1. Introduction
The production of doubled haploid (DH) lines remains an important tool for the rapid generation of fixed lines for breeding and research purposes. In self-pollinating crops such as wheat, the time to variety release can be reduced by three to four years when DHs are used. Additionally, phenotypic evaluation and selection is more reliable and accurate in DH populations. The benefits and applications of DHs have been reviewed extensively, and the large numbers of wheat DH varieties attest to the success of the technology [
1,
2,
3]. In addition to variety development, DH populations are a significant research tool for mapping single locus genes and QTL controlling traits of interest [
4,
5,
6]. In their recent review of wheat DHs, Devaux and Cistué [
3] also indicated the usefulness of DHs for their application in genome wide association studies (GWAS), genomic selection (GS) and sequencing activities. Doubled haploid technology can also be used in tandem with transformation and gene-editing technologies, where isolated microspores or microspore-derived embryos can be used as targets. For these technologies, the totipotent microspore is a valuable tool, and homozygous DH transgenic or gene-edited plants can be generated in a single step [
7,
8,
9,
10].
In Western Australia, large numbers of spring bread wheat (
Triticum aestivum L.) DH lines are produced each year using anther culture. In 2018, approximately 15,000 wheat DH lines were produced. Improvements in wheat DH production have resulted from co-culture with ovaries [
11] and
n-butanol treatment [
12,
13]. Approximately 90% of the DH lines developed in our program are destined for plant breeding companies, with the remaining populations used for research projects throughout Australia [
14,
15]. Genotype variability in key production parameters, such as embryo production, green plant regeneration and chromosome doubling, is an ongoing challenge, especially for the high-throughput production of breeding populations.
We rely on spontaneous chromosome doubling to restore fertility. This avoids the necessity to screen regenerant plants for ploidy and treat haploid plants with colchicine using root dipping “immersion” treatments [
16,
17], and the associated issues of plant mortality, ploidy chimeras and variable seed set that can occur as a result of this treatment [
18]. In microspore-derived wheat and barley DHs, nuclear fusion is widely accepted as the mechanism responsible for spontaneous chromosome doubling [
19,
20,
21]. In barley, the frequency of spontaneous doubling is relatively high, 60% to 90% [
22,
23]. In wheat, however, the frequency of spontaneous doubling can vary more widely, with reports of 25% to 70% [
23]. In our program, which predominantly handles Australian spring wheat crosses, we have observed frequencies from 14% to 80%.
Anti-mitotic chemicals, such as colchicine, can also be applied in vitro to promote chromosome doubling at an early stage. This can be labor- and cost-effective and avoid some of the problems of colchicine root dipping. The addition of colchicine to anther and microspore induction media has successfully improved doubling in wheat [
18,
24,
25] as well as other species, including
Brassica napus [
26,
27], triticale [
28], rice [
29] and red pepper [
30]. Colchicine also has a positive effect on embryogenesis and can replace the heat pretreatment normally required for embryogenesis in
B. napus [
31]. Increases in embryo and/or green plant numbers following in vitro colchicine application have also been reported in wheat, although the effects varied with genotype [
18,
24,
25]. While colchicine has been widely used to induce polyploidy in many plant species, it also has negative aspects. It has been shown to have a low affinity for plant microtubules and therefore must be used at relatively high concentrations [
32,
33]. It is also toxic to humans and has a high affinity for vertebrate microtubules [
34].
Several herbicides also target mitosis as a primary mechanism of action. They belong to a range of chemically diverse classes, including dinitroanilines (trifluralin and oryzalin), phosphorothioamidates (aminoprophos-methyl or APM), benzamides (pronamide), carbamates (chlorpropham and isopropyl
N-3-chlorophenyl carbamate) and others [
34]. Studies on the mechanism of oryzalin and APM have shown they bind to tubulin proteins, inhibiting microtubule polymerization and promoting depolymerization of the anaphase spindle [
35,
36]. Mitosis and cell division are inhibited, and affected cells may contain polyploid nuclei. Like colchicine, these chemicals have been applied to a range of plant species to induce polyploidy [
34]. Trifluralin, oryzalin and APM have also been used to induce chromosome doubling during androgenesis in wheat [
37],
B. napus [
38,
39,
40], maize [
41] and cork oak [
42] and during parthenogenesis in beet [
43] and cucumber [
44]. Because these chemicals have a much higher affinity for plant microtubules than colchicine, they can be applied at micromolar concentrations [
35,
45]. Additionally, these chemicals do not bind to animal microtubules [
35,
36,
45], reducing the toxicity risk to humans.
There is evidence that these chemicals can also stimulate embryogenesis, which is not surprising, given that their effects on plant microtubules are similar to colchicine. Trifluralin and APM stimulated embryogenesis in wheat microspores and oryzalin, trifluralin and APM stimulated embryogenesis in
B. napus [
37,
38]. In these studies, the herbicides were applied at concentrations of 0.1–10 µM (wheat) or 0.3–30 µM (
B. napus) for either 24 or 48 h. Stimulatory effects were observed at low concentrations (0.3–1.0 µM) of the herbicides, while higher concentrations inhibited embryo formation in both species. In contrast, plant fertility improved with increasing herbicide concentration. In wheat, the highest percentage of fertile plants was obtained with 10 µM trifluralin or APM applied for 48 h. Colchicine was also included in the
B. napus study, although at much higher concentrations (3–3000 µM) and for shorter exposure times (6–24 h). The response curves for colchicine were similar to the herbicides, with small improvements in embryo numbers at low colchicine concentrations, while concentrations above 300 µM were considered toxic. Again, plant fertility increased with increasing colchicine concentration and exposure time. Data from these studies indicate that anti-mitotic herbicides such as oryzalin, trifluralin and APM can have similar in vitro effects to colchicine.
Exposing plant cells to caffeine can also result in binucleate and multi-nucleate cells by impeding cytokinesis. Although cell plate formation commences normally in the presence of caffeine, it is never completed [
46,
47,
48]. The cell plate is synthesized by the phragmoplast, which expands centrifugally. Dynamic microtubules depolymerize in the central region, where cell plate synthesis is completed, and re-polymerize at the expanding phragmoplast front, where cell plate synthesis will next take place. Golgi-derived vesicles fuse into a continuous membrane network in the center of the phragmoplast, and callose forms a coat-like structure on the membrane surface, later replaced by cell wall polysaccharides [
49,
50]. In the presence of caffeine, however, both the deposition of callose and the redistribution of phragmoplast microtubules is completely inhibited, and the deposition of callose in the cell plate appears tightly related to the depolymerization of microtubules at the central region of the phragmoplast [
49,
51]. Although the exact mechanism of caffeine remains unclear, it has been proposed that Ca
2+ gradients and the reduction of Ca
2+ levels near the cell plate play a role [
48,
49,
52].
There is a limited number of studies in which caffeine has been used to induce polyploidy for practical purposes. Espino and Vazquez [
53] applied caffeine and colchicine to detached cultured leaves of African violet,
Saintpaulia ionantha, to induce polyploidy; however, the frequency of polyploids following caffeine treatment was very low. Lim et al. [
54] injected caffeine solution into the buds of interspecific Lilium crosses to restore gametic fertility to obtain 2n gametes. In wheat, caffeine has been tested as an alternative to colchicine to induce chromosome doubling in haploids generated from interspecific (wheat × maize) crosses [
55]. In that study, caffeine was tested in immersion/root dipping treatments over a range of concentrations (0.3–10 g/L) and times (3–24 h). Various treatments resulted in pollen shedding and substantial seed set compared with the untreated haploid controls. To our knowledge, caffeine has not been tested as an in vitro doubling agent following androgenesis.
This study aimed to determine whether chemicals such as caffeine or trifluralin, applied in vitro during anther culture, could improve green plant regeneration and/or the frequency of chromosome doubling in wheat. The effects of caffeine and trifluralin on albino plant production were also considered.
3. Discussion
Exposing anthers to caffeine or trifluralin at the start of the induction phase yielded mixed results in this study. Caffeine treatment at 5 mM for 24 h significantly improved green plant production in two of the six spring wheat crosses but had no effect on the other four crosses. The improvements were observed in two responsive crosses, Trojan/Havoc and Lancer/LPB14-0392, where green plant numbers increased by 14% and 27% to 161 and 42 green plants per 30 anthers, respectively. Increasing the time anthers were exposed to caffeine from 24 to 48 h significantly reduced the number of green plants in Experiment 1, where only one cross was tested.
Caffeine had no significant effect on the frequency of chromosome doubling despite higher doubling in Experiment 1, from 56% in the control to 67–68% in three of the four caffeine treatments. When the results from Experiment 1 were expressed as a success index (DHs per 20 anthers), the 0.5 mM/24 h caffeine treatment yielded sufficient improvement to warrant further investigation, with 29.5 DHs per 20 anthers, compared with 20.1 in the control. However, when this treatment was tested on five crosses in Experiment 2, there was little difference between the control and caffeine treatment means (5% or less).
To our knowledge, caffeine has not been tested as an in vitro doubling agent in anther or microspore culture. Although caffeine did not significantly improve doubling in this study, it did result in chromosome doubling and restored fertility in wheat haploids when applied as immersion/root dipping treatments [
55]. Caffeine may also promote embryogenesis, given that it can affect phragmoplast microtubules during cell division and cytokinesis [
51] and its application resulted in modest improvements in green plant production in some genotypes in this study. It is widely accepted that the cytoskeleton is involved in reprogramming microspores toward androgenesis [
1,
20]. The disruption of spindle microtubules by colchicine and anti-mitotic herbicides has stimulated microspore embryogenesis in several species (see
Section 1) and the disruption of cortical microtubules by
n-butanol has stimulated embryogenesis in wheat [
12,
13].
In terms of this study, the concentration of caffeine may have been too low. The selected concentrations were based on previous studies with colchicine and caffeine. For example, colchicine is generally applied at 0.1% (
w/
v) (2.5 mM) for immersion/root dipping treatments in cereals [
16,
17] but at lower concentrations (0.3 to 1.0 mM) when applied in vitro to anther and microspore cultures [
18,
25]. When caffeine was tested in a series of immersion/root dipping treatments in wheat, 3 g/L (15.4 mM) for 24 h was the most successful treatment in terms of seed recovery and the size and incidence of fertile sectors [
55]. To test the in vitro application of caffeine in this study, concentrations of 0.5 and 1.5 mM were selected. The fact that there were no significant improvements in doubling, however, indicates that higher concentrations of caffeine may be required. Anther walls may also act as a filter, preventing the absorption of caffeine. Soriano et al. [
18] applied colchicine during anther and microspore culture to the wheat variety Pavon and obtained smaller improvements in doubling with anther culture compared to microspore culture. Based on the results of Pulido et al. [
56], they proposed that the anther wall may act as a filter, preventing colchicine absorption. We may be seeing the same effect, especially as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was not included in our experiments with caffeine. Given the preliminary results from this study, it would be beneficial to test higher concentrations of caffeine for 24 h or less and include DMSO in the treatment. It would also be useful to test more than one genotype so that a more robust treatment can be identified.
In contrast to caffeine, trifluralin significantly decreased green plant regeneration and significantly increased chromosome doubling in the variety Tammarin Rock. The control treatment yielded 31.8 green plants per 20 anthers (approximately 95 green plants per spike), compared with 9–25 green plants per 20 anthers in the trifluralin treatments. Green plant numbers were reduced by 21% to 71% in the trifluralin treatments, with increasing concentration and exposure times resulting in stepwise significant reductions in the number of green plants. However, every trifluralin treatment had higher rates of chromosome doubling than the control, with significant improvements in both treatments where anthers were exposed to trifluralin for 48 h. In these treatments, doubling improved from 38% (control) to 51% and 53% in the 1 µM and 3 µM trifluralin treatments, respectively. Despite the improved doubling frequencies following trifluralin treatment, the reductions in green plants meant that the success indices for the trifluralin treatments were either similar to the control (~10–11 DH per 20 anthers) or less than the control (~5 DHs per 20 anthers).
The concentrations and exposure times of trifluralin selected for use in this study (1 and 3 µM) were based on the results of Hansen and Andersen [
37], who tested both trifluralin and APM at concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 10 µM in a wheat microspore study. They observed that low concentrations could stimulate embryo production (relative to the treated controls) and plant regeneration, but higher concentrations reduced embryo and plant numbers. In contrast, the percentage of fertile diploid plants increased steadily with increasing concentrations of trifluralin or APM. When the results were combined in a success index (DHs per spike), the best results were obtained at concentrations between 1 and 3 µM.
In the present anther culture study, we did not observe any positive effects of trifluralin on green plant production, even with low concentrations (1 µM) of trifluralin. This might reflect the fact that we used anther culture and not microspore culture. In our experiment, the trifluralin (dissolved in DMSO) solution would have penetrated the anthers and remained in contact with microspores after the treatment finished. In contrast, Hansen and Andersen [
37] rinsed their microspores following treatment with the herbicides. Given our results, it may be useful to try a rinse step, as well as more exposure time/concentration combinations. Additionally, we can test other culture phases such as embryos and alternative solvents such as acetone [
34].
This study was a preliminary investigation into the application of in vitro doubling agents to improve the frequency of chromosome doubling following anther culture. Further work is required to identify a treatment regime with caffeine and/or anti-mitotic herbicides that consistently increases chromosome doubling but does not significantly reduce green plant production.