+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

3 Cell and Tissue Culture

Date post: 30-Mar-2016
Category:
Upload: koshua-jennedy
View: 246 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
 
Popular Tags:
14
Transcript
Page 1: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture
Page 2: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

Cell/Tissue culture – growing cells/tissue in the lab

• can be used for genetic manipulation, research etc.

• different techniques and growth media depending on cell type

What things do you think you would need for all cell types to grow?

Page 3: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

Many things are needed by all cell types:

• source of cells

• suitable container

• growth medium to provide all necessary nutrient

• gas exchange

• control of environmental factors (e.g. pH, temp.)

• method to measure cell growth

• avoid contamination from micro-organisms

Page 4: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture
Page 5: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

Microbial Cells

Bacterial and fungal cultures are used for:

1.Energy – ethanol (biofuel) and methane (biogas) production

2.Food – single cell biomass, vinegar etc.

3.Biodegradation – treatment of sewage

Page 6: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

• can be grown in batch culture without dilution until maximum quantity reached

• in correct conditions, cultures show exponential growth until a factor becomes limiting

• eventually will die out if not sub-cultured

• need to ensure cells from culture cannot escape and contaminate

Page 7: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture
Page 8: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

• fragile, and conditions need to be more carefully controlled than for microbial cells

Answer following in sentences:

1.What nutrients must be present in the growth medium?

2.Why might it be useful to include universal indicator and antibiotics?

Salt, amino acids, vitamins, glucose

Indicator to monitor pH, antibiotics to kill microbes

Foetal bovine serum (FBS) is essential also, as it contains chemicals for cell proliferation.

Page 9: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

2 types of animal culture:

1. Primary culture – cells are taken from tissue (sometimes tumours e.g. HeLa) using proteolytic enzymes, however, cells only have a limited lifespan

2. Continuous cell line – cells taken from an already established culture, they will proliferate indefinitely given suitable media and space

Page 10: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

• cells need a solid surface to ‘anchor’ on to

• cells grow as a monolayer until confluent (joined)

• proliferation stops until they are sub-cultured

• cells from culture can be cloned to make a culture of identical cells

• cultures are used in medical research

Page 11: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture
Page 12: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

• media simpler than that of animal cell culture

• plant cells show nuclear totipotency – they can develop into any type of cell

=> whole plants can be generated from culture

• explants (small piece of plant tissue) are grown

• protoplasts are produced (plant cells with the wall removed)

Page 13: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

• protoplasts divide to produce a callus (mass of undifferentiated cells)

• cells from callus can be sub-cultured with plant hormones (e.g. auxins and cytokinins) to promote differentiation

• protoplasts from different species can be fused together

• these plants are called hybrids

• what is this process called? (Think back to Higher!)

Somatic fusion

Page 14: 3 Cell and Tissue Culture

Plant cultures can be used to:

• grow pathogen-free plantlets and plants

• produce new plant varieties


Recommended