Abstract

Long-term embryogenic lines were repeatedly obtained from nine asparagus ( Asparagus officinalis L.) genotypes by the selection of rare events, which consisted of the emergence of either a few somatic embryos or an embryogenic callus from a restricted area of a primary callus. In the first case, somatic embryos emerged from 1 % of calli induced with naphtaleneacetic acid and transferred to a medium without auxin. Isolated and subcultured on hormone free medium, these embryos developed habituated embryogenic lines (H lines) growing by adventive embryogenesis. In the second case, 3 % of primary calli developed then subcultured on 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) produced a new type of friable and yellowish-white callus, constituted of clusters of globular somatic embryos which can be continuously maintained on 2,4-D (2,4-D lines). Among 2,4-D lines, two types were identified by subculturing them on hormone–free medium. Half of the 2,4-D lines were habituated and half were 2,4-D dependent. Most plants regenerated from H lines exhibited a strong increase in embryogenic capacity compared to control plants, unlike plants regenerated from the 2,4-D dependent lines. This increased embryogenic capacity was transmitted to the progeny as a monogenic dominant trait. H lines would therefore be issued from mutation(s) occurring in vitro, conferring both the embryogenic and habituated phenotypes. On the contrary, in the 2,4-D dependent lines, the embryogenic processes appeared to remain under exogenous auxin control and no evidence of a mutational origin could be inferred from the behaviour of regenerated plants.

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