Title
Development of a pvs2 droplet vitrification method for potato cryopreservation
Date Issued
01 May 2014
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Cryo-Letters
Abstract
BACKGROUND: CIP maintains the largest in vitro clonal potato collection in the world, comprising 4,013 landraces and 3,353 improved accessions. The in vitro technology is more efficient and secure than conservation in the field, allowing in vitro plantlets to be stored for approximately 2 years without sub-culture. This method however is not ideal for the long-Term germplasm conservation because it is labor consuming, costly, and carries risks of losing accessions due to human error, such as contamination and mislabeling during sub-culturing. OBJECTIVE: To improve the potato cryopreservation procedure based on the droplet PVS2 vitrification. METHODS: The improved method is as follows: Excision of 1.8-2.5 mm apical shoot tips from 3 weeks old cultures; 15 min exposure to a loading solution and 50 min to PVS2 (at 0°C); ultra-rapid cooling on aluminum foil strips (0.5 x 2 cm) in LN; rewarming (20 min) in 1.2 M sucrose MS liquid medium; post-cryo culture in the dark on potato meristem medium with progressively decreased sucrose levels (daily transfers from 0.3, to 0.2, to 0.1 M and maintained on 0.07 M). This method was compared with those previously applied by IPK (Germany) and CIP potato genebanks. RESULTS: Survival and recovery were higher using the PVS2 droplet method. Cultivars from several species, one frost tolerant (Solanum juzecpzukii, cv. Piñaza) and two drought tolerant (S. tuberosum subsp andigena, cv Ccompis, and Solanum spp, cv Desiree) responded similarly. CONCLUSIONS: The improved method is recommended for the long term conservation of diverse potato germplasm.
Start page
255
End page
266
Volume
35
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencia del suelo
Agricultura
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84906908688
PubMed ID
Source
Cryo-Letters
ISSN of the container
01432044
Source funding
World Bank Group
Sponsor(s)
gratefully acknowledge the Belgium Technical Cooperation (BTC) support for the collaborative work between CIP and Catholic University of Leuven (KU Leuven); the World Bank for funding part of the research through the Global Public Good project for upgrading the CIP Genebank; and the support from both CGIAR Research Programmes (CRP), the Roots, Tubers and Bananas-CRP and The Genebank CRP. The authors thank Dave Ellis for his valuable comments and advice during the writing of this paper; and the helpful technical assistance from Edwige André, Karen Reyniers (KU Leuven) and Rosalva Villagaray, Wendy García and Dino Sanchez (CIP).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus