Author:
Deng Wei,Xie Yunling,Qiu Yilan
Abstract
Pepper (Capsicum annuum) pollen is bicellular and contains a vegetative cell and a generative cell, which divides in pollen tubes to form two sperm cells. Sperm cells of pepper were isolated using an in vivo–in vitro method. Hand-pollinated styles were first grown in vivo for several hours, then cut from their base and cultured in vitro until pollen tubes grew from the cut end. When the pollen tubes were transferred to a breaking solution, sperm cells were released from broken tubes. Viable embryo sac cells of pepper were isolated using enzymatic digestion and mechanical dissection. Isolated ovules were digested using cellulase and pectinase for 40 minutes and then transferred to an enzyme-free solution for mechanical dissection. Three cells of the egg apparatus and a central cell were released from a cut at the chalazal end of each ovule by pressing on the micropylar area of the ovule with a microneedle. Optimal isolation conditions included 11% mannitol, 0.04% CaCl2, 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 1% cellulase, 1% pectinase, and 0.3% pectolyase. Using this protocol, populations of pepper egg cells, synergids, and central cells were isolated.
Publisher
American Society for Horticultural Science
Cited by
1 articles.
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