Planta Med 1995; 61(6): 554-557
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-959370
Papers

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Plant Regeneration from Mesophyll and Suspension Protoplasts of Silybum marianum

E. Hetz1 , E. Huancaruna Perales1 , R. Liersch2 , O. Schieder1
  • 1Institut für Angewandte Genetik, Freie Universität Berlin, Albrecht-Thaer-Weg 6, D-14195 Berlin, Germany
  • 2Madaus AG, Ostmerheimer Str. 198, D-51109 Köln, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

1995

1995

Publication Date:
04 January 2007 (online)

Abstract

Mesophyll protoplasts of six lines of Silybum marianum were enzymatically isolated from young leaves, embedded in sodium alginate, and cultivated in KM-medium. Division frequencies observed after ten days were strongly influenced by the protoplast density. When 5 × 104/ml protoplasts were plated, division frequencies of about 35% were obtained, with a protoplast population density of 1 × 105/ml division frequencies of about 75% resulted. Plant regeneration experiments undertaken with the protocalluses on medium containing BAP led to shoot formation in only two lines with regeneration frequencies of less than 1% in one (M 24) and up to 7% in a second line (M 2), respectively. However, when the protocalluses from line M 2 were treated with thidiazuron (TDZ) in a first culture step, and with BAP in a second step, the shoot formation frequency rose to 22%. Shoots were rooted on hormone free MS agar medium and transferred into soil where plants grew to maturity. Similar results were obtained when protoplasts of the line M 2, isolated from a suspension culture, were cultivated.