Study on tissue cultivation of adventitious roots of Pseudostellaria heterophylla.
- Author:
Yu-Yong LIANG
1
;
Shuang-Shuang YIN
;
Bei-Mei ZUO
;
Wen-Yuan GAO
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Amino Acids; metabolism; Biomass; Bioreactors; Caryophyllaceae; growth & development; metabolism; Plant Roots; growth & development; metabolism; Polysaccharides; metabolism; Saponins; metabolism; Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet; Time Factors; Tissue Culture Techniques; instrumentation; methods
- From: China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2012;37(24):3803-3807
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo systematically optimize the cultivation conditions of adventitious roots of Pseudostellaria heterophylla.
METHODTissue cultivation technology and ultraviolet spectrophotometry were adopted to observe the effect of inoculum volume, sucrose concentration, inorganic salt concentration, number of cultivation days, gradual scale-up cultivation and bubble different angles of bioreactor on the growth of adventitious roots of P. heterophylla, and determine the content of constituents such as saponin, polysaccharide and amino acid.
RESULTThe propagation multiple of adventitious roots reached the maximum when the inoculum was 6 g in a 1 L culture shake flask. With the increase in sucrose concentration, the dry weight propagation multiples of adventitious roots followed an up and down trend. The inorganic salt concentration in a cultivation dish had a greater effect on the growth of adventitious roots, particularly 3/4 MS was the most favorable for the growth of adventitious roots. The growth curve of P. heterophylla was "S", with the biomass reaching the maximum at the 28th day.
CONCLUSIONThe inoculum volume, sucrose concentration, inorganic salt concentration, gradual scale-up cultivation and angles of bubble bioreactor had a significant effect on the growth of adventitious roots of P. heterophylla. The contents of saponin and amino acid in adventitious roots were higher than that in cultivated P. heterophylla, whereas the polysaccharide content were lower than that in cultivated P. heterophylla.