New Frontiers in Micropropagation
A special issue of Agronomy (ISSN 2073-4395). This special issue belongs to the section "Soil and Plant Nutrition".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 October 2021) | Viewed by 24269
Special Issue Editors
Interests: plant micropropagation; seed dormancy and germination; abiotic stress; conservative agriculture
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Micropropagation is an effective technique for massive multiplication of selected, disease-free plants in a short time, as well as a reliable method for in vitro preservation of threatened plant species. Decontamination methods from fungi and bacteria, composition of culture media (in terms of macro- and microelement, organic and growth regulator content, quality and characteristics of gelling agents, use of semisolid or liquid media), genotypic differences, limitation of vitro-pathologies are among the main factors influencing the efficiency of protocols for in vitro propagation. The maintenance of true-to type of plants is another fundamental aspect of clonal propagation by micropropagation. Furthermore, increasing the sustainability of the micropropagation process - e.g., by improving the growth chamber efficiency with LED illumination, the elimination of environmental toxic elements in the growth media (such as cobalt), the optimization of plant acclimatization in greenhouse - represents a sound investigation topic. Currently, micropropagation has also attracted growing attention from researchers as an efficient alternative way for rapid and controlled production of bioactive phytochemicals or food ingredients from medicinal and aromatic plants. Since the process of micropropagation yields genetic fidelity and true-to-type progeny of plants, bioactive phytochemical integrity may remain intact in developed plantlets.
This special issue will concern papers focussing the main novelties in micropropagation such as the development of new protocols, practices enhancing the efficiency of the process, its sustainability and new relevant goals of productions, such as metabolite and food additive synthesis in in vitro culture.
Dr. Valeria CavallaroDr. Maurizio Lambardi
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- micropropagation
- new protocols
- process sustainability
- bioactive phytochemicals production
- cryopreservation
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