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ERT 103 PLANT TISSUE CULTURE AND MEDIA FORMULATION BY DR. ZARINA BT ZAKARIA WEEK 12-13 PLANT TISSUE AND CELL CULTURE 1. Introduction - The purpose of practicing plant and cell culture includes for regeneration/propagation, embryogenesis and secondary metabolites production. - In this technique, culture medium components, explant source and plant growth regulator is the important factors. - Procedures should be follows includes laboratory set up, medium preparation, sterilization, initiation and maintenance of cultures. - Refers to technique of growing plant cells, tissues, organs, seeds or other plant parts in a sterile environment on a nutrient medium 2. Terminology - Explants – segments of plant organs used to initiate culture - Callus cultures – tissues arising by proliferation from explants on agar medium/Mass of undifferentiated cells produced in tissue culture is called callus. The callus is highly vacuolated and unorganised cells. - Suspension cultures – cells or small cells aggregates growing dispersed in liquid medium - Aseptic transfer – to move the tissue/cell while maintain the sterile condition - Basal medium - Most of the media contain inorganic salts of major and minor elements, vitamins and sucrose. A medium with these ingredients is called basal medium. - Inoculation - Transfer of explant to culture medium is called inoculation. - In vitro - Cells/tissues removed from the intact organism and grown in controlled condition in laboratory. - Embryogenesis – the origin of plantlets closely resembling the normal embryology from fertilized ovum - Organogenesis – the origin of shoot buds or roots from tissue cultures or suspension cultures/Process of differentiation of callus initially into embryo like structure (embryoids) and then showing organ like roots/shoots - Somatic embryogenesis - Process of production of embryo from somatic cells is called somatic embryogenesis and such embryo is called embryoid. - Sub-culture - Callus produced and cultured again for production of big mass of callus is called sub-culture. 3. Laboratory organization - Tissue and cell cultures work needs clean environmental conditions. - Basics set up include an autoclave, laminar flow chamber, incubator, wash-up area, media preparation area, dissecting set and laboratory facilities (glasswares, chemicals, refrigerator etc.). - The culture maintenance and tissue transfer rooms may be fumigated with formalin regularly against fungal and bacterial contaminants prior to use. - To prevent the entry of microbes at the time of inoculation, laminar air flow cabinet (chamber used for culture) is sterilized with ultra violet light or filter sterilized air. - The principal advantage of working in these cabinets is that the flow of air does not hamper the use of spirit lamp. - Under tropical and subtropical areas, where dust particles are very high, it must be kept in double door fitted culture room in order to prolong the effective life of the filter. 4. Preparation of culture media - All plant culture media components can be divided into six groups. These are - major inorganic nutrients - trace elements - iron source - vitamins - carbon source - plant growth regulators - Culture media can be solidified (semi-solid) as agar is added, or liquid media without agar. - Solidified media usually used for callus cultures and liquid media is used for suspension cultures. - Media can be prepared or obtained from ready made in packaging such as Murashige and Skoog, Gamborg, B5, Nitsch etc. - All components are mixed at required concentration prior autoclaving to get rid of contaminants. - Sterile media later on are poured into containers (vials, Erlenmeyer flasks, petri dish, test tube etc.) according to size of explants. - Culture media usually prepared a few days before use to ensure sterility and dry. For longer keeping, they can be stored in refrigerator. 5. Sterilization - For all types of materials (media, glasswares, utensils), sterilization by autoclaving at 15 psi, 121oC for 15-20 minutes are commonly used. - Thermo-labile substances such as certain plant growth regulators and vitamins, are sterilized by membrane filtration (0.22 to 0.45 m pore size). - Dry-heat sterilization in an oven is used for glasswares and instruments wrapped in aluminium foil and treated for 1-2 hr at 160oC. - Routinely used utensils such as scalpels and forceps kept sterile by immersing in 80% ethanol and flamed prior using. - Source of explants brought from the field is invariably heavily contaminated with dust and microorganisms. - They are surface-sterilization using disinfectant solution such as calcium hypochlorite or sodium hypochlorite. - The concentration used must be both harmless to the tissue and effective to combat bacteria. All American Electric Sterilizer 6. Initiation of callus - Explant is extracted with a sharp scalpels - tissues remain undamaged from suitable parts of a plant. - - Expants are cut into small sizes to increase the surface area and to ensure the absorption of nutrients. - Damaged tissues release various compounds which are air oxidized. - explant surface is sterilized with bleaching agents such as chlorine water or sodium hypochlorite, HgCl2 (0.1 %), then it is washed with sterilled distilled water to remove adherent chemical particles. - explant is transferred to sterilised agar-solidified culture medium kept in test tubes or flasks in culture chamber. - This chamber is also pre-sterilized with ultra violet ray emitting tubes. - Callus produced in above stage is taken out, cut into pieces and each piece is transferred to fresh culture medium in separate tubes or flasks. - After some time these pieces develop into big masses of callus. - This is called sub-culture or multiplication stage as callus get multiplied here. 7. Initiation of Suspension Cultures - Suspension cultures are form readily after transfer of friable (soft) callus to shaken flasks of the liquid media. - The preparation of friable callus is similar to callus initiation technique with medium modification. - A platform shaker is used to give a circular/orbital motion in a variable speed control (a range form 30-150 rpm). - For large scale suspension cultures, bioreactors system is being used for the purpose of producing high value plant products. - For maintenance of cultures, callus or suspension cultures have to transfer into a fresh medium (subculture) at interval period (exp every 4 to 6 weeks). - In order to growth, cultures need constant ambient temperature of 25 2oC (for the tropics). - A low level of lighting (100-1000 lux) would suffice for maintenance of tissue culture of different plants. Some cultures need to be incubated in the dark for other purposes. Light is essential for plant regeneration only. - For those purposes, incubators are used, and some incubator equipped with shaker for suspension cultures. - Callus formation is observed after two weeks of inoculation, i.e. incubation period is of two weeks. 8. Acclimatization - Cultured plants are taken out of test tubes/flasks and thoroughly washed under running tap water to remove adhered agar molecules. - Plants are kept at low minimal salt medium for 24 - 48 hours and transferred to pots containing autoclaved sterilized mixture of clay and core soil leaf moulds in equal proportions. - Plantlets of the pots are covered with transparent polythene to maintain humidity for 15-30 days. - Plantlets then are transferred to green house for a week and then to field. - In the field agricultural techniques are applied like other crops/ plants. 9. Biotechnological application a. To propagate new plantlets in mass and in a relatively short time or micropropagation. - Micropropagation occurs in five stages: 1. selection of explant source and prepagation - the explant must be in good physiological condition and disease free. - Size of explant, its location on the plant, its age, or its developmental phase are among factors that affect the success of micropropagation. 2. Initiation and aseptic establishment - The explant is surface sterilized before placing it on the medium. Exogenous plant growth regulators may be added to the medium 3. Proliferation of axillary shoota - Cytokinin-enriched medium enhances axillary shoot proliferation. The shoots may be subcultured at an interval of about four weeks. 4. Rooting - The purpose of this stage is to prepare shoots for transfer into the soil. This requires application of auxin in the medium. Some commercial producers bypass this stage and plant directly into the soil. 5. Transfer to natural environment - Plants are put through the process of hardening off to ready them for natural environment. They are gradually moved from ideal lab conditions to more natural conditions by reducing the relative humidity and increasing light intensity. b. Until now cell culture technique enable us to evolve cell lines with special attributes such as to obtain droughtresistance, disease resistance and salt-tolerance crops and natural dye (shikonin). c. The production of high value natural product such as terpenoids, alkaloids and fenolic acid can be increased by this technique. The use of suspension cultures of Morinda citrifolia for example, for the production of anthraquinones has give few advantages. Solve production problems obtaining these highvalue substances from natural plants such as the decreased of plant resources and increases in labour cost. Not affected by changes in environmental conditions such as climate or natural depredation. Cell cultivation in culture systems are easy to manipulate in order to improve the production. This can be done in any place or season. 10. It Is Worth to Adapt Tissue Culture Technique? a. High cost of tissue culture system highly specialized equipments (laminar flow, autoclave) specific media formulation for specific plant, time consuming to study. High media cost High skills for the operator (time, cost) b. Factors have to consider supply and demand difficult to propagate high value compounds growth condition (bad/well) in certain climate less tissue culture expertise