Monozygotic cleavage polyembryogenesis and conifer tree improvement
The mass cloning of elite genotypes of commercially important conifers has led to the establishment of an industrial forest of two of the most important softwood species in the United States. Embryonal-suspensor masses, produced by monozygotic cleavage polyembryony (MCP), are rescued from controlled...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cytology and genetics 2008-06, Vol.42 (3), p.159-173 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The mass cloning of elite genotypes of commercially important conifers has led to the establishment of an industrial forest of two of the most important softwood species in the United States. Embryonal-suspensor masses, produced by monozygotic cleavage polyembryony (MCP), are rescued from controlled-pollinated seeds in tree breeding orchards. MCP is scaled up as cell suspensions and into mature somatic embryos. The embryos serve as a source for the production of various artificial and manufactured seeds used in replicated field trials to test genotype
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environmental interactions. For the capture of genetic gains, early selections are based on correlations with known traits. This reduces the costs spent on years of tree improvement. Mass cloning and genotype cryopreservation enable field testing under a wider range of sites. Process-controlled bioreactors are proposed as artificial ovules to impose nutritional variables from the mother tree and to simulate environmental factors that are known to affect the performance of the new generation. Comparisons among extant and modern conifer genotypes would provide new insights on their latent potentials for apomixis, the alternation of generations, and adaptive plasticity. |
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ISSN: | 0095-4527 1934-9440 |
DOI: | 10.3103/S0095452708030031 |