4.7 Review

An Academic and Technical Overview on Plant Micropropagation Challenges

Journal

HORTICULTURAE
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/horticulturae8080677

Keywords

acclimatization; browning; contamination; delay of subculture; hyperhydricity; recalcitrance; somaclonal variations; totipotency

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Funding

  1. National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of Hungary [TKP2021-EGA-20]
  2. Hungarian Tempus Public Foundation (TPF), Bilateral State Scholarships [AK-00184-003/2021]

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The production of micropropagated plants in plant-tissue-culture laboratories and nurseries is a crucial method for propagating economic plants. However, commercial propagation using tissue-culture techniques may face various technical, biological, physiological, and/or genetic difficulties, as well as overproduction or lack of resources. This study aims to address the major challenges of plant micropropagation and provide scientific and technical solutions. The review covers different issues such as contamination, delay of subculture, in vitro rooting difficulty, and shoot abnormalities, among others.
The production of micropropagated plants in plant-tissue-culture laboratories and nurseries is the most important method for propagation of many economic plants. Micropropagation based on tissue-culture technology involves large-scale propagation, as it allows multiplication of a huge number of true-to-type propagules in a very short time and in a very limited space, as well as all year round, regardless of the climate. However, applying plant-tissue-culture techniques for the commercial propagation of plants may face a lot of obstacles or troubles that could result from technical, biological, physiological, and/or genetical reasons, or due to overproduction or the lack of facilities and professional technicians, as shown in the current study. Moreover, several disorders and abnormalities are discussed in the present review. This study aims to show the most serious problems and obstacles of plant micropropagation, and their solutions from both scientific and technical sides. This review, as a first report, includes different challenges in plant micropropagation (i.e., contamination, delay of subculture, burned plantlets, browning, in vitro rooting difficulty, somaclonal variations, hyperhydricity, shoot tip necrosis, albino plantlets, recalcitrance, shoot abnormalities, in vitro habituation) in one paper. Most of these problems are related to scientific and/or technical reasons, and they could be avoided by following the micropropagation protocol suitable for each plant species. The others are dominant in plant-tissue-culture laboratories, in which facilities are often incomplete, or due to poor infrastructure and scarce funds.

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