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This indicates that organized growth polarity do not always exist in somatic embryogenesis.
A still newer experimental technique, known as somatic embryogenesis, can create multiple embryos from a mass of cells.
Many culture systems induce and maintain somatic embryogenesis by continuous exposure to 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid.
Abscisic acid has been reported to induce somatic embryogenesis in seedlings.
The first documentation of somatic embryogenesis was by Steward et al. in 1958 and Reinert in 1959 with carrot cell suspension cultures.
Somatic embryogenesis is a process where a plant or embryo is derived from a single somatic cell or group of somatic cells.
Plant growth regulators, such as auxins, cytokinins, and gibberellins, are supplemented into the medium to initiate callus formation or somatic embryogenesis.
Using somatic embryogenesis has been considered for mass production of vegetatively propagated pine clones and cryopreservation of germplasm.
Regulation and promotion of plant growth - as a polyamine plant growth regulator it is also a plant hormone-promoting somatic embryogenesis.
Through a technique known as somatic embryogenesis (SE) CFS researchers have been the first to use a single cell to regenerate larch trees.
Somatic embryogenesis has served as a model to understand the physiological and biochemical events that occur plant developmental processes as well as a component to biotechnological advancement.
Latest studies indicate that Cekur manis encouraged rapid regeneration and multiplication through organogenesis and somatic embryogenesis.
Somatic embryogenesis is a method that has the potential to be several times higher in multiplication rates and is amenable to handling in liquid culture systems like bioreactors.
Triploid plants with seedless fruits can also be produced using endosperm culture for the regeneration of triploid plantlets from endosperm tissue via somatic embryogenesis.
Somatic embryogenesis, in which asexual adventive embryos (comparable to zygotic embryos in their structure and development) are induced directly on explants or indirectly through a callus phase.
Somatic embryogenesis has been described to occur in two ways: directly or indirectly Direct embryogenesis occurs when embryos are started directly from explant tissue creating an identical clone while indirectly occurs from unorganized tissue (callus).
Plant regeneration via somatic embryogenesis occurs in five steps: initiation of embryogenic cultures, proliferation of embryogenic cultures, prematuration of somatic embryos, maturation of somatic embryos and plant development on nonspecific media.