Most commercially cultivated orchid plants are generally infected with cymbidium mosaic virus (CyMV) and odontoglossum ringspot virus (ORSV). Two methods were used in order to generate virus-free plants: meristem culture and thin section culture with chemotherapy. Meristems (0.10 mm to 1.00 mm) were excised from infected axillary shoots of an infected monopodial orchid hybrid (Mokara Char Kuan 'Pink') and cultured in modified Vacin and Went medium. Only larger meristem explants survived and the regenerated plantlets remained virus-infected. In contrast, high percentages of virus-free plantlets were obtained from thin section cultures of infected plantlets and protocorm-like bodies with ribavirin treatment. Interestingly, regenerants from thin section cultures without ribavirin treatment were also found to be free from CyMV and ORSV. All plantlets were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and/or polymerase chain reaction (PCR).
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