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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Halophytes are plants able to thrive in environments characterized by severe abiotic
conditions, including high salinity and high light intensity, drought/flooding, and temperature
fluctuations. Several species have ethnomedicinal uses, and some are currently explored as sources
of food and cosmetic ingredients. Halophytes are considered important alternative cash crops to
be used in sustainable saline production systems, due to their ability to grow in saline conditions
where conventional glycophyte crops cannot, such as salt-affected soils and saline irrigation water.
In vitro plant tissue culture (PTC) techniques have greatly contributed to industry and agriculture
in the last century by exploiting the economic potential of several commercial crop plants. The
application of PTC to selected halophyte species can thus contribute for developing innovative
production systems and obtaining halophyte-based bioactive products. This work aimed to put
together and review for the first time the most relevant information on the application of PTC
to halophytes. Several protocols were established for the micropropagation of different species.
Various explant types have been used as starting materials (e.g., basal shoots and nodes, cotyledons,
epicotyls, inflorescence, internodal segments, leaves, roots, rhizomes, stems, shoot tips, or zygotic
embryos), involving different micropropagation techniques (e.g., node culture, direct or indirect
shoot neoformation, caulogenesis, somatic embryogenesis, rooting, acclimatization, germplasm
conservation and cryopreservation, and callogenesis and cell suspension cultures). In vitro systems
were also used to study physiological, biochemical, and molecular processes in halophytes, such as
functional and salt-tolerance studies. Thus, the application of PTC to halophytes may be used to
improve their controlled multiplication and the selection of desired traits for the in vitro production of
plants enriched in nutritional and functional components, as well as for the study of their resistance
to salt stress.
Description
Keywords
Salt-tolerant plants Micropropagation Plant biotechnology Caulogenesis Callogenesis Suspension cultures Transgenesis Somatic embryogenesis Biochemical applications
Citation
Plants 12 (1): 126 (2023)
Publisher
MDPI