Summary:
The process of elicitation makes use of the capacity of plants and plant cells cultivated in vitro to
react to various stress stimuli by a number of protective reactions leading to increased accumulation
of secondary metabolites. The endogenic signal substances of plant protective reactions include
jasminic acid, which in the case of exogenous application also acts as an elicitor. The paper examined
the effect of four concentrations of jasminic acid on the production of anthracene derivatives by
a three-year-old tissue culture, which was derived from the roots of a two-year-old intact plant
Rheum palmatum L. (Polygonaceae). The culture was cultivated on Murashige-Skoog medium with
an addition of 10 mg.l-1 of α-naphthylacetic acid. The results show that the optimal effect of jasminic
acid on the production of callus culture was manifested after a 12-hour application of the strongest
concentration of 5 mM, and on the production of suspension culture after a 48-hour application of
a concentration of 0.05mM,when the photometric determination according to PhBs 4 demonstrated
the maximal content of anthracene derivatives (1.26 %) and the productionwas stimulated by 109 %
in comparison with the control.
Key words:
Rheum palmatum L. in vitro – anthracene derivatives – elicitation – jasminic acid
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