Although the heritable nature of plant tissue culture responses is now well documented in many species, only a few studies have been conducted to elucidate complete inheritance patterns. Genetic control of in vitro shoot regeneration from leaf explants was investigated inSolanum chacoense using parental, F1 and F2 generations. Broad-sense heritability estimates were high for frequency (percentage) of responsive leaf explants (61-83%) and number of shoots regenerated per responsive explant (53-75%). Consistent with high heritability estimates, a hypothesis involving three genes could be formulated to explain the variability in the response observed in this study. This model implies that homozygous recessive alleles at any two (out of three) loci are required for the highest response, i.e., more than two shoots per explant in more than 40% of the explants. The presence of homozygous recessive alleles at any one of the three loci produces an intermediate response, i.e., fewer than 40% of the explants regenerating fewer than two shoots per explant, and a dominant allele at all the three loci results in non-responsiveness. Additional minor modifier genes, each with a small effect, would also be required to account for the variable intensity of regeneration within groups. Such a relatively simple genetic control of in vitro regenerability suggests that incorporation of this trait should be easy in potato improvement programmes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01240915 | DOI Listing |
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