Effect of Sucrose on Growth and Stress Status of Castanea sativa x C. crenata Shoots Cultured in Liquid Medium

Use este enlace para citar
http://hdl.handle.net/2183/31073Coleccións
- Investigación (FCIE) [1228]
Metadatos
Mostrar o rexistro completo do ítemTítulo
Effect of Sucrose on Growth and Stress Status of Castanea sativa x C. crenata Shoots Cultured in Liquid MediumAutor(es)
Data
2022-04-01Cita bibliográfica
Gago, D.; Bernal, M.Á.; Sánchez, C.; Aldrey, A.; Cuenca, B.; Christie, C.B.; Vidal, N. Effect of Sucrose on Growth and Stress Status of Castanea sativa x C. crenata Shoots Cultured in Liquid Medium. Plants 2022, 11, 965. https://doi.org/10.3390/plants11070965
Resumo
[Abstract] Current breeding programs aim to increase the number of ink-tolerant chestnut trees using vegetative propagation of selected genotypes. However, the commercial vegetative propagation of chestnut species is still a bottleneck for the forest industry, mainly due to problems in the rooting and acclimation of propagules. This study aimed to explore the potential benefits of decreasing sucrose supplementation during chestnut micropropagation. Explants were cultured with high light intensity and CO2-enriched air in temporary or continuous immersion bioreactors and with different sucrose supplementation to evaluate the impact of these treatments on growth, rooting and physiological status (monosaccharide content, soluble phenolics and antioxidant activity). The proliferation and rooting performance of shoots cultured by continuous immersion decreased sharply with sucrose concentrations lower than 1%, whereas shoots cultured by temporary immersion grew and rooted successfully with 0.5% sucrose. These results suggest this system is appropriate to culture chestnut with low sucrose concentration and to explore photoautotrophic propagation of this species.
Palabras chave
Bioreactors
Chestnut
Continuous immersion
Photoautotrophy
Photosynthesis
Temporary immersion
Chestnut
Continuous immersion
Photoautotrophy
Photosynthesis
Temporary immersion
Versión do editor
Dereitos
Atribución 3.0 España
ISSN
2223-7747