Abstract

The endogenous levels of polyamines (PAs) in leaf-base explants isolated from plants of two isogenic lines of Dactylis glomerata L., differing in their competence for somatic embryogenesis, were compared. Leaf-bases isolated from plants with a high level of competence for somatic embryogenesis (HEC) contained four times the level of polyamines compared to those isolated from plants with a low level of competence for somatic embryogenesis (LEC). When the levels of individual polyamines in the HEC and LEC lines were compared, leaf-bases from plants of the HEC line had much lower PUT/SPD ratios than those from the LEC line. When changes in the levels of PAs were monitored during the first 28 d of culture, on a medium which promotes initiation of somatic embryogenesis, leaf-base cultures from plants of the HEC line showed a 50% increase in the levels of PAs during the first 7 d of culture, after which time levels began to decline. By day 21, levels had dropped below those found in freshly isolated leaf bases. While PUT and SPM levels increased by about 30%, the greatest increase was shown by SPD, which increased by more than 100% during the first 7 d of culture, before declining. In contrast much smaller changes in PA levels were found when leaf-bases from plants of the LEC line were cultured.

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