Applications of Plant Tissue Culture: New Insights into Plant Improvement Research Using Plant Tissue Culture and Plant Modification Techniques―2nd Edition

A special issue of Plants (ISSN 2223-7747). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Cell Biology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2024 | Viewed by 636

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand
Interests: plant biotechnology; in vitro plant breeding; micropropagation; phytoremediation; genetic modifications of plants; bio-printing
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Guest Editor
Department of Forestry Science and Biodiversity, Faculty of Forestry and Environment, Universiti Putra Malaysia, UPM Serdang 43400, Selangor, Malaysia
Interests: Plant genetics and biotechnology; plant-environment interactions; secondary metabolites; medicinal and aromatic plants; biotic and abiotic resistance
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

The global population increase puts a huge pressure on the availability of food and water resources. Traditionally, plant breeders have played a key role in the genetic improvement of the quality and quantity of crops to feed the world’s growing population. Traditional plant breeding is, however, an ineffective method for sustained genetic improvement and has many limitations. The classical plant breeding procedure is time-consuming, reliant on limited natural genetic resources, and labour-intensive. Plant biotechnology has emerged as a reliable set of tools that empowers plant breeders to use genes of beneficial traits from diverse sources and insert them into plant genomes for genetic modifications. In addition, plant tissue culture (PTC) is a core biotechnology for maintaining or growing plant cells, tissues, or organs under aseptic conditions. There have been remarkable advances in PTC research on multiple fronts including the regulation of plant developmental processes in vitro, discoveries of biologically active compounds, gene transfer, and production of secondary metabolites of medicinal significance. Most recently, the integration of PTC with novel techniques such as genome editing has opened a new window for improving desirable traits in plants. Therefore, this Special Issue, titled “New Insight into Plant Improvement Research using Plant Tissue Culture and Plant Modification Techniques―2nd Edition”, aims to attract contributions on new advances in PTC, focusing on plant growth regulators, gene transformation, genome editing, molecular farming, and other applications of plant culture research in vitro. We welcome the submission of original research papers, reviews, and novel in vitro protocols including, but not limited to, the following topics:

  • Micropropagation;
  • Cell totipotency;
  • Phytochemical production by in vitro cultures;
  • Somaclonal variation;
  • Somatic embryogenesis;
  • De novo organogenesis;
  • Synthetic seeds;
  • Virus-free plants;
  • Cell suspension culture;
  • Hairy root culture;
  • Cellular reprogramming;
  • Callus formation;
  • Plant transformation;
  • Molecular plant breeding;
  • Genetics;
  • Genome editing;
  • DNA (transgene)-free editing;
  • Base/prime editing;
  • HDR-based editing;
  • The CRISPR/dCas9 system;
  • Off-target effects;
  • Transcription factors;
  • Rewiring of plant defence genes in vitro;
  • Bioreactors;
  • Secondary metabolites in plant tissue cultures;
  • Elicitors;
  • Plant defence mechanisms;
  • Biotic and abiotic stress in vitro culture;
  • Plant growth regulators;
  • Quality improvement;
  • Phytoremediation.

Dr. David W. M. Leung
Dr. Rambod Abiri
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • micropropagation
  • molecular plant breeding
  • genome editing
  • biotic and abiotic stress in vitro culture
  • secondary metabolites in plant tissue cultures

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

18 pages, 9678 KiB  
Article
Characteristics of Callus and Cell Suspension Cultures of Highbush Blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum L.) Cultivated in the Presence of Different Concentrations of 2,4-D and BAP in a Nutrient Medium
by Dmitry A. Rybin, Alina A. Sukhova, Andrey A. Syomin, Tatiana A. Zdobnova, Ekaterina V. Berezina and Anna A. Brilkina
Plants 2024, 13(23), 3279; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants13233279 - 22 Nov 2024
Abstract
In this work, cultures of callus and suspension cells originating from leaves of sterile highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum L.) plants were obtained and characterized. For their active growth and production of phenolic compounds, a combination of 2,4-D at a concentration of 0.34–2.25 [...] Read more.
In this work, cultures of callus and suspension cells originating from leaves of sterile highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum L.) plants were obtained and characterized. For their active growth and production of phenolic compounds, a combination of 2,4-D at a concentration of 0.34–2.25 µM and BAP at a concentration of 0.45–2.25 µM is effective. An increase in the phytohormone concentration leads to a slowdown in culture formation and reduces their ability to synthesize phenolic compounds. When cultivating V. corymbosum suspension cells over a year (12 passages), they not only retain the ability to synthesize phenolic compounds but also enhance it. By the 12th passage, the content of TSPC in suspension cells reaches 150 mg/g DW, the content of flavonoids reaches 100 mg/g DW, the content of flavans reaches 40 mg/g DW, and the content of proanthocyanidins reaches 30 mg/g DW. The high content of phenolic compounds may be due to the high expression of genes in flavonoid biosynthesis enzymes. V. corymbosum suspension cells accumulate a high level of phenolic compounds during a passage. The ability of V. corymbosum callus and cell suspension cultures in the presence of low concentrations of phytohormones to grow and accumulate biologically active phenolic compounds determines their high economic significance and prospects for organizing a biotechnological method for obtaining phenolic compounds. Full article
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