4.7 Article

Promotive effect of phytosulfokine-peptide growth factor-on protoplast cultures development in Fagopyrum tataricum (L.) Gaertn

Journal

BMC PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12870-023-04402-9

Keywords

2-aminoondane-2-phosphonic acid (AIP); Agarose; Driselase; Hypocotyl; Morphogenic callus; Non-morphogenic callus; Phenolic compounds; Plating efficiency; Polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP); Tartary buckwheat

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This study successfully established a protoplast-to-plant system in Tartary buckwheat, a valuable crop with high nutritional importance. The protoplast isolation approach and supplementation of a culture medium effectively stimulated cell division and further development of protoplast cultures, leading to plant regeneration.
BackgroundFagopyrum tataricum (Tartary buckwheat) is a valuable crop of great nutritional importance due to its high level of bioactive compounds. Excellent opportunities to obtain plants with the high level or the desired profile of valuable metabolites may be provided by in vitro cultures. Among known in vitro techniques, protoplast technology is an exciting tool for genetic manipulation to improve crop traits. In that context, protoplast fusion may be applied to generate hybrid cells between different species of Fagopyrum. To apply protoplast cultures to the aforementioned approaches in this research, we established the protoplast-to-plant system in Tartary buckwheat.ResultsIn this work, cellulase and pectinase activity enabled protoplast isolation from non-morphogenic and morphogenic callus (MC), reaching, on average, 2.3 x 10(6) protoplasts per g of fresh weight. However, to release protoplasts from hypocotyls, the key step was the application of driselase in the enzyme mixture. We showed that colony formation could be induced after protoplast embedding in agarose compared to the alginate matrix. Protoplasts cultured in a medium based on Kao and Michayluk supplemented with phytosulfokine (PSK) rebuilt cell walls, underwent repeated mitotic division, formed aggregates, which consequently led to callus formation. Plating efficiency, expressing the number of cell aggregate formed, in 10-day-old protoplast cultures varied from 14% for morphogenic callus to 30% for hypocotyls used as a protoplast source. However plant regeneration via somatic embryogenesis and organogenesis occurred only during the cultivation of MC-derived protoplasts.ConclusionsThis study demonstrated that the applied protoplast isolation approach facilitated the recovery of viable protoplasts. Moreover, the embedding of protoplasts in an agarose matrix and supplementation of a culture medium with PSK effectively stimulated cell division and further development of Tartary buckwheat protoplast cultures along with the plant regeneration. Together, these results provide the first evidence of developing a protoplast-to-plant system from the MC of Fagopyrum tataricum used as source material. These findings suggest that Tartary buckwheat's protoplast cultures have potential implications for the species' somatic hybridization and genetic improvement.

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