02113naa a2200181 a 450000100080000000500110000800800410001910000110006024501000007126000090017152016040018065300110178465300130179565300220180865300250183065300160185577300600187110847552012-05-07 2000 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d1 aEpagri aOff-type micropropagated banana plantsbendogenous levels of auxin, cytokinins and iaa-oxidase. c2000 aThe occurrence of dwarfism and variegation is an extensive and severe limitation for banana (Musa spp. AAA) micropropagation. Dwarf and normal plants were cultured (30 days) in vitro on MS-media with addition of gibberellic acid (GA3). indoleacetic acid (IAA), L- tryptophan or D-tryptophan (Trp) , and variegated plants were grown in the greenhouse. The endogenous leveis of cytokinins (CKs), indoleacetic acid (IAA) and IAA-oxidase were studied in dwarf and normal banana plants and in variegated leaves. Extracts were fractionated by HPLC and IAA and CKs were quantified by ELISA. GA3 was the most stimulating substance on growth of both normal and dwarf plants. IAA leveIs were significantly enhanced with L-Trp and GA3. It is interesting to highlight the fact that the amount of IAA found in the dwarf material was significantly higher than in material from normal plants. These results seem to be indirectly reinforced by the high leveIs of IAA-conjugate measured in normal plants and its low amount in dwarf plants. In the variegated leaves, a significantly higher activity of IAA-oxidase was detected in green and yellow sectors as compared to normal and dwarf green leaves. Total CK leveI (zeatin, Z; zeatin riboside, [9R]Z; isopentenyl-adenine, iP; and isopentenyladenosine, [9R]iP) in the variegated leaves was about 2 times lower than in normal leaves, diminishing to a value of 10 times when only yellow sectors were took into account. These results indicate that in the variegated material IAA-cytokinin ratio is mainly affected by IAA oxidation rather then hy conjugation processes. ' aBanana aDwarfism aGrowth regulators aSomacIonal variation aVariegation tActa Horticulturae, Brusselsgn. 520, p. 219-227, 2000.