| Literature DB >> 31700526 |
Jing-Wei Li1,2, Xiao-Chen Zhang1, Min-Rui Wang1, Wen-Lu Bi1,3, M Faisal4, Jaime A Teixeira da Silva5, Gayle M Volk6, Qiao-Chun Wang1.
Abstract
Lilium is one of the most popular flower crops worldwide, and some species are also used as vegetables and medicines. The availability of and easy access to diverse Lilium genetic resources are essential for plant genetic improvements. Cryopreservation is currently considered as an ideal means for the long-term preservation of plant germplasm. Over the last two decades, great efforts have been exerted in studies of Lilium cryopreservation and progress has been made in the successful cryopreservation of pollen, seeds and shoot tips in Lilium. Genes that exist in Lilium, including those that regulate flower shape, color and size, and that are resistant to cold stress and diseases caused by fungi and viruses, provide a rich source of valuable genetic resources for breeding programs to create novel cultivars required by the global floriculture and ornamental markets. Successful cryopreservation of Lilium spp. is a way to preserve these valuable genes. The present study provides updated and comprehensive information about the development of techniques that have advanced Lilium cryopreservation. Further ideas are proposed to better direct future studies on Lilium cryobiotechnology.Entities:
Keywords: Cryopreservation; Genetic stability; Lily; Pollen; Seeds; Shoot tips
Year: 2019 PMID: 31700526 PMCID: PMC6825351 DOI: 10.1186/s13007-019-0506-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Methods ISSN: 1746-4811 Impact factor: 4.993
Fig. 1Major steps of Lilium cryopreservation for shoot tips (A), pollen (B) and seeds (C). Shoot tip cryopreservation by droplet-vitrification (1 in A [35]; 2 in A [34, 43]), vitrification (3 in A [30, 31]), encapsulation–vitrification (4 in A [30]), and encapsulation–dehydration (5 in A [30]). Pollen cryopreservation by dehydration (B [53]). Seed cryopreservation by encapsulation–dehydration (1 in C [29]), glycerol treatment (2 in C [29]) and dehydration (3 in C [29])
A list of successful cryopreservation of shoot tips of Lilium spp.
| Species or hybrids | No. of genotypes tested | Cryo-methods | Shoot regrowth (%) | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1 | Encapsulation–dehydration | 88 | [ |
|
| 1 | Encapsulation–vitrification | 94 | [ |
|
| 1 | Vitrification | 92 | [ |
| 1 for | Vitrification | 83 for | [ | |
| 2 cultivars for | Vitrification | 53–89 for | [ | |
| Oriental hybrids ‘Siberia’ | 1 | Vitrification | 51 (survival). Shoot regrowth was not tested | [ |
|
| 1 | Vitrification | 95 (survival). Shoot regrowth was not tested | [ |
| Oriental hybrid ‘Siberia’ | 1 | Vitrification | 72 | [ |
| 3 | Droplet-vitrification | 67 for | [ | |
| 5 | Droplet-vitrification | 78 for | [ | |
| 20 | Droplet-vitrification | 52 for | [ | |
| 3 species, 2 Oriental hybrids and 2 Asiatic hybrids | Droplet-vitrification | 80 for | [ | |
|
| 1 | Droplet-vitrification | 81–89 | [ |
Fig. 2Cryopreservation of Lilium pollen (a, b), seeds (c, d) and shoot tips (e–l). Oriental hybrid ‘Siberia’ pollen released from anthers and used for cryopreservation (a) and germinating pollen (b) after cryoexposure (courtesy of Prof. Yan Liu for providing the photos). Surface-disinfected seeds of Lilium brownie used for cryopreservation (c) and germinating seeds (d) after dehydration cryopreservation (courtesy of Dr. Liang Lin for providing the photos). Four-weeks old adventitious buds regenerated from leaf segments of Oriental hybrid ‘Siberia’ (e). A shoot tip excised from the 4-weeks old adventitious buds in d (f). PVS2 droplets, each containing one shoot tip, on an aluminum foil strip (g). Somatic embryo-like structures regenerated from cryopreserved shoot tips of Oriental hybrid ‘Siberia’ after 4 weeks of post-thaw culture (h). A germinating somatic embryo developed from h after 4 weeks of culture on germinating medium (i). A small leaf square-bearing two adventitious buds of Oriental hybrid ‘Siberia’ after 4 weeks of induction (j). Shoot regrowth of cryopreserved small leaf square-bearing adventitious buds after 4 weeks of post-thaw culture (k). A plantlet regenerated from cryopreserved shoot tips of Oriental hybrid ‘Siberia’ after 4 weeks of culture on rooting medium (l). Bars in a and b = 20 µm; in c and d = 2 mm; in e–l = 1 mm
A list of successful cryopreservation of Lilium pollens and seeds
| Species or hybrids | Cryo-methods | Survival or germination (%) | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pollens | |||
| Oriental hybrid ‘Sorbonne’ and ‘Siberia’ | Desiccation | 60 and 59 after 60 days, and 51 and 48 after 420 days | [ |
| Oriental hybrid ‘Siberia’ | Rapid cooling | 59 | [ |
| Oriental hybrid ‘Siberia’ | Vitrification | 70 | [ |
| | Desiccation + rapid cooling | 21–92 (according to the conservation duration) | [ |
| Seeds | |||
| | Encapsulation–dehydration | 50 | [ |
| | Pregrowth-dehydration | 75 | [ |
| | Encapsulation–vitrification | 10 | [ |
| | Vitrification | 97 | [ |
| Desiccation | 95 | ||
| Encapsulation–dehydration | 69 | ||
| Glycerol pretreatment | 98 | ||
| | Dehydration | 93–100 | [ |