Abstract

The regeneration potential of excised aspen (Populus tremula L.) roots cultivated in liquid medium, as affected by plant growth regulators and by the position of the isolated root explant on the main root, was investigated. The effect of various levels of benzyladenine (BA) and thidiazuron (TDZ) on bud regeneration in root explants was studied. TDZ in the medium had a marked effect on bud development as compared with BA, inducing a tenfold increase in the number of buds regenerated from various root explants. TDZ enhanced both root and root-borne shoot biomass production but reduced further shoot development and elongation. The position of the isolated root sections on the main root affected regeneration, the proximal sections further away from the root tip producing the highest number of buds per explant in both BA and TDZ treatments. Buds regenerated in close proximity to the site of lateral roots in BA-treated roots, while in TDZ-treated root sections, the buds formed all over the root regardless of the presence of lateral roots. The buds developed from inner cortical and sub-epidermal cell layers, disrupting the epidermis and the inner layers. Root biomass production and growth was greatly enhanced in well-aerated bioreactor culture in the presence of 4.5×10-2 μM TDZ. A high number of the root-borne shoots could be rooted and converted to plantlets. However, while shoots regenerated in a medium with BA rooted well in a growth regulator-free medium, shoots formed in a medium with TDZ required auxin for rooting. Roots cultured in the presence of ancymidol, a gibberellin biosynthesis inhibitor, regenerated non-hyperhydric bud clusters and hyperhydric shoots. These were separated mechanically, subcultured to growth and rooting medium and transplanted ex vitro resulting in phenotypically true-to-type plantlets. The potential of liquid cultures for aspen shoot biomass production from roots is discussed.

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