La coltura in vitro per la conservazione della biodiversità orticola - In vitro culture for the biodiversity conservation of vegetables
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
Today, in vitro culture is a strategic tool to
support medium and long-term conservation of plant
genetic resources by using the slow growth storage of
shoot cultures and the cryopreservation of organs and
tissues. Over the last 30 years, considerable progresses
were made in the development of both techniques
that are nowadays considered as ex situ conservation
strategies complementary to traditional
seed banks and in-field clonal collections. Efficient
protocols were developed for the conservation of a
large number of crops, including important vegetables
of the temperate environment (garlic, artichoke,
asparagus, mint, potato, sweet potato, tomato, red
chicory, thyme). Conservation in slow growth storage
consists in modifying the medium and/or culture conditions
to reduce the growth of plant material without
affecting the viability and regrowth potential of shoots
when moved back to standard culture conditions. The
technique allows medium-term crops conservation,
with a storage time of vegetables ranging from a few
months to two years and more, without recurring subcul
tur ing typical of micropropagat ion.
Cryopreservation preserves plant organs and tissues
at ultra-low temperature, as liquid nitrogen temperature
(-196°C). Currently, various techniques are available,
based on cold tolerance induction by cell cytoplasm
vitrification during the fast ultra-freezing
through in liquid nitrogen immersion of explants. The
term "vitrification" refers to the solidification of a liquid
without crystallization. If induced in plant cells, it
avoids the formation of lethal intra-cellular ice crystals
during the ultra-freezing process, keeping tissues at
stopped metabolism condition but vital. Working with
vegetables, the techniques based on direct immersion
of specimens in liquid nitrogen ("one-step freezing",
such as the "droplet-method", the "PVS2 vitrification",
the "encapsulation-based" and the "cryo plate-based"
procedures) are the most used. Further, the "two-step
freezing", i.e. the slow explants cooling before immersion
in liquid nitrogen, still finds some applications.
The experimental activity mainly focused on three
economically important species, i.e., Allium sp., potato
and sweet potato. Currently, almost 38,000 accessions
of garlic, cassava, mint, potato, sweet potato,
taro, yam are maintained in 17 genetic resources conservation
centers, located in 12 Countries and 5
Continents (Europe, Asia, Africa, North and South
America). Approximately 4/5 of these accessions are
maintained in vitro by means of slow growth storage
of shoot cultures, but more recent cryopreservation is
constantly growing, and over 7,500 accessions from
vegetables are stored at -196 °C. The germplasm of
potato (Solanum sp.) is by far the most collected in
the world, with almost 17,700 accessions presently
maintained in in vitro banks and cryobanks.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
cryopreservation; cryobanks; in vitro banks; micropropagation; slow growth storage.
Elenco autori:
Lambardi, Maurizio
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