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1.
Cryo Letters ; 28(6): 471-82, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18183327

ABSTRACT

The droplet-vitrification protocol was applied to unripe inflorescences of plants of two Korean garlic collections, Danyang and Mokpo, to establish a cryopreserved germplasm collection. Garlic unripe inflorescences of the 59 accessions harvested at Danyang showed a mean survival of 83.3% and regeneration of 73.5% after cryopreservation. Unripe inflorescences of accessions cryopreserved at sub-optimal developmental stages displayed lower survival and/or regeneration. Of these 59 accessions, 53 were cryopreserved and stored for long-term conservation. In the Mokpo collection, unripe inflorescences of 149 accessions were cryopreserved, displaying a mean survival of 79.9% and regeneration of 78.2%. Of these 149 accessions, 116 were cryopreserved and stored for the long-term. A total of 252 accessions of five clonal Allium species, including garlic, were cryopreserved using unripe inflorescences, cloves or bulbils, with a mean survival of 80.9% survival and regeneration of 77.0%, from which 221 accessions were stored in liquid nitrogen for long-term conservation. The real-time quantitative, reverse transcription (RT)-PCR assay of several garlic viruses showed that virus concentration was much lower in plantlets originating from cryopreserved material, compared to plantlets originating from preculture control and dehydration control samples. These results demonstrate that large-scale implementation of cryopreservation of Allium germplasm is feasible and that it can result in the regeneration of virus-free or little infected material. These findings will strongly facilitate the conservation and international exchange of Allium germplasm.


Subject(s)
Allium , Cryopreservation , Flowering Tops , Allium/virology , Flowering Tops/virology , Plant Viruses/isolation & purification , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
2.
Cryo Letters ; 27(3): 143-53, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16892163

ABSTRACT

The droplet-vitrification protocol, a combination of droplet-freezing and solution-based vitrification was applied for cryopreserving garlic bulbil primordia. The highest survival and regeneration percentages of cryopreserved primordia (90.1 to 95.0 percent and 82.7 to 85.0 percent, respectively) were achieved after preculture for 2-4 days at 10 degree C on solid medium with 0.1 - 0.3 M sucrose, loading for 50 minutes in liquid medium with 2 M glycerol + 0.5 M sucrose, dehydration with PVS3 vitrification solution for 90-150 min, cooling primordia in 5 microl droplets of PVS3 vitrification solution placed on aluminum foil strips by dipping these strips in liquid nitrogen, warming them by plunging the foil strips into pre-heated (40 degree C) 0.8 M sucrose solution for 30 s and further incubation in the same solution for 30 minutes. The optimized droplet-vitrification protocol was successfully applied to bulbil primordia of five garlic varieties originating from various countries and to immature bulbils of two vegetatively propagated Allium species, with regeneration percentages ranging between 77.4 - 95.4 percent.


Subject(s)
Cryopreservation/methods , Garlic/physiology , Plant Shoots/physiology , Cell Survival , Cryoprotective Agents/pharmacology , Culture Techniques , Garlic/drug effects , Humans , Plant Shoots/drug effects
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