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Home / The Country

How researchers are putting the future avocado apocalypse on ice

The Country
10 Sep, 2020 03:00 AM3 mins to read

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Photo / File

Photo / File

The supply of smashed "avo" is secure for generations, after world-first research cryopreserved the tips of avocado shoots and then revived them to create healthy plants.

University of Queensland PhD student Chris O'Brien has developed the first critical steps to create a cryopreservation protocol for avocado which had never been achieved until now, despite more than 40 years of research.

"The aim is to preserve important avocado cultivars and key genetic traits from possible destruction by threats like bushfires, pests and disease such as laurel wilt – a fungus which has the capacity to wipe out all the avocado germplasm in Florida," O'Brien said.

"Liquid nitrogen does not require any electricity to maintain its temperature, so by successfully freeze avocado germplasm, it's an effective way of preserving clonal plant material for an indefinite period."

Cryopreservation is the technology used to freeze human biological material, such as sperm and eggs, at minus 196 degrees Celsius. It has also been used to freeze other plants such as bananas, grape vines and apple.

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O'Brien has been working with UQ Centre for Horticultural Science's Professor Neena Mitter and Dr Raquel Folgado from The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens in California to perfect the technique.

UQ PhD student Chris O'Brien inspecting cryopreserved avocado shoot tips. Photo / UQ
UQ PhD student Chris O'Brien inspecting cryopreserved avocado shoot tips. Photo / UQ

He used clonal shoot tip material developed from tissue culture propagation technology which enabled up to 500 true-to-type plants to grow from a single shoot-tip.

"At first I was just recovering brown mush after freezing the avocado tips," O'Brien said.

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"There was no protocol, so I experimented with priming the tips with Vitamin C, and used other pre-treatments like sucrose and cold temperature to prepare the cells – it was a question of trial and error to get the optimal mixture and correct time points."

The avocado shoot tips are placed on an aluminium foil strip, which allows for ultra-fast cooling and rewarming, then placed into a "cryotube", before being stored in liquid nitrogen.

The frozen shoot tips can be revived in a petri dish containing a sucrose mixture to rehydrate.

"It takes about 20 minutes to recover them," O'Brien said.

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"In about two months they have new leaves and are ready for rooting before beginning a life in the orchard."

University of Queensland Professor Neena Mitter and PhD student Chris O'Brien inspecting avocado plants. Photo / UQ
University of Queensland Professor Neena Mitter and PhD student Chris O'Brien inspecting avocado plants. Photo / UQ

O'Brien had achieved 80 per cent success in regrowing frozen Reed avocado plants and 60 per cent with the Velvick cultivar.

Eighty revived avocado plants are now growing in a UQ glasshouse.

The recovered trees will be monitored for flowering times and fruit quality, with field trials planned with collaborators at Anderson Horticulture.

Avocado plants regrown. Photo / UQ
Avocado plants regrown. Photo / UQ

Professor Mitter said this was the first time the plants had experienced life outside the laboratory.

"I suppose you could say they are space-age avocados – ready to be cryo-frozen and shipped to Mars when human flight becomes possible," she said.

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"But it is really about protecting the world's avocado supplies here on earth and ensuring we meet the demand of current and future generations for their smashed "avo" on toast."

The research is published in Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture.

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