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Basic principles and protocol in plant tissue culture

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Basic Principles and Protocol in Plant Tissue Culture Chapter 9 Siti Norazura Jamal
Transcript
  • Basic Principles and Protocol in

    Plant Tissue Culture

    Chapter 9

    Siti Norazura Jamal

  • Objective

    Be familiar with the protocol in plant tissue culture

    Get know the application of aseptic technique in plant

    tissue culture

  • Tissue Culture

    The term tissue culture is commonly used in a very

    wide sense to include in vitro aseptic culture of plant

    cells, tissue and organs.

    Is the term for the process of growing cells artifically in

    the laboratory.

    Involves both plant and animal cells

    Tissue culture produces clones, in which all product cells

    have the same genotypes (unless affected by mutation

    during culture).

  • Plant Tissue Culture

    Is a practice used to propagate clones of a plant

    There are various reasons this may be done:

    1) To create exact copies of plants that produces

    particularly good flowers or fruits.

    2) To quickly produce mature plants.

    3) To produce multiple of plants in the absence of seeds or

    necessary pollination to produce seeds.

    4) Used to regenerate the whole plants from plant cells

    that have been genetically modified.

  • What is needed?

    Tissue culture, both plant and animal has several critical

    requirements:

    1) Appropriate tissue

    - Some tissue culture better than others

  • 2) A suitable growth medium

    - Containing energy sources and inorganic salts to supply

    cell growth needs. This can be liquid or semisolid.

  • 3) Aseptic conditions

    - Microorganisms grow much more quickly than plant and

    animal tissue and can over run a culture

  • 4) Growth regulators

    - In plants, both auxins and cytokins.

    - In animal, this is not as well defined and the growth

    substances are provided in serum from the cell types of

    interest

    5) Frequent subculturing

    - To ensure adequate nutrition and to avoid the build up of

    waste conditions.

  • Aseptic Technique

    Is the exclusion of invading microorganisms during

    experimental procedures

    Using sterile instruments and culture media

    Media and apparatus are sterile by autoclaving (121C for

    15 minutes)

    Aseptic transfer performed in a transfer chamber such as

    laminar flow hood which also preferably equipped with a

    bunsen burner.

    Common sterilants are ethyl alcohol an clorox with an

    added surfactants.

  • Culturing (micropropagating) plant Tissue the steps.

    1) Selection of the plant tissue

    - Plant tissue (explant) from a healthy vigorous mother

    plant

    - Often the apical bud, but can be other tissue.

  • 2) Sterilization

    - This tissue must be sterilized to remove microbial

    contamination

  • Culture type

  • 3) Establishment of the explant

    - Establishment in a culture medium. The medium sustain

    the plant cells and encourage cell division. It can be

    solid or liquid.

    - Each plant species has particular medium requirements

    that must be established by trial and error.

  • 4) Multiplication

    - The explant gives rise to a callus ( a mass of loosely

    arranged cells) which is manipulated by varying sugar

    concentrations and the auxin (low): cytokinin (high)

    ratios to form multiple shoots.

    - The callus may be subdivided a number of times

  • Dividing shoots Warmth and good light are

    essential

  • 5) Root formation

    - The shoots are transfered to a growth medium with

    relatively higher auxin: cytokinin ratios.

  • Benefits of plant tissue culture

    In plants prone to virus diseases, virus free explants (new meristem tissue is usually virus free) can be cultivated to provide virus free plants.

    Plant tissue banks can be frozen, the regenerated through tissue culture.

    Plant culture in approved media are easier to export than are soil-grown plants, as they are pathogen free and take up little space (most current plant export is now done in this manner)

    Tissue culture allows fast selections for crop improvement- explants are chosen from superior plants, then cloned.


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