Abstract

An effective method of tulip regeneration via somatic embryogenesis (SE) was developed. Explants, flower stem slices excised from cooled bulbs were incubated in darkness on MS modified media containing auxins alone (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid—2,4-D, 1-naphthalene acetic acid—NAA and 4-amino-3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridine carboxylic acid—picloram) or combined with thidiazuron (TDZ) at 0.1 and 0.5 mg L−1. Yellowish-white callus with a granular structure was developed in the presence of all auxins on the cut surface from the tissues of the vascular bundles. From this, lines of embryogenic calli were derived. The addition of TDZ to the medium with auxins significantly stimulated somatic embryo formation. Cyclic and the most intensive proliferation of embryogenic callus as well as embryo formation was obtained in the presence of 2,4-D at 0.1 mg L−1 combined with TDZ at 0.5 mg L−1. Addition of proline enhanced either callus proliferation rate or frequency of embryo formation. The best quality embryos with cotyledons longer than 10 mm able to form bulbs were recorded when TDZ was replaced with 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP) at the concentration of 0.1 mg L−1. Histomorphology showed that the development of somatic embryos could have either external or internal origins. Embryos of external origin were initiated by cell division on the edge of embryogenic calli. Embryos of internal origin resulted from the division of parenchyma cells inside the tissue. Embryonic cells were characterized by their small volume, regular shape, dense cytoplasm and large nuclei. The globular embryos were covered by a distinct layer of periderm. Then, the embryos developed into structures having leaf-shaped cotyledons with a procambial strand and a sideward-orientated meristem of the vegetative apex (stolon). Cotyledon embryos did not show vascular connections with the parent tissue, and they did not develop embryonic roots.

Highlights

  • Tulips are among the leading cut flowers produced [1,2]

  • We developed the method of tulip micropropagation based on cyclic multiplication of adventitious shoots

  • Embryogenic calli capable of continuous multiplication were derived from yellowish-white callus with a granular structure, formed on the cut surface of flower stem - from the tissues of the vascular bundles, in the presence of 2,4-D and thidiazol-5-yl urea (TDZ)

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Summary

Introduction

Tulips are among the leading cut flowers produced [1,2]. The development of a new cultivar is time-consuming and expensive. In the 1980s, 1990s and in the first years of the 21st century, much information was generated on the direct regeneration of shoots or microbulbs on the initial explants such as the bulb scales, vegetative buds and flower stems, with the latter showing highest regenerative potential [3,4,5,6,7,8] These methods were not the systems based on the cyclic multiplication of adventitious shoots or bulbs and allowed obtaining at most about 200 microbulbs from one donor bulb. Maślanka and Bach [9] demonstrated a high regenerative potential for seedling fragments as initial explants of Tulipa tarda This method is based on the direct regeneration of adventitious shoots, and it could be used successfully to reproduce wild tulip species, e.g., those endangered with extinction.

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