Somatic hybrid plants of Rutaceae were obtained by protoplast fusion between Citrus sinensis Osb. ('Trovita' orange) and Poncirus trifoliata. Protoplasts isolated from embryogenic cells of C. sinensis and from leaves of P. trifoliata, and the culture of fusion products in the presence of high concentrations of sucrose were essential requirements for the selection of hybrids. Green globular embryoids derived from protoplasts resulted in the regeneration of trifoliate plants. Other morphological characters of these plants were intermediate between both parents. The chromosome number in one of the hybrid plants was 36, which was the sum of C. sinensis (2n=18) and P. trifoliata (2n=18). EcoRI restriction analysis of rDNA confirmed the presence of parental nuclear DNAs in the hybrid.
Somatic hybrid plants were produced by protoplast fusion of navel orange and 'Murcott' tangor. Hybridity of the plants was confirmed by the restriction endonuclease analysis of nuclear ribosomal DNA. All of the plants (16 clones) were normal, uniform, and had the amphidiploid chromosome number of 36 (2n=2x=18 for each parent). The cpDNA analysis showed that each of the 16 somatic hybrids contained either one parental chloroplast genome or the other. In all cases, the mitochondrial genomes of the regenerated somatic hybrids were of the navel orange type.
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