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Research Project: BIOCATALYTIC FUNCTIONALIZATION OF PLANT LIPIDS

Location: New Crops and Processing Technology Research

Title: Spearmint plantlet culture system as a means to study secondary metabolism in vitro

Authors

Submitted to: In Vitro Cellular and Developmental Biology - Plants
Publication Type: Proceedings/Symposium
Publication Acceptance Date: April 12, 2007
Publication Date: June 11, 2007
Citation: Tisserat, B., Berhow, M.A., Vaughn, S.F. 2007. Spearmint plantlet culture system as a means to study secondary metabolism in vitro. In Vitro: Cellular and Developmental Biology-Plant. 43:519-520.

Technical Abstract: The production of phytochemicals in vitro has been obtained from a variety of tissue types and organs. A plantlet culture system offers a means to study whole plant growth and development in a miniature scale and their corresponding phytochemical production. Plantlets resemble their in vivo counterparts both physically and chemically. A plantlet system that semi-isolates the shoot from the root offers a means to study exogenous media and atmospheric effects more critically. In such systems, the roots act indispensably in the transport of exogenous nutrients to the foliage. The foliage, in turn, is now free from any immediate contact with media and displays more ¿typical foliage behavior¿. Such systems should be considered valuable aids in understanding the mechanisms of how to achieve higher secondary metabolism in vitro. Spearmint plantlets readily manifest terpenoids and phenolics in vitro. Although these compounds are produced from different pathways, they respond similarly to the same physical and nutritional treatments. Carbon, particularly, whether added atmospherically or through exogenous media additions, plays a significant role in secondary metabolic production. Plantlet culture may be considered an intermediate step between shoot cultures and seedlings germinated in soil. Information gained from these study systems can then be employed toward enhancing of secondary metabolism both in vitro and in vivo.

   

 
Project Team
Laszlo, Joseph - Joe
Evans, Kervin
Compton, David - Dave
Isbell, Terry
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Quality and Utilization of Agricultural Products (306)
 
 
Last Modified: 05/12/2009
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