Genetic manipulation in plant breeding: somatic versus generative
- 1 September 1983
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Theoretical and Applied Genetics
- Vol. 66 (3) , 179-201
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00251141
Abstract
A comparison is made between molecular/ in vitro/somatic and plant-level/generative approaches in the reconstruction of genotypes and reproductive systems. Although classical methods will remain the basis of plant breeding, a number of new somatic as well as generative genetic manipulation techniques are definitely applicable in several special situations. The first are technically more demanding, the latter are often conceptually more difficult, and both are laborious. Choice of approach is determined by the plant species, the stage of development of the techniques, the amount of background genetic information and the genetic diversity available, and the capacity of the institution involved. In the final stages of the program traditional selection and testing procedures remain indispensable. Whether any particular breeding program will profit from the incorporation of sophisticated genetic manipulation techniques must be carefully analysed. This discussion is intended to provide a basis for this analysis.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- In vitro development of embryoids from punched leaf discs ofCoffea canephoraProtoplasma, 1983
- Isolation of Agronomically Useful Mutants from Plant Cell CulturesScience, 1983
- An unusual mitochondrial DNA plasmid in the genus BrassicaNature, 1983
- The Regeneration of Potato Plants from Leaf-Cell ProtoplastsScientific American, 1982
- Perspectives in chromosome manipulationPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1981
- Potato Protoplasts in Crop ImprovementScience, 1980
- Präferenzielle Paarung der Chromosomen autotetraploider Gerste — Mathematisches ModellGenetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 1977
- Genetic Recombination in Maize as Affected by Ethylenediaminetetraacetic Acid and Dimethyl Sulfoxide 1Crop Science, 1975
- Genetic control of recombination in Schizophyllum commune: specific and independent regulation of adjacent and non-adjacent chromosomal regionsHeredity, 1969
- An X-ray-induced Strain of Ring-of-12 in Tradescantia paludosaNature, 1962