Plants (Jul 2021)

Successful Cryopreservation of Dormant Buds of Blackcurrant (<i>Ribes nigrum</i> L.) by Using Greenhouse-Grown Plants and In Vitro Recovery

  • Saija Rantala,
  • Janne Kaseva,
  • Anna Nukari,
  • Jaana Laamanen,
  • Merja Veteläinen,
  • Hely Häggman,
  • Saila Karhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10071414
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. 1414

Abstract

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The cryopreservation of dormant buds can be a feasible method for preserving germplasm of cold-tolerant woody plants. In the present study, we evaluated the effects of pre-desiccation, thawing method, and the rehydration of bud sections on the post-cryopreservation recovery of dormant blackcurrant buds in vitro. The estimated recovery of small- and medium-sized buds was 80.1 and 62.7% respectively for desiccated buds and 67.8 and 72.3% respectively for non-desiccated buds. The pre-desiccation of bud sections enhanced the number of the shoots regenerated from vegetative buds (2.3 vs. 4.7). The estimated recovery of fast-thawed buds was better after 14-day than after 7-day rehydration (85 vs. 59%). In slowly thawed buds the difference between 14-day and 7-day rehydration was not significant (73 vs. 62%). The estimated recovery of vegetative and flower buds was 77.7 and 41.1% respectively after 7-day rehydration, and 95.2 and 43.6% respectively after a 14-day rehydration period. The rehydration of bud sections was not necessary for the in vitro recovery of non-desiccated, fast-thawed buds. Of the 23 blackcurrant cultivars cryopreserved using non-desiccated dormant buds collected from a greenhouse, the estimated recovery of 22 cultivars ranged between 42 and 90%.

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