide a basis for the development of a micropropagation procedure for cocoaCULTIVO DE TEJIDOSTHEOBROMA CACAOAPICE VEGETATIVOBROTACIONMICROPROPAGACIONGERMINACIONDESARROLLO EMBRIONARIOSUSTANCIAS DE CRECIMIENTO VEGETALPhysiologia Plantarum (Dinamarca)
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic CULTIVO DE TEJIDOS
THEOBROMA CACAO
APICE VEGETATIVO
BROTACION
MICROPROPAGACION
GERMINACION
DESARROLLO EMBRIONARIO
SUSTANCIAS DE CRECIMIENTO VEGETAL
CULTIVO DE TEJIDOS
THEOBROMA CACAO
APICE VEGETATIVO
BROTACION
MICROPROPAGACION
GERMINACION
DESARROLLO EMBRIONARIO
SUSTANCIAS DE CRECIMIENTO VEGETAL
spellingShingle CULTIVO DE TEJIDOS
THEOBROMA CACAO
APICE VEGETATIVO
BROTACION
MICROPROPAGACION
GERMINACION
DESARROLLO EMBRIONARIO
SUSTANCIAS DE CRECIMIENTO VEGETAL
CULTIVO DE TEJIDOS
THEOBROMA CACAO
APICE VEGETATIVO
BROTACION
MICROPROPAGACION
GERMINACION
DESARROLLO EMBRIONARIO
SUSTANCIAS DE CRECIMIENTO VEGETAL
101290 Orchard, J.E.
58370 Collin, H.A.
76097 Hardwick, K.
Culture of shoot apices of Theobroma cacao
description Surface sterilized buds of young cocoa plants (Theobroma cacao L.) taken at particular stages of the flush cycle were placed in Linsmaier and Skoog agar medium supplemented with a range of growth regulators. Only buds taken at the I-2 (dormant) stage of the flush cycle and treated with gibberellic acid (GA3) alone and GA3 plus kinetin (KN) supplement showed bud opening. In liquid Linsmaier and Skoog medium buds isolated at the I-2 stage also responded to GA3 and KN. In this case addition of KN caused bud opening, while GA3 either initiated bud opening only or opening followed by leaf expansion depending on the concentration of GA3 supplied. Bud development was inhibited when ABA was included in the medium but this was overcome by the presence of GA3 but not KN. Since a hormonal supplement was required for any response from the excised buds, it is suggested that the intermittent growth of the shoot apex in the intact plant may be determined by hormonal stimuli derived from other parts of the plant. The findings also indicate that the bud apices could be maintained in culture for long periods which may provide a basis for the development of a micropropagation procedure for cocoa
format
topic_facet CULTIVO DE TEJIDOS
THEOBROMA CACAO
APICE VEGETATIVO
BROTACION
MICROPROPAGACION
GERMINACION
DESARROLLO EMBRIONARIO
SUSTANCIAS DE CRECIMIENTO VEGETAL
author 101290 Orchard, J.E.
58370 Collin, H.A.
76097 Hardwick, K.
author_facet 101290 Orchard, J.E.
58370 Collin, H.A.
76097 Hardwick, K.
author_sort 101290 Orchard, J.E.
title Culture of shoot apices of Theobroma cacao
title_short Culture of shoot apices of Theobroma cacao
title_full Culture of shoot apices of Theobroma cacao
title_fullStr Culture of shoot apices of Theobroma cacao
title_full_unstemmed Culture of shoot apices of Theobroma cacao
title_sort culture of shoot apices of theobroma cacao
publishDate 1979
work_keys_str_mv AT 101290orchardje cultureofshootapicesoftheobromacacao
AT 58370collinha cultureofshootapicesoftheobromacacao
AT 76097hardwickk cultureofshootapicesoftheobromacacao
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