Abstract

Factors affecting conversion of horse chestnut (A. hippocastanum L.) somatic embryos into plantlets were evaluated. Anther filament derived embryogenic tissue developed bipolar structures with two cotyledons and a well-developed shoot and root apical meristem upon auxin omittance from the culturing medium. The impact of carbohydrate type (glucose, fructose, sucrose and maltose) and concentration (3 and 6%) on somatic embryo maturation and conversion were evaluated. Although conversion frequencies were high for all treatments, overall quality of regenerated plantlets was poor. Increasing the carbohydrate concentration in the maturation medium did not increase conversion of somatic embryos or quality of regenerated plantlets in terms of shoot height. On the contrary, addition of PEG (polyethylene glycol) in maturation media had a beneficial effect on shoot quality of regenerated plantlets. Sucrose was a superior carbon source when PEG was included in the maturation medium, in terms of conversion rate (65.7%) as well as of shoot quality of plantlets (43.8% of plantlets had shoots >2 cm). Clonal fidelity of the different development stages of somatic embryogenesis and of converted plantlets was assessed by flow cytometry and no major ploidy changes were found.

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