| Literature DB >> 29222727 |
Kana Higaki1, Kento Rammitsu1, Yumi Yamashita2, Tomohisa Yukawa2, Yuki Ogura-Tsujita3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mycoheterotrophic plants are one of the most difficult plant groups to conserve because they are entirely dependent on symbiotic fungi. Establishment of viable culture systems would greatly aid their conservation. We describe a simple culture system for the mycoheterotrophic orchid, Gastrodia pubilabiata, that does not require laboratory facilities. The orchid is symbiotic with leaf-litter-decomposing fungi.Entities:
Keywords: Conservation; Gastrodia; Leaf litter-decomposing fungi; Mycoheterotrophic plants
Year: 2017 PMID: 29222727 PMCID: PMC5722783 DOI: 10.1186/s40529-017-0214-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bot Stud ISSN: 1817-406X Impact factor: 2.787
The culture vessels and leaf litter used in this study and the results of seed germination
| Vessel number | Size of the vessels | Location of leaf litter collected | Seed germinationb |
|---|---|---|---|
| Box 1 | L260 × W190 × D100a | Site 1 | ++ |
| Box 2 | L411 × W337 × D139 | Site 1 | + |
| Bottle 3 | 450 mL | Site 2 | + |
| Bottle 4 | 450 mL | Site 2 | − |
| Bottle 5 | 900 mL | Site 2 | + |
aLength (L) × width (W) × depth (D) (mm)
b++, a large number of protocorms and seedlings were observed; +, germination was observed; –, no germination
Fig. 1The culture vessels used in this study and flower morphology of Gastrodia pubilabiata. Plastic boxes (a) and glass bottles (b) were filled with leaf litter collected from the natural habitat. c A flowering plant in its habitat (photo by T. Yamashita)
Fig. 2Seed germination and seedling growth of Gastrodia pubilabiata. a, b Protocorms after 35 days of culture. Fungal hyphae and white rhizomorphs are evident around the protocorms; c Seedlings after 35 days of culture. Roots (arrows) and tubers (T) are evident; d A Box 1 seedling after 65 days of culture. Elongated roots (arrows) and hairy tubers (T); e A seedling root with attached fungal rhizomorphs after 120 days of culture. Rhizomorphs (Rz) growing from a dead branch are connected to a mycorrhizal root (Ro)
The results of molecular identification of the fungal isolates from G. pubilabiata seedlings
| Isolate | NBRC no.a | Accession no. of ITS sequence | Closest mach in GenBank | Identities |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| F68 | NBRC113007 | LC314114 |
| 607/607 (100%) |
| Mycorrhizal fungus of | 650/659 (99%) | |||
| F69 | NBRC113008 | LC314115 | Mycorrhizal fungus of | 642/646 (99%) |
|
| 641/645 (99%) | |||
|
| 640/645 (99%) |
aAll isolates were deposited to the Biological Resource Center of the National Institute of Technology and Evaluation (NBRC)