Principles of Plant Genetics and Breeding. George Acquaah

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seed could be produced in species in which commercial hybrid production is problematic (e.g. cotton, soybean).

      7.16.2 Limitations to commercialization of synthetic seed technology

      Whereas the prospect of commercial synthetic seed is appealing, several factors make this impractical at this time. Problems may occur at maturation, germination, rooting, shot apex formation, or acclimatization.

       Large‐scale production of high quality viable propagules remains a key challenge.

       A major limitation is the poor conversion of apparently normal propagules into normal plantlets.

       Improper development and maturation of somatic embryos causes poor germination and conversion problems.

       Poor storage of synthetic seeds due to lack of dormancy and stress tolerance in the somatic embryos.

       Mechanical damage, lack of oxygen supply, invasion by microbes, and lack of nutrients all contribute to poor germination of synthetic seeds.

      Strategies are available for addressing some of these challenges. They vary among species and includes desiccation, a process that can damage the embryo.

      7.16.3 Production of virus‐free plants

      Viral infections are systemic, being pervasive in the entire affected plant. Heat therapy is a procedure that is used for ridding infected plants of viral infections. After heat treatment, subsequent new growth may be free of viruses. More precisely, meristems dissected from leaf and shoot primordia are often free of viruses even when the plant is infected. Tissue culture technology is used to nurture the excised meristematic tissue into full plants that are free from viruses.

      The process starts with detection (e.g. by ELISA) of the presence of a viral infection in the plant. Once confirmed, the meristems on the shoots are aseptically removed and sterilized (dipped in 75–99% ethanol or 0.1–0.5% sodium hypochlorite or household bleach for a few seconds or minutes). The explant is submitted to tissue culture as previously described. Sometimes, to increase the success of viral elimination, researchers may include chemicals (e.g. Ribavirin, Virazole) in the tissue culture medium. The plants produced must be tested to confirm virus‐free status.

      7.16.4 Applications in wide crosses

      Wide cross production is discussed in Chapter 7.

       Embryo rescue

      Sometimes, especially in crosses between different plant species, the embryo formed after fertilization in wide crosses fails to develop any further. The breeder may dissect the flower to remove the immature embryo. The embryo is then nurtured into a full plant by using the tissue culture technology. This technique is called embryo rescue. The fertilized ovary is excised within several days of fertilization to avoid an abortion (due to, e.g. abnormal endosperm development). Normal embryogenesis ends at seed maturation. The development of the embryo goes through several stages with certain distinct features. The globular stage is undifferentiated, while the heart stage is differentiated and capable of independent growth. The torpedo stage and cotyledonary stage of embryo development follow these early stages. Prior to differentiation, the developing embryo is heterotrophic and dependent on the endosperm for nutrients. Excising the embryo prematurely gives it less chance of surviving the embryo rescue process. Just like all tissue culture work, embryo rescue is conducted aseptically and cultured on the medium appropriate for the species.

       Somatic hybridization

      Somatic hybridization was discussed in Chapter 6.

      Haploids contain half the chromosome number of somatic cells. Anthers contain immature microspores or pollen grains with the haploid (n) chromosome number. If successfully cultured (anther culture), the resulting plantlets will have a haploid genotype. Haploid plantlets may arise directly from embryos or indirectly via callus. To have maximum genetic variability in the plantlets, breeders usually use anthers from F1 or F2 plants. Usually, the haploid plant is not the goal of anther culture. Rather, the plantlets are diploidized (to produce diploid plants) by using colchicine for chromosome doubling. This strategy yields a highly inbred line that is homozygous at all loci, after just one generation.

      Methods used for breeding self‐pollinated species generally aim to maintain their characteristic narrow genetic base through repeated selfing over several generations for homozygosity. The idea of using haploids to produce instant homozygotes by artificial doubling has received attention. Haploids may be produced by one of several methods:

       Anther culture to induce androgenesis;

       Ovary culture to induce gynogenesis;

       Embryo rescue from wide crosses.

      7.17.1 Anther culture

      Flower buds are picked from healthy plants. After surface sterilization, the anthers are excised from the buds and cultured unto an appropriate tissue culture medium. The pollen grains at this stage would be in the uninucleate microspore stage. In rice the late uninucleate stage is preferred. Callus formation starts within 2–6 weeks, depending on the species, genotype, and physiological state of the parent source. High nitrogen content of the donor plant and exposure to low temperature at meiosis reduces albinos and enhances the chance of green plant regeneration. Pre‐treatment (e.g. storing buds at 4–10 °C for 2–10 days) is needed in some species. This and other shock‐treatments promote embryogenic development. The culture medium is sometimes supplemented with plant extracts (e.g. coconut water, potato extract). To be useful for plant breeding, the haploid pollen plants are diplodized (by artificial doubling with 0.2% colchicines, or through somatic callus culture).

       Applications

       Development of new cultivarsThrough diplodization, haploids are used to generate instant homozygous true breeding lines. It takes only two seasons to obtain doubled haploid plants, versus about seven crop seasons using conventional procedures to attain near homozygous lines. The genetic effect of doubling is that doubled haploid lines exhibit variation due primarily to additive gene effects and additive × additive epistasis, enabling fixation to occur in only one cycle of selection. Heritability is high because dominance is eliminated. Consequently, only a small number of doubled haploid plants in the F1 is needed, versus several 1000s of F2 for selecting desirable genotypes.

       Selection of mutantsAndrogenic haploids have been used for selecting especially recessive mutants. In species such as tobacco, mutants that are resistant to methionine analogue (methionine sulfoxide) of the toxin produced by Pseudomonas tabaci have been selected.

       Development of supermales

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