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The choice of auxin analogue for in vitro root induction influences post-induction root development in Eucalyptus grandis
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Previous studies on in vitro rooting for improved micropropagation of eucalypts indicated that root graviperception and postacclimatisation architecture are determined by the relative exogenous auxin analogue and its stability, supplied during the pre-rooting culture stages. | Turkish Journal of Agriculture and Forestry Turk J Agric For (2013) 37: 258-266 © TÜBİTAK doi:10.3906/tar-1302-110 http://journals.tubitak.gov.tr/agriculture/ Research Article The choice of auxin analogue for in vitro root induction influences post-induction root development in Eucalyptus grandis 1 1, 2 Muhammad NAKHOODA , Maria Paula WATT *, David MYCOCK School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa 2 School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa 1 Received: 26.02.2013 Accepted: 25.07.2013 Published Online: 27.01.2014 Printed: 24.02.2014 Abstract: Previous studies on in vitro rooting for improved micropropagation of eucalypts indicated that root graviperception and postacclimatisation architecture are determined by the relative exogenous auxin analogue and its stability, supplied during the pre-rooting culture stages. The specific roles of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) in the rooting medium on the in vitro root morphological processes were explored using a good-rooting clone. In vitro rooting percentage was significantly reduced when either of the auxin inhibitors 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid (TIBA) and ρ-chlorophenoxyisobutyric acid (PCIB) or the auxin antagonist kinetin was supplied at rooting, with or without exogenous auxin. For all treatments, at the time of root induction, shoots did not possess a vascular cambium, only procambial tissue, from where adventitious roots formed. However, when the inhibitors or the antagonist were supplied to the roots 3 days after root induction, they affected root growth and graviperception. Kinetin and PCIB significantly reduced the mean root diameter from 552.8 µm (control) to 129.2 µm and 278.6 µm, respectively, over 3 weeks. While the PCIB treatment resulted in a significant increase in Δ root length over this period, the TIBA treatment significantly decreased ∆ root length and increased mean