home about us journals search

African Journal of Biotechnology

     
   AJB Home
   About AJB
   Submit Manuscripts
   Instructions for Authors
   Editors
   Call For Paper
   Archive
   Faculty 1000
   Conferences
   Associations

  Afr. J. Biotechnol.

  Vol. 8 No. 12

  Viewing options:

    • Abstract
    •Reprint (PDF) (134K)

  Search Pubmed for articles by:

  Nurazah Z
  Maziah M

  Other links:
  PubMed Citation
  Related articles in PubMed

Related Journals
African Journal of Agricultural Research
African Journal  of Environmental Science & Technology
Biotechnology & Molecular Biology Reviews

African Journal of Biochemistry Research

African Journal of Microbiology Research
African Journal of Pure & Applied Chemistry
African Journal of Food Science
Journal of Cell & Animal Biology
African Journal of Pharmacy & Pharmacology

African Journal of Plant Science
Journal of Medicinal Plant Research
International Journal of Physical Sciences
Scientific Research and Essays
 

African Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 8 (12), pp. 2740-2743, 17 June 2009

ISSN 1684-5315  © 2009 Academic Journals  

 

 

Full Length Research Paper

 

Effects of plant growth regulators on callus induction from Cananga odorata flower petal explant

 

Z. Nurazah*, M. Radzali, A. Syahida and M. Maziah

 

Natural Product Laboratory, Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, University of Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia.

 

*Corresponding author. E-mail: nurazahzain@yahoo.com.

 

Accepted 24 February, 2009

 
   Abstract
 

The Cananga odorata callus was initiated from petals of the C. odorata flowers on MS medium and B5 vitamins containing 30 g/L sugar and 3 g/L agar. The medium was also supplemented with different concentrations of 1-naphtalene acetic acid (NAA), and combinations of NAA with 6-benzylaminpurine (BAP) as the plant growth regulators. It was observed that the C. odorata callus could be induced on media containing the combination of 3 mg/L NAA and 0.5 mg/L BAP. High concentration of NAA gave rise to pale, whitish and friable callus after 1 - 2 weeks of culture. The optimum pH for the cell culture was about 5.7 and incubation at 25 ± 2°C, in totally dark condition.

 

Key words: Cananga odorata, 1-naphtalene acetic acid, 6-benzylaminopurine, callus culture.

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Advertise on AJB | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Help

© Academic Journals 2002 - 2009