Addition of cellulose to the culture medium inhibited cell wall regeneration and nuclear and cell division in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) mesophyll protoplasts. When the activity of celllase was inhibited by cellobiose, the inhibition of nuclear and cell division was overcome. Cell wall formation thus appears to be a prerequisite for nuclear and cell division in tobacco protoplasts.
Species-specific repetitive DNA probes are a useful tool for the molecular identification of somatic hybrids. Therefore, the distribution of three repetitive DNA elements of Solanum was investigated in Solanum wild species, Solanum breeding lines, and in more distantly related species of the genera Lycopersicon, Nicotiana, and Datura. The clone pSCH15, obtained from S. circaeifolium, represents a new 168-bp repetitive element; it shows 73-79% sequence similarity to repetitive elements of S. brevidens and Lycopersicon species. The 163-bp element in pSBH6, cloned from S. bulbocastanum, turned out to be very similar (95% sequence homology) to the Lycopersicon element pLEG15/TGRI previously regarded to be present only in species of the genus Lycopersicon and in S. lycopersicoides. Lower sequence similarity of approximately 80% was observed to repetitive elements of S. brevidens which are organized differently. The repeats exhibited different degrees of specificity: by Southern hybridization the element represented by the clone pSBH6 could be detected in almost all Solanum species investigated here but only after long exposure to X-ray film. The previously described "Solanum-specific" element represented by the clone pSA287 was also found, although in a very low copy number, in Lycopersicon esculentum. Therefore, detection of the repetitive elements pSA287 and pSBH6 in those species in which the respective repeat is less represented depends on exposure time. In contrast, the element pSCH15 is prominently present only in a small number of Solanum wild species and - to some extent - in the diploid breeding lines as revealed after long exposure. Use of these repeated elements for the identification of specific genomes in protoplast-fusion hybrids between Solanum wild species and Solanum breeding lines, or between two breeding lines, was evaluated.
The nucleotide sequences of the 5S rRNA genes (5S rDNA) of two Solanum tuberosum breeding lines (R1 and B15) and of the Mexican wild species S. pinnatisectum were determined and compared with each other and to the 5S rDNA of other Solanaceae species (Lycopersicon esculentum, Nicotiana rustica and Petunia hybrida). The 5S rDNA repeats of the Solanum species are 324-329 bp in length, and they exhibit 91-95% sequence identity. Sequence variability is mainly located in a short region of the spacer separating the 5S rRNA coding regions. A synthetic 28-mer oligonucleotide constructed according to this region can be used as a specific hybridization probe to distinguish symmetric somatic hybrids between S. tubersosum breeding line B15 and S. pinnatisectum produced by protoplast fusion. Interestingly, the two Solanum breeding lines R1 and B15 differ also in this spacer region.
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