Founded in 1965, In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant is the only journal devoted solely to worldwide coverage of in vitro biology in plants. Its high-caliber original research and reviews make it required reading for anyone who needs comprehensive coverage of the latest developments and state-of-the-art research in plant cell and tissue culture and biotechnology from around the world. Each year, four issues from the Society for In Vitro Biology (SIVB) cover cellular, molecular and developmental biology research using in vitro grown or maintained organs, tissues or cells derived from plants. Two special issues from the International Association for Plant Biotechnology (IAPB) focus on plant tissue culture, and molecular and cellular aspects of plant biotechnology. The IAPB and SIVB maintain separate, independent editorial review boards for their issues. Coverage extends to a range of topics, including Biotechnology/genetic transformation; Developmental biology/ morphogenesis; Micropropagation; Functional genomics; Molecular farming; Metabolic engineering, and more.
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant
Description
Identifiers
ISSN | 1054-5476 |
e-ISSN | 1475-2689 |
DOI | 10.1007/11627.1475-2689 |
Publisher
Springer US
Additional information
Data set: Springer
Articles
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant > 2019 > 55 > 5 > 519-526
Tissue culture methods using gametophytes are considered the easiest ways to mass-produce fern sporophytes. The aim of this study was to develop a practical propagation method for the ornamental fern, Athyrium sheareri. The gametophytes obtained from in vitro spore germination were used as experimental materials. We used the chopping method to investigate the culturing conditions for proliferating...
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant > 2019 > 55 > 5 > 595-604
The efficiency of embryogenesis of anther culture was compared using four cultivars of oat (Avena sativa L.): ‘Akt’, ‘Bingo’, ‘Bajka’, and ‘Chwat’. Despite the high resistance of oat to the process of androgenesis, all tested cultivars produced embryo-like structures and only two of them, ‘Akt’ and ‘Chwat’, produced fertile doubled haploid plants. A strong cultivar dependency was observed during induction...
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant > 2019 > 55 > 5 > 590-594
The evolutionary route from plant tissue culture (IAPTC) to plant biotechnology (IAPB). Plant biotechnology is an evolutionary scientific process, formulated and maintained by our accumulated cultural-societal knowledge and the invention of new technologies (Altman and Mesoudi submitted). It emerged thousands of years ago when wheat, rice, chickpeas, potatoes, and coffee (and other plants) were first...