Direct sowing of Coffea arabica somatic embryos mass-produced in a bioreactor and regeneration of plants

Plant Cell Rep. 1999 Dec;19(2):111-117. doi: 10.1007/s002990050720.

Abstract

The effect of germination conditions on the morphology of Coffea arabica L. somatic embryos mass-produced in a 1-l temporary immersion bioreactor (RITA®) was studied with emphasis on direct sowing in soil. Using germinated embryos, direct sowing resulted in a highly successful conversion of embryos into plants. A culture density above 1600 embryos per 1-l bioreactor positively affected embryo morphology by causing higher embryonic axis elongation (+4-5 mm). At this density, the addition of a high concentration of sucrose (234 mM) 2 weeks before sowing promoted an increase in effective plant conversion in soil (78%) and a vigorous vegetative growth of the resulting plants. Furthermore, direct sowing reduced handling time to 13% and shelving area requirements to 6.3% of the values obtained by conventional acclimatization of plants developed on gel media.

Keywords: Bioreactor; Coffee; Key words Acclimatization; Plant regeneration; Somatic embryogenesis.