Polyploid plants have been induced in differentAsparagus officinalis L. breeding programs in order to obtain plants with improved agronomical traits, such as large spear diameter or segregation ratios with a higher number of males. The polyploidization methods can produce somaclonal variation in the polyploid plants obtained and, therefore, unwanted changes in the agronomical traits of the initial elite plants. We used two different polyploidization methods to induce polyploid plants from diploid genotypes of commercial varieties and tetraploid genotypes of the Spanish landrace ''Morado de Hue ´tor''. The first method was the culture of rhizome buds in the medium ARBM-3 (Asparagus Rhizome Bud Medium), supplemented with different concentrations of colchicine (0.1-0.75 g l -1 ) for 10 and 20 days. The best polyploidization rate obtained was 25 % (0.5 g l -1 colchicine for 10 days). The second method was the regeneration of polyploid plants from callus culture, resulting in a polyploidization rate of 40 and 12.5 % for the diploid genotype CM077 and the tetraploid genotype HT156, respectively. Additionally, we have developed a new protocol to separate the mixoploids generated into their different genetic components, obtaining plants with a unique ploidy level. EST-SSRs markers were employed to analyze the genetic stability of polyploidy plants. Somaclonal variation was not detected for polyploidy plants obtained through the culture of rhizome bud explants. Therefore, these polyploid plants should maintain the agronomical traits of the initial elite plants. However, somaclonal variation was detected in the polyploid plants regenerated from callus culture.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.