Abstract

In a culture method for enhanced axillary branching functional plants of Eucalyptus tereticornis and E. camaldulensis are efficiently regenerated. To assess the genetic integrity among the regenerants, we employed multiple analytical tools including cytochemical and molecular assays. The 2C DNA amounts were estimated in the meristematic zones of root and shoot tips of 250 micropropagated plants, collected at various cycles of tissue culture from multiplication to field transfer, and compared to the corresponding mother plants. The culture conditions did not induce amplification or deletion of DNA sequences, nor were there drastic change(s) in chromosome number, since all the micropropagated plants of E. tereticornis (1.2 pg) and E. camaldulensis (1.4 pg) maintained the same DNA amounts as the mother plant. Total DNA of 46 micropropagated and mother plants digested with eight restriction enzymes and hybridized to 13 nuclear, mitochondrial, and synthetic oligonucleotide DNA probes yielded 82 bands. Hybridization patterns indicated that the variation observed was minor. To further confirm the genetic fidelity, 12 arbitrary 10-base primers and six synthetic oligonucleotide sequences, successfully used to amplify genomic DNA from in vivo and in vitro materials, produced 133 fragments that were monomorphic across the plants tested. The present results demonstrate that enhanced-axillary-branching culture of mature trees could be utilized commercially for mass clonal propagation of these two important Eucalyptus species that have been recalcitrant to vegetative propagation. The results also provide novel insights into the genetic differences between E. tereticornis and E. camaldulensis.

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