Abstract

A potato breeding scheme implies the possibility of ploidy level manipulation either by reducing the chromosome number of cultivars from 48 to 24 to be able to cross them with diploid related species or by doubling diploid material to reach the generally optimal tetraploid level. In vitro spontaneous chromosome doubling is widely used but can lead to somaclonal variation. Since oryzalin has proven to be efficient as a chromosome doubling agent on potato cell suspension cultures, we tried this herbicide on various Solanum species and interspecific diploid hybrids. A 24 h dip in a 28.8 μM aqueous oryzalin solution applied on apical buds was the most efficient treatment in terms of tetraploid plant production (mean = 4.1 tetraploid plants for 10 treated buds over 4 genotypes). However 50–100% of the regenerated tetraploid plants acclimatized after in vitro treatment proved to be chimaeric. Consequently, a selection procedure in the progeny was necessary to obtain real and stable doubled clones and final yields were low. This technique is easy to apply and could be a good alternative to chromosome doubling by spontaneous in vitro regeneration in the case of refractory genotypes especially where somaclonal variation is problematic. Percentage of tetraploids among the regenerated plants varied from 6 to 29% with the oryzalin doubling technique while it varied from 20 to 78% by in vitro spontaneous doubling for five diploid genotypes. An observation of the progeny indicated that chimaeras were more frequent using oryzalin (50–100% of the initially supposed tetraploid plants) than when chromosomes doubled spontaneously (4–67% of the initially supposed tetraploid plants).

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