
plant hybridization project
that aims to benefit Californias floriculture industry is entering its second phase
at California State University, Fresno this fall.
Following successful efforts to establish DNA "markers" for two species of
the hibiscus plant, research specialist Maria Jenderek and plant science professor Arthur
Olney will attempt to create a new hybrid containing the "best" characteristics
of both. What could result is a hardy new landscape plant that would add brilliant color
to the landscapes of inland California homes.
Of the two hibiscus species, one is H. syriacus, also
known as rose of Sharon or shrub
althea. It is a hardy shrub that can endure extremes in heat and cold, but it produces
flowers of only "modest" size and color, noted Olney in explaining the research
project. Its cousin H. rosa-sinensis, or tropical hibiscus,
produces brilliant flowers but
is grown only along the California coast because it cant endure the colder inland
temperatures.
"Our objective is to create somatic hybrids between these two species that
will have the large showy flowers and also be cold hardy," Olney said. Although the
two hibiscus are related, genetically they are "too far apart" to be crossed by
conventional methods; thus the unconventional approach. The technique will include
protoplast fusion, which involves isolating individual cells from each of the two
species, breaking down the cell walls, and fusing the DNA-containing cell membranes
together using electrical current.
"We hope to enable the cells to rejuvenate with characteristics of both
species," Olney said. This will probably be the most difficult goal to achieve since
the cells can easily be damaged when fused by this method, he added.
In order to determine whether the new hybrid does carry characteristics
of both H.
syriacus and H. sinensis, Jenderek and Olney will examine
ultra-violet
"photographs" of the DNA using a technique that exposes randomly amplified
polymorphic DNA, or RAPD markers. This method avoids the months of time it would take to
actually grow the new plants to maturity and observe the flower characteristics.
Jenderek has presented
initial project results to the scientific community at the Congress on In Vitro Biology
held in Washington D.C. this summer. Those same results are available in a research note
just published by the California Agricultural Technology Institute (CATI). It is entitled
"Development of Randomly Amplified Polymorphic DNA Markers Characteristic of Hibiscus
rosa-sinensis and H. syriacus."
The publication may be viewed or ordered from the Research Publications: Center for
Irrigation Technology section of this web site. Olney said the
research teams goal
is to have the second and third phases of the experiment completed by the summer of 1998.
Also assisting in the project is assistant professor Kristina Schierenbeck from the
Biology Department.