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Regeneration of plants by somatic embryogenesis (SE) was achieved in Stone pine (Pinus pinea), one of the most characteristic tree species of the Mediterranean ecosystem. The initial explants were megagametophytes containing zygotic embryos from five selected half-sib families collected at different dates over 2 consecutive years. Rates of extrusion and initiation of SE differed in both years. However, qualitative patterns were very similar: for most families, the responsive developmental window was from late cleavage polyembryony to early cotyledonary stage. The highest overall mean frequencies of extrusion and SE initiation (7 and 0.9%, respectively, for the five families and the eight 2006 collections) were obtained on a modified Litvay's medium with 9 lM 2,4-D and 4.5 lM BAP, supplemented with L-glutamine and casein hydrolysate. Families showed large differences in frequencies of SE initiation from year to year. Only seven embryogenic lines were induced in 2005, representing three of the five families tested, whereas 34 lines from all the families were obtained in 2006. Proliferation of embryonal masses (EM) was significantly improved when they were subcultured after dispersing in liquid medium and collected on filter paper disks, instead of being subcultured as small clumps. This effect showed a significant interaction with genotype. Several preconditioning treatments and culture media combinations were tested for embryo development and maturation. The high proliferation rate of EM hampered somatic embryo development. However, up to 42 mature embryos from different lines of three of the five families were obtained, 23 of them germinated and seven converted into somatic seedlings.
Somatic embryogenesis was obtained in cultures of leaves from young seedlings of Quercus suber L. A twostage process, in which benzyladenine and naphthaleneacetic acid were added first at high and then at low concentrations, was required to initiate the process. Somatic embryos arose when the explants were subsequently placed on medium lacking plant growth regulators. The embryogenic lines remained productive, by means of secondary embryogenesis, on medium without growth regulators. However, this repetitive induction was influenced by the macronutrient composition of the culture medium. Both low total nitrogen content and high reduced nitrogen concentration decreased the percentage of somatic embryos that showed secondary embryogenesis. Our results suggest that alternate culture on medium that increases embryo proliferation and a low salt medium prohibiting embryo formation will partially synchronize embryo development. Chilling slightly reduced secondary embryogenesis but gave a modest increase in germination. Maturation under light followed by storage at 4 °C for at least 30 days gave the best results in switching embryos from an embryogenic pathway to a germinative one. Under these conditions 15% of embryos showed coordinated root and shoot growth and 35% formed either shoots or mostly roots. These percentages were higher than those of embryos matured in darkness. This result indicates that a specific treatment is required after maturation and before chilling to activate the switch from secondary embryo formation to germination.
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