For scientists as well as for commercial breeders, the establishment of a routinely applicable doubled haploid (DH) protocol is of significant interest. For triticale, microspore culture has been shown to provide a high frequency of DH plants, and thus is becoming the method of choice for DH production [
8,
9]. Key issues remain, however, that prevent the widespread application of this method. A major limitation relates to the low frequency of spontaneous DH plants produced in triticale, which necessitates chemically-induced doubling of the chromosomes to obtain fertile plants. In this study we compared the traditionally employed
in vivo approach to those where colchicine is applied
in vitro during the first stage of microspore culture.
The
in vitro application of colchicine has been reported to induce positive as well as negative effects on the whole androgenetic pathway, influencing the events of embryogenesis, regeneration rate and the percentage of green plants [
15]. In contrast to Zhou et al. [
16], who found an increased frequency of embryogenesis in
Brassica by the application of colchicine, we observed no effect of the
in vitro colchicine treatment on embryo formation in the experiments described here (Figure ) nor in our routine DH program (Additional file
1: Figure S1). We did, however, observe a reduced regeneration rate for the treatments with high colchicine concentrations and extended incubation time (Table ). A similar trend was observed by Soriano et al. [
11] for the wheat cultivar Chris, but not for two other cultivars, indicating that this process is likely genotype dependent.
A critical point for a DH procedure is the survival rate, which gives a measure of how many green plants regenerated on culture medium survive until maturity. We found that this survival rate was only 44% for the
in vivo approach mainly due to a high mortality after the colchicine treatment of the seedlings. Colchicine is an anti-microtubule agent that not only doubles the chromosomes in the meristem but also has severe effects on the health status of the seedlings, possibly explaining the high mortality [
6]. By contrast, the
in vitro approach resulted in much higher survival rates (Table ) as the seedlings are not subjected to the deleterious colchicine treatment. In this approach, the survival rate of seedlings appeared to be largely dependent upon the transfer from culture medium to soil.
We found that the rate of spontaneous doubled haploids was 32.1

%, which is consistent with previous reports for triticale [
8,
9], and confirms that an additional chemically-induced chromosome doubling step is required for triticale DH programs. The
in vitro colchicine method tested here (Table ) resulted in improved frequency, with the best treatments more than doubling the rate of fertile plants as compared to the spontaneous doubled haploid rate. More importantly, this method also outperformed the
in vivo approach. The highest rates of fertile plants were observed for the 1

mM and 5

mM colchicine concentrations applied for 48 or 72

h (Figure A). The increasing proportion of fertile plants among the regenerated green plants produced after
in vitro treatment can be seen in the mosaic plot (Figure B). Our results on the number of sterile and fertile tillers per regenerated green plant suggest that the
in vivo approach mainly produces chimeric plants with sectors that are still haploid (Table ). By contrast, the plants derived from the
in vitro approach produced predominantly fertile tillers suggesting that the doubling occurred during an early stage of embryogenesis, and that the plants are entirely doubled haploid. The few sterile tillers may be attributable to inadvertent stress applied to the plants (through transfer to soil or bagging of tillers for example), or to doubling taking place at a later stage of embryogenesis such that a minority of the recovered plants are also mosaic for haploid and doubled haploid sectors.
Whereas the enhancement of the proportion of fertile plants is an important goal, the number of fertile plants derived from a defined number of transferred embryos is the ultimate measure of DH procedure success. In this study we found that this is maximized by three treatment combinations: 1

mM colchicine applied for 24

h, or the lower concentration of 0.3

mM colchicine for 48 or 72

h. The variation in optimal incubation time is advantageous because it gives the experimenter more flexibility, especially in applied high-throughput DH programs. With regard to the rate of fertile plants produced from a standard number of transferred embryos, the
in vivo approach was only slightly less effective than the
in vitro approach. This similar rate, however, is misleading since a fair comparison must consider the effort required to reach this value. Culturing of seedlings and fostering of treated plants to maturity, including the bagging required to prevent cross-pollination, are resource and time consuming steps. For the
in vivo approach, many plants are maintained throughout the entire method but do not yield any DH seeds. By contrast, the higher rate of fertile plants and the higher survival rate observed for the
in vitro approach more than compensate for the reduced regeneration rate as compared to the
in vivo approach.