Tetraploid plants are essential for interploid hybridization to create triploid seedless citrus.Here we report a simple and efficient in vitro method for generating autotetraploids for sweet orange (Citrus sinensis). Cell-division activity in 'Anliucheng' sweet orange callus was analyzed using flow cytometry to determine the peak frequency of cell division at which time callus in a liquid media and solid media was treated with 1000 mg l À1 colchicine. The percentage of the DNA-content-varied cells in the callus increased markedly from 11.0% to 44.4% and to 59.0% for liquid and solid media respectively. A total of 20 tetraploid plantlets were recovered via embryogenesis from 47 plantlets regenerated from the treated callus. All the autotetraploids were derived from different embryoids. Autotetraploids will be useful parents for interploid hybridization to generate commercially valuable seedless triploid citrus cultivars.
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