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Why do Plant Tissue Culture? • A single explant can be multiplied into several thousand plants in less than a year - this allows fast commercial propagation of new cultivars • Taking an explant does not usually destroy the mother plant, so rare and endangered plants can be cloned safely • Once established, a plant tissue culture line can give a continuous supply of young plants throughout the year Why do 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, then regenerated through tissue culture • Plant cultures 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) Why do Plant Tissue Culture • Tissue culture allows fast selection for crop improvement - explants are chosen from superior plants, then cloned • Tissue culture clones are ‘true to type’ as compared with seedlings, which show greater variability Plant Tissue Culture Nutrient Media Composition The essential (basal) components of all (most) nutrient media for plant tissue cultures include I. inorganic (mineral nutrients) and II. organic (carbon source, growth regulators) I. Inorganic salts/mineral nutrients A. Composition - essential macro- and micro-nutrients; A nutrient is considered essential if: a. it is required for the plant to complete its life cycle and/or b. it is part of a molecule that is an essential plant constituent or metabolite, a cofactor, osmolyte, etc. Essential Nutrients Macronutrients (required content in the plant - 0.1% or % per dry weight) - C, H, O, P, K, N, S, Ca, Mg Micronutrients (requirement - ppm/dry weight) - Fe, Mo Na, Se and Si are essential for some plants Mn, Zn, Cu, B, Cl, Quantity of the Macro-Nutrient Quantity of the Micro-Nutrient MS medium was formulated from the ash content of tobacco callus. The higher concentration of salts substantially enhanced cell division. Chemical Form of the Nutrient NO3Only NO3-/NH4+ Types of culture Embryo culture Cell culture Callus culture Seed culture Plant tissue culture Bud culture Meristem culture Protoplast culture Organ culture Types of In vitro culture (explant based) Culture of intact plants (seed and seedling culture) Embryo culture (immature embryo culture) Organ culture Callus culture Cell suspension culture Protoplast culture Seed culture Growing seed aseptically in vitro on artificial media Increasing efficiency of germination of seeds that are difficult to germinate in vivo Precocious germination by application of plant growth regulators Production of clean seedlings for explants or meristem culture Embryo culture Growing embryo aseptically in vitro on artificial nutrient media It is developed from the need to rescue embryos (embryo rescue) from wide crosses where fertilization occurred, but embryo development did not occur It has been further developed for the production of plants from embryos developed by non-sexual methods (haploid production discussed later) Overcoming embryo abortion due to incompatibility barriers Overcoming seed dormancy and self-sterility of seeds Shortening of breeding cycle Organ culture Any plant organ can serve as an explant to initiate cultures No. 1. 2. 3. 4. Organ Shoot Root Leaf Flower Culture types Shoot tip culture Root culture Leaf culture Anther/ovary culture Shoot apical meristem culture Production of virus free germplasm Mass production of desirable genotypes Facilitation of exchange between locations (production of clean material) Cryopreservation (cold storage) or in vitro conservation of germplasm Ovary or ovule culture Production of haploid plants A common explant for the initiation of somatic embryogenic cultures Overcoming abortion of embryos of wide hybrids at very early stages of development due to incompatibility barriers In vitro fertilization for the production of distant hybrids avoiding style and stigmatic incompatibility that inhibits pollen germination and pollen tube growth Anther and microspore culture Production of haploid plants Production of homozygous diploid lines through chromosome doubling, thus reducing the time required to produce inbred lines Uncovering mutations or recessive phenotypes Callus Culture Callus: An un-organised mass of cells A tissue that develops in response to injury caused by physical or chemical means Most cells of which are differentiated although may be and are often highly unorganized within the tissue Cell Culture Cell suspension culture When callus pieces are agitated in a liquid medium, they tend to break up. Suspensions are much easier to bulk up than callus since there is no manual transfer or solid support. Protoplast culture The isolation and culture of plant protoplasts in vitro Different Techniques of Plant Tissue Culture: •Callus and Cell culture •Somatic embryogenesis •Haploid culture •Protoplast culture •Micropropagation •Organogenesis •Production of virus-free plants •Somaclonal variation • In Vitro Mutagenesis Thanks