4.7 Article

Control of in vitro rooting and plant development in Corymbia maculata by silver nitrate, silver thiosulfate and thiosulfate ion

Journal

PLANT CELL REPORTS
Volume 29, Issue 11, Pages 1315-1323

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00299-010-0918-5

Keywords

Adventitious root; Corymbia maculata; Eucalyptus maculata; Ethylene; Lateral root; Silver thiosulfate

Categories

Funding

  1. Forestry Board [277-0212-07]
  2. ARO [117/2010]
  3. Volcani Center, Bet Dagan, Israel

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Plant regeneration and transformation in vitro is often improved by adding silver ion (Ag(+)) to the culture media as AgNO(3) or silver thiosulfate (STS). Ag(+) reacts with substances to form insoluble precipitates, while thiosulfate (S(2)O(3) (2-)) interferes with these reactions. We studied the implications of silver precipitation and S(2)O(3) (2-) in the medium for culture development by (1) examining formation of Ag(+) precipitates from AgNO(3) versus STS in agar gels and their possible dependence on agar type; (2) comparing Corymbia maculata culture responses to AgNO(3) and STS and determining which better suits control of culture development; (3) clarifying whether STS-dependent alterations in culture development are due to Ag(+) alone or also to a separate influence of S(2)O(3) (2-). Silver precipitates appeared in aqueous gels of four agar brands supplemented with AgNO(3), but not in Phytagel((TM)), which remained transparent. No precipitation was observed in gels with STS. Indole-3-butyric acid (IBA)-mediated adventitious root induction and shoot growth were higher in C. maculata shoot tips cultured on gels with STS versus AgNO(3) (6-25 mu M Ag(+)). IBA-treated shoot tips exhibited enhanced adventitious root regeneration, accelerated root elongation, increased frequency of lateral root formation, and stimulated shoot growth mediated by 100-250 mu M sodium thiosulfate (Na(2)S(2)O(3)) in medium without Ag(+). The potency of S(2)O(3) (2-) in facilitating culture development has never been recognized. It is inferred that superiority of STS in stimulating multiple responses of C. maculata culture results from sustained biological activity of Ag(+) through prevention of its precipitation, and from impact of S(2)O(3) (2-) on cell differentiation and growth.

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