New insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: Ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable Lamiaceae species from northern Africa

The overuse of natural medicinal plants forces the search for alternative production techniques to meet the growing needs, compensate for habitat degradation and conserve natural populations of plants. This study investigated the macropropagation and micropropagation of four medicinal plants from th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Souad Mehalaine, Haroun Chenchouni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-09-01
Series:Current Plant Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214662821000219
id doaj-fe67140f7db0492b8cc3268fd473e810
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fe67140f7db0492b8cc3268fd473e8102021-08-06T04:21:51ZengElsevierCurrent Plant Biology2214-66282021-09-0127100216New insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: Ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable Lamiaceae species from northern AfricaSouad Mehalaine0Haroun Chenchouni1Department of Nature and Life Sciences, Faculty of Exact Sciences and Nature and Life Sciences, Larbi Tebessi University, Tebessa 12002, Algeria; Corresponding author at: Department of Nature and Life Sciences, Faculty of Exact Sciences and Nature and Life Sciences, Larbi Tebessi University, Tebessa 12002, Algeria.Department of Nature and Life Sciences, Faculty of Exact Sciences and Nature and Life Sciences, Larbi Tebessi University, Tebessa 12002, Algeria; Laboratory of Natural Resources and Management of Sensitive Environments ‘RNAMS’, Larbi Ben M’hidi University, Oum-El-Bouaghi 04000, Algeria; Corresponding author.The overuse of natural medicinal plants forces the search for alternative production techniques to meet the growing needs, compensate for habitat degradation and conserve natural populations of plants. This study investigated the macropropagation and micropropagation of four medicinal plants from the Lamiaceae family growing in Algeria: Thymus algeriensis Boiss &amp; Reut., Rosmarinus officinalis L., Marrubium vulgare L. and Salvia officinalis L. This baseline study aimed to describe biotechnology techniques that will help in restoring these important species and the developed callus culture can be a source of pharmaceutically important metabolites. It included two experiments: In Experiment 1, macrocuttings of 10−15 cm were cultivated in plastic pots containing soil and submitted in open greenhouse conditions. The rates of developed cuttings into whole plants were estimated. Experiment 2: segments of 5 mm taken from young stems were washed, sterilized using 0.1 % HgCl2 and then cultured on semi-solid Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium supplemented with various combined concentrations of plant growth regulators (PGRs): indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and Kinetin or N-6-furfuryladenine (Kin). The explants were incubated in a photoperiod (16 h light/25 °C, 8 h dark/15 °C) in a phytotron. The rates of callogenesis and caulogenesis were evaluated for different IAA/Kin combinations. The obtained results from macropropagation experiment showed significant differences (P < 0.001) in regeneration rates between the plant species. Salvia officinalis presented the highest success rate of regeneration (100 %) compared to other plants that showed low success rates. The combinations between IAA and Kin exhibited significant effects (P < 0.05 and P < 0.001) on callogenesis and caulogenesis. The best results of callus formation in T. algeriensis were observed at the combination of (5 mg/L IAA, 5 mg/L Kin) and (5 mg/L IAA, 10 mg/L Kin) where regeneration rates reached 23.3 % and 20 % respectively. In R. officinalis, the greatest callus production was obtained at (2.5 mg/L IAA, 5 mg/L Kin) with a rate of 56.7 %. In M. vulgare, the highest callus formation was marked at (2.5 mg/L IAA, 2.5 mg/L Kin), (2.5 mg/L IAA, 5 mg/L Kin) and (5 mg/L IAA, 5 mg/L Kin) with success rates varied between 33.3 % and 36.7 %. While S. officinalis can be significantly regenerated through macrocutting, the application of IAA and Kin combinations influenced greatly callus and shoots proliferation in T. algeriensis, R. officinalis and M. vulgare in in vitro micropropagation. The caulogenesis scores were low in the three above plants. Whereas, S. officinalis did not show any organogenic changes with all PGR combinations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214662821000219CallogenesisCaulogenesisLamiaceae speciesMacropropagationMicropropagationPlant growth regulators
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Souad Mehalaine
Haroun Chenchouni
spellingShingle Souad Mehalaine
Haroun Chenchouni
New insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: Ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable Lamiaceae species from northern Africa
Current Plant Biology
Callogenesis
Caulogenesis
Lamiaceae species
Macropropagation
Micropropagation
Plant growth regulators
author_facet Souad Mehalaine
Haroun Chenchouni
author_sort Souad Mehalaine
title New insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: Ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable Lamiaceae species from northern Africa
title_short New insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: Ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable Lamiaceae species from northern Africa
title_full New insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: Ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable Lamiaceae species from northern Africa
title_fullStr New insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: Ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable Lamiaceae species from northern Africa
title_full_unstemmed New insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: Ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable Lamiaceae species from northern Africa
title_sort new insights for the production of medicinal plant materials: ex vitro and in vitro propagation of valuable lamiaceae species from northern africa
publisher Elsevier
series Current Plant Biology
issn 2214-6628
publishDate 2021-09-01
description The overuse of natural medicinal plants forces the search for alternative production techniques to meet the growing needs, compensate for habitat degradation and conserve natural populations of plants. This study investigated the macropropagation and micropropagation of four medicinal plants from the Lamiaceae family growing in Algeria: Thymus algeriensis Boiss &amp; Reut., Rosmarinus officinalis L., Marrubium vulgare L. and Salvia officinalis L. This baseline study aimed to describe biotechnology techniques that will help in restoring these important species and the developed callus culture can be a source of pharmaceutically important metabolites. It included two experiments: In Experiment 1, macrocuttings of 10−15 cm were cultivated in plastic pots containing soil and submitted in open greenhouse conditions. The rates of developed cuttings into whole plants were estimated. Experiment 2: segments of 5 mm taken from young stems were washed, sterilized using 0.1 % HgCl2 and then cultured on semi-solid Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium supplemented with various combined concentrations of plant growth regulators (PGRs): indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and Kinetin or N-6-furfuryladenine (Kin). The explants were incubated in a photoperiod (16 h light/25 °C, 8 h dark/15 °C) in a phytotron. The rates of callogenesis and caulogenesis were evaluated for different IAA/Kin combinations. The obtained results from macropropagation experiment showed significant differences (P < 0.001) in regeneration rates between the plant species. Salvia officinalis presented the highest success rate of regeneration (100 %) compared to other plants that showed low success rates. The combinations between IAA and Kin exhibited significant effects (P < 0.05 and P < 0.001) on callogenesis and caulogenesis. The best results of callus formation in T. algeriensis were observed at the combination of (5 mg/L IAA, 5 mg/L Kin) and (5 mg/L IAA, 10 mg/L Kin) where regeneration rates reached 23.3 % and 20 % respectively. In R. officinalis, the greatest callus production was obtained at (2.5 mg/L IAA, 5 mg/L Kin) with a rate of 56.7 %. In M. vulgare, the highest callus formation was marked at (2.5 mg/L IAA, 2.5 mg/L Kin), (2.5 mg/L IAA, 5 mg/L Kin) and (5 mg/L IAA, 5 mg/L Kin) with success rates varied between 33.3 % and 36.7 %. While S. officinalis can be significantly regenerated through macrocutting, the application of IAA and Kin combinations influenced greatly callus and shoots proliferation in T. algeriensis, R. officinalis and M. vulgare in in vitro micropropagation. The caulogenesis scores were low in the three above plants. Whereas, S. officinalis did not show any organogenic changes with all PGR combinations.
topic Callogenesis
Caulogenesis
Lamiaceae species
Macropropagation
Micropropagation
Plant growth regulators
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214662821000219
work_keys_str_mv AT souadmehalaine newinsightsfortheproductionofmedicinalplantmaterialsexvitroandinvitropropagationofvaluablelamiaceaespeciesfromnorthernafrica
AT harounchenchouni newinsightsfortheproductionofmedicinalplantmaterialsexvitroandinvitropropagationofvaluablelamiaceaespeciesfromnorthernafrica
_version_ 1721219560637464576