ABSTRACT
Embryogenic cultures were initiated from immature Melia azedarach (Meliaceae) zigotic embryos. Explants were induced on Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium with 4.54 microM thidiazuron or 0.45 microM dichlorophenoxyacetic acid. After 6 weeks of culture on induction medium, somatic embryos were categorized in four morphological classes based on the presence of single or fused embryos and if they remained united or not to the original explant; that were evaluated histologically. The somatic embryos of every category were transferred, in groups or individually, on a 1/4 MS medium. Bipolar embryos, the more typically normal ones, had well defined shoot and root apical meristems and produced single plants; subcultured individually their conversion was 28%, and subcultured in groups the conversion declined to 6.8%. Fused embryos subcultured in groups had only a 2.1% conversion and produced plants with fused stems. None conversion rate in the others classes was associated to poorly developed shoot and root meristematic areas or with their absence. The converted plants were acclimatized and transferred, in a mist, to soil, with an independent of the class 95% survival rate.
Subject(s)
Melia azedarach/embryology , Melia azedarach/growth & development , Meristem/growth & development , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Tissue Culture TechniquesABSTRACT
Embryogenic cultures were initiated from immature Melia azedarach (Meliaceae) zigotic embryos. Explants were induced on Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium with 4.54 microM thidiazuron or 0.45 microM dichlorophenoxyacetic acid. After 6 weeks of culture on induction medium, somatic embryos were categorized in four morphological classes based on the presence of single or fused embryos and if they remained united or not to the original explant; that were evaluated histologically. The somatic embryos of every category were transferred, in groups or individually, on a 1/4 MS medium. Bipolar embryos, the more typically normal ones, had well defined shoot and root apical meristems and produced single plants; subcultured individually their conversion was 28%, and subcultured in groups the conversion declined to 6.8%. Fused embryos subcultured in groups had only a 2.1% conversion and produced plants with fused stems. None conversion rate in the others classes was associated to poorly developed shoot and root meristematic areas or with their absence. The converted plants were acclimatized and transferred, in a mist, to soil, with an independent of the class 95% survival rate.(AU)
Subject(s)
Melia azedarach/embryology , Melia azedarach/growth & development , Meristem/growth & development , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Tissue Culture TechniquesABSTRACT
Embryogenic cultures were initiated from immature Melia azedarach (Meliaceae) zigotic embryos. Explants were induced on Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium with 4.54 microM thidiazuron or 0.45 microM dichlorophenoxyacetic acid. After 6 weeks of culture on induction medium, somatic embryos were categorized in four morphological classes based on the presence of single or fused embryos and if they remained united or not to the original explant; that were evaluated histologically. The somatic embryos of every category were transferred, in groups or individually, on a 1/4 MS medium. Bipolar embryos, the more typically normal ones, had well defined shoot and root apical meristems and produced single plants; subcultured individually their conversion was 28%, and subcultured in groups the conversion declined to 6.8%. Fused embryos subcultured in groups had only a 2.1% conversion and produced plants with fused stems. None conversion rate in the others classes was associated to poorly developed shoot and root meristematic areas or with their absence. The converted plants were acclimatized and transferred, in a mist, to soil, with an independent of the class 95% survival rate.
Subject(s)
Plant Shoots/growth & development , Melia azedarach/growth & development , Melia azedarach/embryology , Meristem/growth & development , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Tissue Culture TechniquesABSTRACT
In paradise tree (Melia azedarach L.), immature zygotic embryos sampled from immature fruits are the starting material for the production of somatic embryos. These somatic embryos are employed for freezing experiments. Immature fruits could be stored at 25 degrees C for up to 80 days without impairing the embryogenic potential of zygotic embryos, which represents a four-fold increase in immature fruit storage duration, compared with previous studies. Among the three cryopreservation techniques tested for freezing paradise tree somatic embryos, namely desiccation, encapsulation-dehydration and pregrowth-dehydration, only encapsulation-dehydration and pregrowth-dehydration led to successful results. The optimal protocol was the following: i) somatic embryos (encapsulated or not) pretreated in liquid Murashige & Skoog medium with daily increasing sucrose concentration (0.5 M/0.75 M/1.0 M); ii) dehydrated with silica gel to 21 - 26% moisture content (fresh weight basis), for encapsulation-dehydration, or to 19% moisture content, for pregrowth-dehydration; iii) frozen at 1 degree C/min from 20 degrees C to -30 degrees C with a programmable freezing apparatus; iv) rapid immersion in liquid nitrogen. The highest recovery achieved was 36% with encapsulation-dehydration and 30% with pregrowth-dehydration. Regrowth of frozen embryos was direct in most cases, as secondary embryogenesis originating from the root pole was observed on only around 10% of cryopreserved somatic embryos. Plants recovered from cryopreserved embryos presented the same phenotypic traits as non-frozen control plants.
Subject(s)
Cryopreservation/methods , Melia azedarach/embryology , Cryoprotective Agents/pharmacology , Desiccation , Embryonic Development/physiology , Melia azedarach/drug effects , Melia azedarach/growth & development , Sucrose/pharmacologyABSTRACT
Sobre la base de la teoría de Eysenck, se plantea la hipótesis de que los sujetos distímicos serán accesibles al tratamiento de la sensibilidade al ruido y por medio de técnicas de relajación, en tanto que los sujetos histéricos no lo serán. A un grupo de sujetos voluntarios, sensibles al ruido, se le aplica el tratamiento en cuatro sesiones. La comparación de las curvas individuales de sensibilidad al ruido, pre y pos-tratamiento y el análisis del cruce de variables realizado, evidencia que, contrariamente a la hipóteses planteada, el factor de mayor incidencia en los resultados del tratamiento, es el grado de sensibilidad al ruido que presentan los sujetos experimentales (AU)
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Noise/adverse effects , Relaxation Therapy , Hypersensitivity/etiology , Hypersensitivity/therapyABSTRACT
Sobre la base de la teoría de Eysenck, se plantea la hipótesis de que los sujetos distímicos serán accesibles al tratamiento de la sensibilidade al ruido y por medio de técnicas de relajación, en tanto que los sujetos histéricos no lo serán. A un grupo de sujetos voluntarios, sensibles al ruido, se le aplica el tratamiento en cuatro sesiones. La comparación de las curvas individuales de sensibilidad al ruido, pre y pos-tratamiento y el análisis del cruce de variables realizado, evidencia que, contrariamente a la hipóteses planteada, el factor de mayor incidencia en los resultados del tratamiento, es el grado de sensibilidad al ruido que presentan los sujetos experimentales