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Transcript
Plant Tissue Culture
Application
Development of
superior cultivars
Germplasm storage
Embryo rescue
Ovule and ovary cultures
Anther and pollen cultures
 Callus and protoplast culture
Protoplasmic fusion
Plant Genetic Engineering
Tissue Culture Applications
Micropropagation
Germplasm preservation
Somaclonal variation
Haploid & dihaploid production
In vitro hybridization – protoplast fusion
Plant genetic engineering
Features of Micropropagation
• Clonal reproduction
– Way of maintaining heterozygozity
• Multiplication stage can be recycled many times to
produce an unlimited number of clones
– Routinely used commercially for many ornamental species,
some vegetatively propagated crops
• Easy to manipulate production cycles
– Not limited by field seasons/environmental influences
• Disease-free plants can be produced
– Has been used to eliminate viruses from donor plants
COMPARISON OF CONVENTIONAL &
MICROPROPAGATION OF VIRUS
INDEXED REGISTERED RED
RASPBERRIES
Conventional
Micropropagation
Duration:
6 years
2 years
Labor:
Dig & replant every 2 years;
unskilled (Inexpensive)
Subculture every 4 weeks;
skilled (more expensive)
Space:
More, but less expensive (field)
Less, but more expensive
(laboratory)
Required to
prevent viral
infection:
Screening, fumigation, spraying None
Ways to eliminate viruses
 Heat treatment.
Plants grow faster than viruses at high temperatures.
 Meristemming.
Viruses are transported from cell to cell through
plasmodesmata and through the vascular tissue. Apical
meristem often free of viruses. Trade off between infection
and survival.
 Not all cells in the plant are infected.
Adventitious shoots formed from single cells can give virusfree shoots.
Elimination of viruses
Plant from the field
Pre-growth in the greenhouse
Active
growth
Heat treatment
35oC / months
‘Virus-free’ Plants
Meristem culture
Adventitious
Shoot
formation
Virus testing
Micropropagation cycle
Storage of Plant germplasm
 In situ : Conservation in ‘normal’ habitat
–rain forests, gardens, farms
 Ex Situ :
–Field collection, Botanical gardens
–Seed collections
–In vitro collection: Extension of micropropagation techniques
•Normal growth (short term storage)
•Slow growth (medium term storage)
•Cryopreservation (long term storage
 DNA Banks
In vitro Collection
Use :
 Recalcitrant seeds
 Vegetatively propagated
 Large seeds
Concern:
 Security
Availability
cost
Ways to achieve slow growth
 Use of immature zygotic embryos
(not for vegetatively propagated species)
 Addition of inhibitors or retardants
 Manipulating storage temperature and light
 Mineral oil overlay
 Reduced oxygen tension
 Defoliation of shoots
Cryopreservation
Storage of living tissues at ultra-low temperatures (-196°C)
Conservation of plant germplasm
• Vegetatively propagated species (root and tubers, ornamental, fruit trees)
• Recalcitrant seed species (Howea, coconut, coffee)
Conservation of tissue with specific characteristics
• Medicinal and alcohol producing cell lines
• Genetically transformed tissues
• Transformation/Mutagenesis competent tissues (ECSs)
Eradication of viruses (Banana, Plum)
Conservation of plant pathogens (fungi, nematodes)
Cryopreservation Steps












Selection
Excision of plant tissues or organs
Culture of source material
Select healthy cultures
Apply cryoprotectants
Pregrowth treatments
Cooling/freezing
Storage
Warming & thawing
Recovery growth
Viability testing
Post-thawing
Cryopreservation Requirements
• Preculturing
– Usually a rapid growth rate to create cells with small vacuoles
and low water content
• Cryoprotection
– Cryoprotectant (Glycerol, DMSO, PEG) to protect against
ice damage and alter the form of ice crystals
• Freezing
– The most critical phase; one of two methods:
• Slow freezing allows for cytoplasmic dehydration
• Quick freezing results in fast intercellular freezing with little
dehydration
Cryopreservation Requirements
• Storage
– Usually in liquid nitrogen (-196oC) to avoid changes in ice
crystals that occur above -100oC
• Thawing
– Usually rapid thawing to avoid damage from ice crystal
growth
• Recovery
– Thawed cells must be washed of cryo-protectants and nursed
back to normal growth
– Avoid callus production to maintain genetic stability
Somaclonal Breeding Procedures
• Use plant cultures as starting material
– Idea is to target single cells in multi-cellular culture
– Usually suspension culture, but callus culture can
work (want as much contact with selective agent as
possible)
– Optional: apply physical or chemical mutagen
• Apply selection pressure to culture
– Target: very high kill rate, you want very few cells to
survive, so long as selection is effective
• Regenerate whole plants from surviving cells
Requirements for Somaclonal Breeding
• Effective screening procedure
– Most mutations are deleterious
• With fruit fly, the ratio is ~800:1 deleterious to beneficial
– Most mutations are recessive
• Must screen M2 or later generations
• Consider using heterozygous plants?
– But some say you should use homozygous plants to be sure effect is mutation
and not natural variation
• Haploid plants seem a reasonable alternative if possible
– Very large populations are required to identify desired mutation:
• Can you afford to identify marginal traits with replicates & statistics?
Estimate: ~10,000 plants for single gene mutant
• Clear Objective
– Can’t expect to just plant things out and see what happens; relates
to having an effective screen
– This may be why so many early experiments failed
Embryo Culture Uses
• Rescue F1 hybrid from a wide cross
• Overcome seed dormancy, usually with addition
of hormone to media (GA)
• To overcome immaturity in seed
– To speed generations in a breeding program
– To rescue a cross or self (valuable genotype) from
dead or dying plant
Haploid Plant Production
 Embryo rescue of interspecific
crosses
– Creation of alloploids
 Anther culture/Microspore
culture
– Culturing of Anthers or
Pollen grains (microspores)
– Derive a mature plant from a
single microspore
 Ovule culture
– Culturing of unfertilized
ovules (macrospores)
Specific Examples of DH uses
• Evaluate fixed progeny from an F1
– Can evaluate for recessive & quantitative traits
– Requires very large dihaploid population, since no prior selection
– May be effective if you can screen some qualitative traits early
• For creating permanent F2 family for molecular marker
development
• For fixing inbred lines (novel use?)
– Create a few dihaploid plants from a new inbred prior to going to
Foundation Seed (allows you to uncover unseen off-types)
• For eliminating inbreeding depression (theoretical)
– If you can select against deleterious genes in culture, and screen
very large populations, you may be able to eliminate or reduce
inbreeding depression
– e.g.: inbreeding depression has been reduced to manageable level
in maize through about 50+ years of breeding; this may reduce
that time to a few years for a crop like onion or alfalfa
Somatic Hybridization
Development of hybrid plants through the fusion of somatic
protoplasts of two different plant species/varieties
Somatic hybridization technique
1. isolation of protoplast
2. Fusion of the protoplasts of desired species/varieties
3. Identification and Selection of somatic hybrid cells
4. Culture of the hybrid cells
5. Regeneration of hybrid plants
Isolation of Protoplast
(Separartion of
1. Mechanical Method
protoplasts from plant tissue)
2. Enzymatic Method
Mechanical Method
Cells Plasmolysis
Plant Tissue
Microscope Observation of cells
Cutting cell wall with knife
Release of protoplasm
Collection of protoplasm
Mechanical Method
Used for vacuolated cells like onion bulb scale,
radish and beet root tissues
Low yield of protoplast
Laborious and tedious process
Low protoplast viability
Enzymatic Method
Leaf sterlization, removal of
epidermis
Plasmolysed
cells
Plasmolysed
cells
Pectinase +cellulase
Protoplasm released
Pectinase
Protoplasm
released
Release of
isolated cells
cellulase
Isolated
Protoplasm
Enzymatic Method
 Used for variety of tissues and organs including
leaves, petioles, fruits, roots, coleoptiles, hypocotyls,
stem, shoot apices, embryo microspores
 Mesophyll tissue - most suitable source
 High yield of protoplast
 Easy to perform
 More protoplast viability
Protoplast Fusion
(Fusion of protoplasts of two different genomes)
1. Spontaneous Fusion
Intraspecific
Intergeneric
2. Induced Fusion
Chemofusion
Mechanical
Fusion
Electrofusion
Uses for Protoplast Fusion
 Combine two complete genomes
– Another way to create allopolyploids
 In vitro fertilization
 Partial genome transfer
– Exchange single or few traits between species
– May or may not require ionizing radiation
 Genetic engineering
– Micro-injection, electroporation, Agrobacterium
 Transfer of organelles
– Unique to protoplast fusion
– The transfer of mitochondria and/or chloroplasts between
species
Spontaneous Fusion
• Protoplast fuse spontaneously during isolation
process mainly due to physical contact
• Intraspecific produce homokaryones
• Intergeneric have no importance
Induced Fusion
Chemofusion- fusion induced by chemicals
• Types of fusogens
•
•
•
•
PEG
NaNo3
Ca 2+ ions
Polyvinyl alcohol
Induced Fusion
• Mechanical Fusion- Physical fusion of protoplasts
under microscope by using micromanipulator and
perfusion micropipette
• Electrofusion- Fusion induced by electrical stimulation
• Fusion of protoplasts is induced by the application of high strength
electric field (100kv m-1) for few microsecond
Possible Result of Fusion of Two
Genetically Different Protoplasts
= chloroplast
= mitochondria
Fusion
= nucleus
heterokaryon
cybrid
hybrid
hybrid
cybrid
Identifying Desired Fusions
• Complementation selection
– Can be done if each parent has a different selectable marker (e.g.
antibiotic or herbicide resistance), then the fusion product
should have both markers
• Fluorescence-activated cell sorters
– First label cells with different fluorescent markers; fusion
product should have both markers
• Mechanical isolation
– Tedious, but often works when you start with different cell types
• Mass culture
– Basically, no selection; just regenerate everything and then screen
for desired traits
Advantages of somatic
hybridization
• Production of novel interspecific and intergenic hybrid
– Pomato (Hybrid of potato and tomato)
• Production of fertile diploids and polypoids from sexually
sterile haploids, triploids and aneuploids
• Transfer gene for disease resistance, abiotic stress
resistance, herbicide resistance and many other quality
characters
• Production of heterozygous lines in the single species
which cannot be propagated by vegetative means
• Studies on the fate of plasma genes
• Production of unique hybrids of nucleus and cytoplasm
Problem and Limitation of
Somatic Hybridization
1. Application of protoplast technology requires efficient plant
regeneration system.
2. The lack of an efficient selection method for fused product is
sometimes a major problem.
3. The end-product after somatic hybridization is often unbalanced.
4. Development of chimaeric calluses in place of hybrids.
5. Somatic hybridization of two diploids leads to the formation of an
amphiploids which is generally unfavorable.
6. Regeneration products after somatic hybridization are often variable.
7. It is never certain that a particular characteristic will be expressed.
8. Genetic stability.
9. Sexual reproduction of somatic hybrids.
10. Inter generic recombination.
TYPICAL SUSPENSION PROTOPLAST
+ LEAF PROTOPLAST PEG-INDUCED
FUSION
NEW SOMATIC HYBRID PLANT
Requirements for plant genetic
transformation
• Trait that is encoded by a single gene
• A means of driving expression of the gene in
plant cells (Promoters and terminators)
• Means of putting the gene into a cell (Vector)
• A means of selecting for transformants
• Means of getting a whole plant back from the
single transformed cell (Regeneration)