Patent · US Expired

Method for reproducing coniferous plants by somatic embryogenesis using adsorbent materials in the development stage media

US5034326A · kind A · utility

54Cited by
1References
15Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateOct 23, 1989
Grant dateJul 23, 1991
Priority date
Expiry dateOct 23, 2009

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC C)Chemistry; Metallurgy
  • CPC primaryC12N5/0025
  • WIPO fieldBiotechnology
  • WIPO sectorChemistry

Abstract

The invention is a method for reproducing coniferous trees by somatic embryogenesis using plant tissue culture techniques. It comprises a multistage culturing process. A suitable explant, typically the fertilized embryo excised from a mature or immature seed, is first cultured on a medium that induces multiple early stage proembryos. Preferably these proembryos are further multiplied in a second culture having reduced growth hormones. The early stage proembryos may then be placed in or on a late stage proembryo development culture which may have a significantly higher osmotic potential than the previous stage or stages to develop very robust late stage proembryos having at least about 100 cells and multiple suspensor cells. Culturing from this point continues in an embryo development medium very low in or lacking cytokinins and auxins but containing a relatively high concentration of exogenous abscisic acid and an adsorbent material, such as activated charcoal. The combination of abscisic acid and activated charcoal appears to increase the absolute number of embryos produced for most genotypes studied. Further, the vigor and morphology of the embryos is improved. After a period of …

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.