Abstract

A short treatment with the anti-microtubular drug amiprophos-methyl (APM) blocked somatic embryogenesis in alfalfa(Medicago sativa L.) and carrot (Daucus carota L.). The interruption was temporary and restoration of somatic embryogenesis was observed in long-term cultures. In addition to the effect on somatic embryogenesis, APM treatment induced polyploidization the extent of which was concentration dependent. In long-term alfalfa cultures, APM-induced loss of somatic embryogenesis led to ploidy instability and to a shift to DNA aneuploidy. Critical stages of somatic embryogenesis sensitive to disruption of microtubule-mediated processes were determined in carrot cell cultures. Complete embryogenic arrest occurred when APM was added within the first 5 d of embryogenesis from single cells. The role of the cytoskeleton in the first events of somatic embryogenesis and the relation between totipotency and ploidy stabilityin vitro is discussed.

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