Abstract

Variation in long‐continued cultures of Haplopappus gracilis and Daucus carota has been investigated. A strain of carrot tissue was isolated that grew with a compact habit, in contrast to the highly friable habit of the parent strain. Its dividing cells were arranged quite differently than in the parent strain. Earlier work had shown that Haplopappus cultures could be reversibly altered in their pigmentation and form, by changing the culture medium. This was confirmed, and it was further shown that pronounced changes in nitrogenous compounds also occurred in response to factors in the medium. However, strains of Haplopappus were isolated which differed persistently from the parent strain, even when they were maintained under the same conditions. The variant strains, grown in the same medium, showed differences in their content of nitrogenous compounds. Stock cultures also changed spontaneously with time with respect to their content of nitrogenous substances. Acriflavine, at low concentration, inhibited the growth and formation of colonics by cells plated on nutrient agar, but, by prolonged exposure to sublethal amounts of the drug, resistant strains were isolated. Certain of the spontaneous variant strains were found to differ from each other and from the parent strain in their chromosome complements in ways that are described and to which the observed changes in morphology and metabolism of the cultures may be attributed. The variations that may occur in the free cells in culture are contrasted with the greater uniformity of the cells as they exist in the plant body.

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