This article presents the abilities and efficiencies of five different strains of Agrobacterium rhizogenes (strain ATCC 31798, ATCC 43057, AR12, A4 and A13) to induce hairy roots on Solanum mammosum through genetic transformation. There is significant difference in the transformation efficiency (average number of days of hairy root induction) and transformation frequency for all strains of A. rhizogenes (P < 0.05). Both A. rhizogenes strain AR12 and A13 were able to induce hairy root at 6 days of co-cultivation, which were the fastest among those tested. However, the transformation frequencies of all five strains were below 30 %, with A. rhizogenes strain A4 and A13 showing the highest, which were 21.41 ± 10.60 % and 21.43 ± 8.13 % respectively. Subsequently, the cultures for five different hairy root lines generated by five different strains of bacteria were established. However, different hairy root lines showed different growth index under the same culture condition, with the hairy root lines induced by A. rhizogenes strain ATCC 31798 exhibited largest increase in fresh biomass at 45 days of culture under 16 h light/8 h dark photoperiod in half-strength MS medium. The slowest growing hairy root line, which was previously induced by A. rhizogenes strain A13, when cultured in optimized half-strength MS medium containing 1.5 times the standard amount of ammonium nitrate and potassium nitrate and 5 % (w/v) sucrose, had exhibited improvement in growth index, that is, the fresh biomass was almost double as compared to its initial growth in unmodified half-strength MS medium.
The increasing demand of diosgenin for high-revenue synthesis of steroid hormones by the pharmaceutical industries has driven researchers to look for other alternatives. Solasodine which was reported to be present in Solanum mammosum is known to be a potential source. The present study highlighted that added methyl jasmonate, cholesterol and l-arginine into the modified liquid full-strength Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium (with ammonium to nitrate ratio 10.3 mM: 39.4 mM, and 4% (w/v) sucrose) could influence the solasodine production in the hairy roots of S. mammosum. The findings showed that both hairy root line-ATCC31798 and line-A4 (which were separately induced by Agrobacterium rhizogenes strain ATCC31798 and A4) acquired solasodine productivity of 4.5 mg/g dry weight roots with average dry biomass of 190 mg after 32 days culture, when using 50 mg fresh weight roots as initial inoculum size, with 100 mM cholesterol, 1000 μM l-arginine and 300 μM methyl jasmonate added simultaneously into the culture medium on day 20 of culture. The amount of solasodine obtained was five times higher than those without both the elicitor and precursor treatment. The improved solasodine production with a high-biomass growth could reduce the production cost of steroid synthesis in the long run.
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