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Title: Selection%20and%20Management%20of%20Clones


1
Chapter 16
  • Selection and Management of Clones

2
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Vegetative propagation
  • Goal produce progeny identical in genotype to a
    single source plant
  • Cloning clones
  • Occurs naturally
  • Bulbs
  • Rhizomes
  • Runners
  • Tip layers

3
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Clones not favored in nature
  • Does not allow variation
  • Does not allow evolutionary development
  • Early vegetative prop.
  • Potato - Grapes
  • Yam - Olives
  • Sugar cane - Figs
  • Banana - Popular and Willow for fences

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Reasons for cloning
  • Maintain superior genotypes
  • Keep uniformity of crop
  • Facilitate propagation
  • Combine more than one genotype onto a single
    plant
  • Control phases of development

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Fixing genotypes
  • Unique characteristics would be lost in seed
    propagation
  • Uniformity of crop
  • Plant size, growth rate, flowering time
  • Facilitate propagation
  • unpredictable seed production
  • Seedless plants (grapes, oranges, limes)

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Shorten time to flower
  • Flower at an earlier age
  • Clones are typically in mature phase of
    development
  • Combo of 2 genotypes
  • Grafting
  • Why?
  • Control plant height
  • Scion does not root readily
  • Add a pollinator branch to a self-incompatible
    cultivar
  • Control phases of development
  • Juvenile to mature (adult)

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Genetic basis of clones
  • Cultivars come from seedling populations or
    mutations
  • 1.) Seedling selection
  • Multiple propagation from the same plant
  • Consecutive generation of propagation
  • So plant ortet (original selection)
  • Ramets vegetatively propagated generation
  • (a,b,c... Designates different parts of the ortet
    propagated)
  • (S1 S2 S3 consecutive generations)

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Ortet-original selection
Ramets
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Genotype x Environment interactions can occur!
  • Traits that vary in different locations
  • Ex Malus domestica Delicious
  • (discovered in 1870 in Iowa) East coast is
    rounded and West coast is elongated unless those
    on the East coast are chemically treated with GA
    so that they will elongate

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • 2.) Mutations
  • Chance mutations in an established clone
  • Result from changes in the chromosomes
  • Point mutations rearrangement in 1 of the 4
    bases in DNA (A,T,G,C)
  • Deletions, duplications, translocations and
    inversions all result in rearrangement of parts
    of the chromosomes
  • Aneuploidy addition of loss of individual
    chromosomes
  • Polyploidy multiplication of entire sets of
    chromosomes

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Diploid Tetraploid
Tobacco
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Mutations can occur from UV light, X-rays, and
    chemicals
  • Bud sport suddenly appearing mutation that
    grows and is conspicuous
  • Ex Ruby Red grapefruit is a sport from
    regular grapefruit
  • Variegated Clivia
  • Variegated Peperomia
  • Variegated Plectranthus
  • Variegated Spiraea

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Plectranthus
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Created mutations
  • Biotechnology introducing DNA fragments from
    one organism to another recombinant DNA
    technology

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Kinds of Genetic Variation within Clones
  • Chimeras mutations the occur in a single cell
    of a clone and produce an island of mutant
    cells within the growing point of the stem

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Types of chimeras
  • Periclinal mutated tissue occupies a layer of
    cells that completely surrounds an inner core of
    non-mutated tissue
  • Ex Red-fruited apple (Red pigment only in
    epidermal layer)
  • These chimeras are stable
  • Propagation must include the shoot apex
  • Not stable from adventitious buds (from root
    cuttings or tissue culture)

22
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Types of chimeras
  • Mericlinal cells with mutant gene only occupy
    part of the outer cell layer
  • Ex streaking on fruit, color bands
  • This is unstable
  • Sectorial mutated cells occupy an entire sector
    of the stem including all layers of the shoot
    apex
  • Ex broad sectors on fruit that go deep into the
    fruit
  • Unstable

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Transposons jumping genes
  • Barbera McClintock - Nobel prize in 1984
  • Different portions of the chromosomes turn on/off
  • Transmitted to seedlings stable
  • Ex Indian corn Jingle Bells poinsettia

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Selection and Management of Clones
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Selection and Management of Clones
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Origin of chimeras
  • In meristem (dividing cells)
  • In layers (histogens). Generally 3-4 layers
  • L-I (outer) epidermis - division is
    perpendicular to the surface (anticlinal)
  • L-II (middle) leaf margin stem cortex -
    division is usually anticlinal but sometimes
    periclinal (parallel to the surface). This will
    force cells into the L-1 layer
  • L-III (inner) leaf core

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Mutation of L-I periclinal or mericlinal
    chimeras
  • Mutation of L-II also affects the reproductive
    structures (flower and ovary) but not the seed
    inside. Therefore a mutation in this layer is not
    transmitted to the seed. Often results in a
    mericlinal chimera

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Ferns, gymnosperms and roots have unlayered
    meristems. Therefore, chimeras are sectorial.
    This can result in stable or unstable mutants.
  • Layers are different for monocots and dicots

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Dicot GWG (Ex African violet)
  • Monocot GWW (Ex Spider plant)

Leaf center
Epidermis clear
Leaf margin
Epidermis Leaf margin
Leaf center (some)
Leaf center
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African violets
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Selection and Management of Clones
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Spiderplants
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Maintaining stability of chimeras
  • Periclinal relatively stable as long as the
    growing point has continuity with the shoot
    system of the source plant
  • Stem cuttings
  • Division
  • Layering
  • Scion
  • Not good from root or leaf cuttings or
    adventitious shoots (from T.C.)

39
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Reversions of periclinal chimeras happen if L-II
    cells displace L-I cells.
  • (Ex a solid green shoot develops on a
    variegated plant)
  • Mericlinal sectorial chimeras can be completely
    unstable

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Reversions
Pinwheel phlox
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Reversions
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Reversions
Dwarf Alberta Spruce
43
Reversions-
Peperomia
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Non-genetic variation within clones (epigenetic)
  • Environmental effects on phenotype expression
  • (Ex Delicious apples different on East and
    West coasts)
  • Phase variation (change in maturation)
  • Homoblastic - little obvious change in phenotype
    of seedling with age
  • Heteroblastic - different parts of the plant
    exhibit distinct variation of specific traits
    with age (spines/thorns when juvenile and none
    when mature)
  • Ex black locust and citrus

45
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Note the part of the plant nearest the base of
    the plant is oldest in terms of chronological
    age but actually is youngest (more juvenile) in
    terms of physiological maturity (ontogenetic age)
  • Propagules from base of the plant biologically
    juvenile plants
  • Propagules from the top of the plant
    biologically mature plants

46
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Promoting shifts from juvenile to mature phases
  • To speed up maturation, keep plants in continuous
    growth (get through juvenile period more quickly)
  • Maintenance of juvenile phase (for rooting)
  • Collect material displaying juvenile
    characteristics
  • Collect root sprouts (suckers) or force stump
    sprouts
  • Establish hedge rows for severe pruning each
    year

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Reversion from mature to juvenile phase
  • Easiest and quickest to start from seed!
  • Adventitious shoots on roots
  • Consecutive grafting onto seedling rootstock
  • Consecutive subculturing of meristems in T.C.
  • GA treatment (sometimes)
  • Cuttings from the cone of juvenility

50
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Topophysis
  • The effect of position of the propagule on the
    plant upon the type of vegetative growth
    subsequently displayed by the vegetative progeny
  • Orthotropic upright cuttings vertical
    shoots
  • Plagiotropic lateral cuttings horizontal
    shoots
  • Happens mostly in conifers and some broadleaf
    evergreens!

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Coffee
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Holly
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Pathogens and Plant Propagation
  • Systemic pathogens and clones
  • Viruses - nucleic acids (either DNA or RNA)
    encased in a protein coat. Replicates in a plant
    cell. Transmitted by an insect vector or humans.
    Ex TMV
  • Phytoplasm (mycoplasma-like organism MLOs).
  • One celled parasite
  • Lives in phloem and leaf hoppers
  • Blocks phloem and causes a witchs broom

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Witchs broom in Pinus sylvestris
55
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Management of sources for vegetative propagation
  • Trueness-to-name labeling, records
  • Trueness-to-type characteristics of progeny.
    Protein analysis isozymes
  • Freedom from pathogens
  • Visual inspection (however, no symptom does not
    mean no pathogen)
  • Culture indexing - surface sterilize plant part
    and culture pieces
  • Virus indexing - graft/bud onto a sensitive
    indicator plant
  • Serology - ID proteins using ELISA (enzyme-linked
    immuno-sorbent assay)

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Trueness-to-Type
Isozyme analysis
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Trueness-to-Type
RAPD (Randomly Amplified Polymorphic DNA)
profile of Apricot
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Culture Indexing
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Virus Indexing
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Virus Indexing
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Virus Indexing-Elisa
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Virus Indexing-Elisa
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Virus Indexing
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Elisa Purified extract of pathogen injected
    into a rabbit produces antibodies in the blood to
    react to viral proteins. These are extracted and
    put in a gel that lines the walls of well in a
    plate. The plant extract with possible virus is
    added to the wells. If the virus is present, it
    is bound to the antibodies lining the well and
    can be quantified spectrophotometrically.

69
Selection and Management of Clones
  • Now PCR (polymerase chain reaction) is being used
    and the resultant DNA sequenced. DNA sequences
    can be compared to pure DNA sequences of
    virus/bacteria/fungi and identified. It is
    difficult to quantify the amount of pathogen
    present in the plant using this technique.

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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Treatments to eliminate pathogens from plants
  • Select uninfected plant parts (not near soil)
  • Shoot apex culture (meristems). Cells grow in
    advance of most pathogens (esp. viruses)
  • Select only 0.1mm shoot tip
  • Difficult to get established in T.C.
  • Used with orchids, amaryllis, carnations, mums,
    geraniums, lilies, apples, bananas, citrus,
    grapes, strawberries and potato

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Meristem tip culture
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Selection and Management of Clones
  • Heat treatment
  • Vary with species (110-135F for 1/2 - 4 hours)
  • Hot water best
  • Thermotherapy
  • Container-grown plants placed in 98-100F for 2 -
    4 weeks
  • Buds removed and budded onto clean rootstock
  • Or culture shoot apex in T.C.
  • Grow from seeds! Viruses seldom enter a seed!

73
Room for thermotherapy
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