Production of Tetraploid and Triploid Hemp

To maximize yield, cannabidiol (CBD) hemp producers prefer female plants, and this is accomplished by using expensive feminized seed, vegetatively propagated female clones, or by removing male plants from dioecious seed lots. Hemp pollen drifts long distances on wind, and pollination of females redu...

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Main Authors: Lauren E. Kurtz, Mark H. Brand 1, Jessica D. Lubell-Brand
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS) 2020-09-01
Series:HortScience
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/55/10/article-p1703.xml
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spelling doaj-0f78974b7fe54327b90ed320a984424b2020-12-01T20:40:36ZengAmerican Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)HortScience2327-98342020-09-01551017031707https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTSCI15303-20Production of Tetraploid and Triploid HempLauren E. Kurtz Mark H. Brand 1 Jessica D. Lubell-Brand To maximize yield, cannabidiol (CBD) hemp producers prefer female plants, and this is accomplished by using expensive feminized seed, vegetatively propagated female clones, or by removing male plants from dioecious seed lots. Hemp pollen drifts long distances on wind, and pollination of females reduces CBD content. Induction of triploidy is a common strategy used by plant breeders to produce sterile cultivars of agricultural crops. Triploid (3n) hemp, with three sets of chromosomes, was developed by crossing naturally diploid (2n) hemp with tetraploid (4n) hemp. Tetraploid plants used to create triploids were produced using pregerminated seeds and the mitotic spindle inhibitor colchicine. Seedlings from seeds of ‘Abacas’ × [(‘Otto2’ × ‘BaOx’) × (‘BaOx’ × ‘Colorado Cherry’)] treated with 0.05% colchicine or 0.02% colchicine for 12 hours and longer were significantly shorter than controls and ≤1 cm tall at 10 days after sowing. Surviving seedlings exhibited thickened cotyledons and hypocotyls, which indicated a potential change in ploidy. Tetraploid induction ranged from 26% to 64% for pregerminated seeds of five different hemp cultivars (Abacus × Wife, Cherry Wine, Mountain Mango, Wife, and Youngsim10) treated with 0.05% colchicine for 12 hours. Tetraploids had nearly twice the DNA content as diploids according to flow cytometric analysis. Tetraploid ‘Wife’ had larger stomates and reduced stomatal density compared with diploid ‘Wife’. Four triploid ‘Wife’ genotypes produced from crossing tetraploid ‘Wife’ with diploid ‘Wife’ were acclimated to greenhouse conditions after embryo rescue. DNA content and stomate size of triploid ‘Wife’ was intermediate between the parents. This is the first report of triploid plants of hemp. Future research will evaluate the sterility of triploid hemp.https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/55/10/article-p1703.xmlcannabis sativacolchicineembryo rescueflow cytometrypregerminated seed
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren E. Kurtz
Mark H. Brand 1
Jessica D. Lubell-Brand
spellingShingle Lauren E. Kurtz
Mark H. Brand 1
Jessica D. Lubell-Brand
Production of Tetraploid and Triploid Hemp
HortScience
cannabis sativa
colchicine
embryo rescue
flow cytometry
pregerminated seed
author_facet Lauren E. Kurtz
Mark H. Brand 1
Jessica D. Lubell-Brand
author_sort Lauren E. Kurtz
title Production of Tetraploid and Triploid Hemp
title_short Production of Tetraploid and Triploid Hemp
title_full Production of Tetraploid and Triploid Hemp
title_fullStr Production of Tetraploid and Triploid Hemp
title_full_unstemmed Production of Tetraploid and Triploid Hemp
title_sort production of tetraploid and triploid hemp
publisher American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)
series HortScience
issn 2327-9834
publishDate 2020-09-01
description To maximize yield, cannabidiol (CBD) hemp producers prefer female plants, and this is accomplished by using expensive feminized seed, vegetatively propagated female clones, or by removing male plants from dioecious seed lots. Hemp pollen drifts long distances on wind, and pollination of females reduces CBD content. Induction of triploidy is a common strategy used by plant breeders to produce sterile cultivars of agricultural crops. Triploid (3n) hemp, with three sets of chromosomes, was developed by crossing naturally diploid (2n) hemp with tetraploid (4n) hemp. Tetraploid plants used to create triploids were produced using pregerminated seeds and the mitotic spindle inhibitor colchicine. Seedlings from seeds of ‘Abacas’ × [(‘Otto2’ × ‘BaOx’) × (‘BaOx’ × ‘Colorado Cherry’)] treated with 0.05% colchicine or 0.02% colchicine for 12 hours and longer were significantly shorter than controls and ≤1 cm tall at 10 days after sowing. Surviving seedlings exhibited thickened cotyledons and hypocotyls, which indicated a potential change in ploidy. Tetraploid induction ranged from 26% to 64% for pregerminated seeds of five different hemp cultivars (Abacus × Wife, Cherry Wine, Mountain Mango, Wife, and Youngsim10) treated with 0.05% colchicine for 12 hours. Tetraploids had nearly twice the DNA content as diploids according to flow cytometric analysis. Tetraploid ‘Wife’ had larger stomates and reduced stomatal density compared with diploid ‘Wife’. Four triploid ‘Wife’ genotypes produced from crossing tetraploid ‘Wife’ with diploid ‘Wife’ were acclimated to greenhouse conditions after embryo rescue. DNA content and stomate size of triploid ‘Wife’ was intermediate between the parents. This is the first report of triploid plants of hemp. Future research will evaluate the sterility of triploid hemp.
topic cannabis sativa
colchicine
embryo rescue
flow cytometry
pregerminated seed
url https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/55/10/article-p1703.xml
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