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Originally Posted by Harvey
Citrus are supposedly cleaned up of viruses by culturing the new shoots which are not yet infected. Tissue culture methods also will sometimes treat cultures with compounds to kill viruses, I believe, though I don't know if this is always successful.
So do you know if new fig shoots are free of virus? I had never heard this... do you know it to be true? Or, do you know of tissue culture propagation of figs that has successfully resulted in a non-FMV-infected explant? (after starting with an infected plant I mean). As for treating with compounds to kill viruses, I'm not aware of any compounds that will kill the four (or more) viruses that cause FMV without also killing their host (fig tree) cells.
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Originally Posted by Dave
tissue culture is soposed to produce plantlets free of virus or other problems. unlock hidden genetics, or even play around with genetics. it doesnt seem like it would be very hard to find the cause of fmv ie cells attacked, certain protines, etc and possibly isolate it thus creating a strain that is immune.
Can you provide an example of someone who has successfully found the molecular markers and/or molecular vectors and then gone on to isolate uninfected ficus carica cells? I'm not aware of any... (doesn't mean it hasn't been done, but I haven't heard of it yet... seems like that would be pretty big news).
I have heard other people indicate that using TC propagation starting with a source from an infected tree has resulted in infected explant clonal offspring. That seems to make sense to me, unless someone can successfully isolate the non-infected cells of the source tree. (Incidentally, I also bought a couple of fig trees from Hirt's, though not via the ebay outlet, rather their Amazon outlet and their direct web site... though I cannot confirm that they used TC to propagate these plants, both of them had FMV infections by the time they reached me).
So I go back to my questions:
Quote:
Originally Posted by
meI have to ask: - Why (and how) can tissue culture propagation techniques result in a tree that is free of FMV, if the initial source of the tissue sample is a tree with FMV?
- Wouldn't the tissue culture propagate the FMV viruses, just as it propagates the tree itself?
- Or is there something in the process that kills the viruses but doesn't kill the tree tissue?
- Or are you assuming that it's possible to to get a small sample of virus-free tissue from an FMV-infected tree?
I've seen other discussions on this, with various people taking opposing sides of the answer. But I've not seen anybody answer this definitively, dispassionately, convincingly, and in a way that I can understand. I don't know the science of tissue culture / micropropagation well enough to answer. So, a few of you guys seem to understand tissue culture pretty well... can any of you explain the answer to these questions?Does any of you guys out there know the truth of this?
Mike central NY state, zone 5