The study was aimed primarily at cleansing the in vitro-decline displaying long-term micropropagated triploid watermelon 'Arka Manik' cultures from covert bacteria and their further field testing. Disinfectant treated shoots showed endophytic survival but to a lesser extent in shoot-tips. Culturing the NaOCl (5 min) treated shoot-tips on filter paper bridges in liquid watermelon medium containing single antibiotic (gentamycin (Gm), amoxycillin (Ax) or cefazolin (Cz) at 50, 250, 500 or 1000 mg l )1 ) for 1 month followed by repeated indexing of medium and tissue for two-four subculture passages facilitated the cleansing of cultures with 12.5% recovery as monitored for 2 years. Partial bleaching damage by NaOCl, phytotoxicity to higher levels of antibiotics, poor growth response in the initial sucrose-free medium and rampant hyperhydricity came in the way of a higher recovery. The effectiveness of the above approach was ascertained after back inoculating clean cultures with a mixture of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria yielding 30, 45 and 35% clean cultures in Gm, Ax and Cz (250 mg l )1 for 1 month) treatments, respectively in modified medium compared with 10% recovery after mere HgCl 2 surface sterilization. The results indicated that antibiotic treatment was essential but not its choice, and extended culture-indexing subsequent to disinfection or antibiotic treatment was crucial in identifying clean stocks. Cleansed cultures, showed restoration of growth but a drop in rooting. Most of the in vitro cultures appeared normal and trueto-type during the 7-10 year period in vitro but a small proportion of bacteria-harboring stocks displayed 'epigenetic variations'. Acclimatized plants and those in the field also appeared true-to-type but for a minor proportion derived from bacteria-harboring stocks. Field-plants which originated from bacteria-freed stocks after 9 years of continuous culturing were normal and fertile validating the possibility of keeping treasured cultures in vitro for long periods if covert contaminants are checked.Abbreviations: Ax -amoxycillin; BIM -Bacteriological indexing medium; CoBa+ -covert bacteria harboring culture; CoBa--culture devoid of bacteria in covert form; Cz -cefazolin; Gm -gentamycin; PP bag -polypropylene bag; PR -propagation rate; WBNV -watermelon bud necrosis virus; WMM -watermelon multiplication medium; WRM -watermelon rooting medium; 2x -diploid; 3x -triploid
Downy mildew (Pseudoperonospora cubensis) is the most devastating disease in muskmelon (Cucumis melo). A generation mean analysis study was designed to determine the types of gene action and estimate the heritability for resistance to downy mildew in four selected crosses of muskmelon. Generation mean analysis revealed that genetic dominance may be of greater importance for expression of resistance to downy mildew in both greenhouse and field experiments and in all the crosses. The F 1 mean was significantly lesser than the midparent value and skewed towards resistant parent in all the crosses. Negative sign associated with gene effects indicated, in those crosses, that disease level could be decreased in relation to midparent. All the crosses expressed significant and positive additive (d) gene effects. Dominance (h) and dominance 9 dominance (l) gene effects had opposite sign in all crosses and both experiments, which implied duplicate type of gene action. High mid-parent heterosis in all the crosses indicated strong dominance effects (as combination of parental alleles) for resistance to downy mildew. In all the crosses, both resistant and susceptible parent contributed one or more dominant/partially dominant factors for resistance. Estimates of broadsense heritability were high and relatively consistent in both experiments. The two different screening experiments showed that fixable gene effects (d ? i) were lower than the non-fixable gene effects (h ? l) in all the crosses indicating greater role of non-additive effects in the inheritance of resistance to downy mildew. Resistance to downy appeared to be controlled mainly by dominance effects, therefore the inbred lines IIHR 121 and IIHR 122 could be used strategically to exploit heterotic effects.
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.