| Literature DB >> 34067138 |
Chris O'Brien1, Jayeni Hiti-Bandaralage1, Raquel Folgado2, Alice Hayward1, Sean Lahmeyer2, Jim Folsom2, Neena Mitter1.
Abstract
Recent development and implementation of crop cryopreservation protocols has increased the capacity to maintain recalcitrant seeded germplasm collections via cryopreserved in vitro material. To preserve the greatest possible plant genetic resources globally for future food security and breeding programs, it is essential to integrate in situ and ex situ conservation methods into a cohesive conservation plan. In vitro storage using tissue culture and cryopreservation techniques offers promising complementary tools that can be used to promote this approach. These techniques can be employed for crops difficult or impossible to maintain in seed banks for long-term conservation. This includes woody perennial plants, recalcitrant seed crops or crops with no seeds at all and vegetatively or clonally propagated crops where seeds are not true-to-type. Many of the world's most important crops for food, nutrition and livelihoods, are vegetatively propagated or have recalcitrant seeds. This review will look at ex situ conservation, namely field repositories and in vitro storage for some of these economically important crops, focusing on conservation strategies for avocado. To date, cultivar-specific multiplication protocols have been established for maintaining multiple avocado cultivars in tissue culture. Cryopreservation of avocado somatic embryos and somatic embryogenesis have been successful. In addition, a shoot-tip cryopreservation protocol has been developed for cryo-storage and regeneration of true-to-type clonal avocado plants.Entities:
Keywords: embryogenic; ex situ conservation; long-term conservation; plant biodiversity; shoot tips; vitrification
Year: 2021 PMID: 34067138 PMCID: PMC8151510 DOI: 10.3390/plants10050934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Some examples of field repositories maintaining living collections of economically important crops.
| Country | Field Repositories | Genus/Species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| USA | USDA—Geneva NY, Davis CA, Riverside CA | [ | |
| USA | Tropical Botanical Garden | [ | |
| Germany | German Fruit Gene bank | [ | |
| United Kingdom | National Fruit Collection | [ |
Some examples of cryo-storage gene banks maintaining collections of economically important crops.
| Country | Gene Bank | Genus/Species | Accessions Held | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| France | Institute of Research Development | ~500 | [ | |
| Columbia | International Centre for Tropical Agriculture | 5690 | [ | |
| Japan | National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences | ~1000 | [ | |
| Japan | Shimane Agriculture Research Centre | 40 | [ | |
| USA | National Clonal Germplasm Repository | 6073 | [ | |
| Belgium | Bioversity International Transit Centre | 1600 | [ |
Methods to reduce water content.
| Dehydration Method | Uses |
|---|---|
| Desiccation | (1) Air drying of explants in laminar flow hood or using flow of compressed air. |
| Cryoprotectants | (1) Penetrating cryoprotectants, e.g., dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and glycerol act by replacing intracellular water. |
| Freeze-induced dehydration | Preferential freezing of extracellular water by slow cooling at a rate of 0.5–2 °C per min creates a hypotonic surrounding for the cell, resulting in outflow of cellular water. |
| Pre-conditioning of donor plant or explant | Including DMSO abscisic acid, sucrose, polyols or proline in the pre-culture medium or low temperature treatment to induce tolerance to dehydration and freezing. |
Some examples of cryoprotectants used for plant tissue.
| Cryoprotectant | Composition |
|---|---|
| PVS1 | 30% |
| PVS2 | 30% |
| PVS3 | 50% |
| PVS4 | 35% |
| VSL+ | 20% |
| VSL | 20% |
| Steponkus | 50% |
| Towill | 35% EG, 6.8% |
| Fahy | 20% DMSO, 20% formamide, 15% propylene glycol [ |
Some examples of cryopreservation methods, techniques and applications used.
| Method | Technique | Application | Survival/Recovery | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitrification | Pre-culture of cultures on basal medium supplemented with cryoprotectants, pre-treatment with loading solution, dehydration with PVS, rapid freezing rewarming. | Cocoa secondary somatic embryos | 74.5% survival with 5- day pre-culture on 0.5 M sucrose followed by 60 min dehydration in PVS2 treatment for 1 h at 0 °C. | [ |
| Droplet-vitrification | Resembles vitrification in all steps with only difference that materials are cryopreserved on foil strips in drops of vitirification solution. | 43% regrowth with pre-culture on basal + proline (0.193 M) for 24 h in the dark at 25 °C and PVS2 15 min at 0 °C. | [ | |
| Encapsulation-vitrification | Sodium alginate beads are formed and explants are encapsulated in them and dehydrated in PVS before freezing. | 64% regrowth after 4 day pre-culture in sucrose; PVS2 treatment for 3 h treatment and rapid freezing. | [ | |
| Encapsulation-dehydration | Sodium alginate-encapsulated cultures are dehydrated osmotically with high concentrations of sucrose for 1–7 days and/or desiccated in an air current before slow cooling to –80 °C and then immersed in LN. | 40% regrowth following 4 days of sucrose pre-growth, desiccation and freezing. | [ | |
| Dehydration | Samples are dehydrated by either air current, silica gels, or incubation with cryoprotectant, followed by rapid freezing or two-step freezing. | Dried in a laminar flow hood until 5–15% moisture content and 100% recovery after LN. | [ | |
| Pre-growth and pre-growth-dehydration | Samples are cultured on media containing cryoprotectants such as DMSO, dehydrated and then frozen slowly or rapidly. | 50% MS + sucrose (0.6 M) + 5% DMSO for 2 days | [ | |
| V-cryoplate | Modification of encapsulation-vitrification and droplet-vitrification. Dehydration is performed using vitrification solution PVS2. | 87% regrowth, 13 lines pre-cultured at 25 °C for 1 day on MS medium containing 0.3 M sucrose. PVS2 solution for 30 min at 25 °C. | [ | |
| D-cryoplate | Modification of encapsulation-vitrification and droplet-vitrification. Dehydration is achieved using the air current of the laminar flow cabinet or silica gel. | Average 87% regrowth, 10 lines 1–3 months cold acclimatization, 3 °C pre-cultured on 0.3 M sucrose, 2 days at 25 °C, laminar flow 30 min at 25 °C. | [ |
Avocado germplasm maintained as field repositories throughout the world.
| Country | Germplasm Repositories | No. of Accessions | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| USA | The Huntington San Marino CA | 56 | [ |
| USA | Riverside University CA | ~230 avocado scion accessions | [ |
| ~15 wild | |||
| ~246 avocado rootstock accessions | [ | ||
| USA | National Genetic Resources Program, Miami, Florida | [ | |
| USA | The Sub-Tropical Horticulture Research Station, Miami, Florida | ~400 avocado accessions | [ |
| Mexico | National Research Institute of Forestry and Livestock in Guanajuato | 500 accessions belonging to | [ |
| Mexico | State of Mexico of the Fundación Salvador Sanchez Colin-CICTAMEX, S.C. | 800 accessions of avocado and related species. Mexican, Guatemalan, West Indian races, | [ |
| Mexico | Coatepec Harinas and Temascaltepec; State of Mexico | Wild relatives: | [ |
| Ghana | University of Ghana Forest and Horticultural Crops Research Centre | 110 local land races and 5 varieties from South Africa (‘Hass’, ‘Fuerte’, ‘Ryan’, ‘Ettinger’ and ‘Nabal’ | [ |
| Israel | Volcanic Centre in Bet Dagan | 194 trees, propagated from 148 accessions | [ |
| Spain | The Experimental Station ‘La Mayora’ in Malaga | 75 avocado accessions | [ |
| Cuba | N/A | 210 genotypes | [ |
| Chile | N/A | 4 botanical breeds of | [ |
| Australia | Maroochydore Research Station | 46 avocado accessions | [ |
| Nigeria | 8 avocado accessions | [ | |
| Brazil | Brasilia, in the Federal District, depending on the Embrapa Research Institute | 30 avocado accessions | [ |
| Brazil | Conceicao do Almeida and Juazeiro collections, both in the Bahia State | 22 avocado accessions | [ |
| Brazil | Piracicaba, in the Sao Paulo State | 33 avocado accessions | [ |
| Brazil | Jaboticabal, in the Sao Paulo State | 7 avocado accessions | [ |
Figure 1One of the 56 avocado accessions being maintained in The Huntington Botanical Gardens [in San Marino, California USA] living germplasm collection.
Summary of successfully applied cryopreservation techniques to avocado somatic embryos. * Recovery is defined as any somatic embryo clump which was proliferating into new callus clumps.
| Cryopreservation Technique | Cultivars | * Recovery Percentages |
|---|---|---|
| Vitrification | ‘Suardia’ | 62% |
| ‘Fuerte’ | 5% [ | |
| ‘A10’ | 91% | |
| ‘Reed’ | 73% | |
| ‘Velvick’ | 86% | |
| ‘Duke 7’ | 80% [ | |
| Slow freezing | ‘Suardia’ | 60–80% |
| ‘T362’ | 4–53% | |
| ‘Fuerte’ | 73–75% [ | |
| Droplet vitrification | ‘A10’ | 100% |
| ‘Reed’ | 85% | |
| ‘Velvick’ | 93% [ | |
| Two lines of ‘Duke 7’ | 78–100% [ |
Figure 2Shoot tips of cv ‘Reed’ treated with VSL and revived from LN growing in a glasshouse.