4.5 Article

Opportunities for synthetic plant chimeral breeding: Past and future

Journal

PLANT CELL TISSUE AND ORGAN CULTURE
Volume 70, Issue 1, Pages 13-21

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1023/A:1016088621471

Keywords

chimera; graft chimera; in vitro; periclinal chimera

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Many plant periclinal chimeras are selected by horticulturalists due to their distinctive, valuable phenotypes, and because they are relatively stable. Most of these have arisen by induced or spontaneous mutation. Interspecific chimeras have been accidentally produced from graft unions of plants from a wide range of families. Early last century Winkler developed a technique to produce interspecific chimeras from graft unions (graft chimeras). More recently in vitro techniques have been developed to synthesize interspecific and intervarietal chimeras. However, these techniques have only been successful for species in the families Solanaceae and Cruciferae, and rarely assessed on plants in other families. Research is required to improve these techniques or develop new approaches so that the efficiency of chimeral shoot production is improved and the techniques are applicable to plants in a wide range of families. The unique characteristics of interspecific or intervarietal chimeras show the potential of chimeral breeding to produce new cultivars. If chimeral breeding techniques were improved, they could become a standard breeding approach for some horticultural crops.

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