Plant tissue culture

A rose grown from tissue culture.

Plant tissue culture is a collection of techniques used to maintain or grow plant cells, tissues or organs under sterile conditions on a nutrient culture medium of known composition. Plant tissue culture is widely used to produce clones of a plant in a method known as micropropagation. Different techniques in plant tissue culture may offer certain advantages over traditional methods of propagation, including:

Plant tissue culture relies on the fact that many plant cells have the ability to regenerate a whole plant (totipotency). Single cells, plant cells without cell walls (protoplasts), pieces of leaves, stems or roots can often be used to generate a new plant on culture media given the required nutrients and plant hormones.

Techniques

Preparation of plant tissue for tissue culture is performed under aseptic conditions under HEPA filtered air provided by a laminar flow cabinet. Thereafter, the tissue is grown in sterile containers, such as petri dishes or flasks in a growth room with controlled temperature and light intensity. Living plant materials from the environment are naturally contaminated on their surfaces (and sometimes interiors) with microorganisms, so their surfaces are sterilized in chemical solutions (usually alcohol and sodium or calcium hypochlorite)[1] before suitable samples (known as explants) are taken. The sterile explants are then usually placed on the surface of a sterile solid culture medium, but are sometimes placed directly into a sterile liquid medium, particularly when cell suspension cultures are desired. Solid and liquid media are generally composed of inorganic salts plus a few organic nutrients, vitamins and plant hormones. Solid media are prepared from liquid media with the addition of a gelling agent, usually purified agar.

The composition of the medium, particularly the plant hormones and the nitrogen source (nitrate versus ammonium salts or amino acids) have profound effects on the morphology of the tissues that grow from the initial explant. For example, an excess of auxin will often result in a proliferation of roots, while an excess of cytokinin may yield shoots. A balance of both auxin and cytokinin will often produce an unorganised growth of cells, or callus, but the morphology of the outgrowth will depend on the plant species as well as the medium composition. As cultures grow, pieces are typically sliced off and subcultured onto new media to allow for growth or to alter the morphology of the culture. The skill and experience of the tissue culturist are important in judging which pieces to culture and which to discard.

As shoots emerge from a culture, they may be sliced off and rooted with auxin to produce plantlets which, when mature, can be transferred to potting soil for further growth in the greenhouse as normal plants.[2]

Regeneration pathways

Plant tissue cultures being grown at a USDA seed bank, the National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation.

The specific differences in the regeneration potential of different organs and explants have various explanations. The significant factors include differences in the stage of the cells in the cell cycle, the availability of or ability to transport endogenous growth regulators, and the metabolic capabilities of the cells. The most commonly used tissue explants are the meristematic ends of the plants like the stem tip, axillary bud tip and root tip. These tissues have high rates of cell division and either concentrate or produce required growth regulating substances including auxins and cytokinins.

Shoot regeneration efficiency in tissue culture is usually a quantitative trait that often varies between plant species and within a plant species among subspecies, varieties, cultivars, or ecotypes. Therefore, tissue culture regeneration can become complicated especially when many regeneration procedures have to be developed for different genotypes within the same species.

The three common pathways of plant tissue culture regeneration are propagation from preexisting meristems (shoot culture or nodal culture), organogenesis and non-zygotic embryogenesis.

The propagation of shoots or nodal segments is usually performed in four stages for mass production of plantlets through in vitro vegetative multiplication but organogenesis is a common method of micropropagation that involves tissue regeneration of adventitious organs or axillary buds directly or indirectly from the explants. Non-zygotic embryogenesis is a noteworthy developmental pathway that is highly comparable to that of zygotic embryos and it is an important pathway for producing somaclonal variants, developing artificial seeds, and synthesizing metabolites. Due to the single cell origin of non-zygotic embryos, they are preferred in several regeneration systems for micropropagation, ploidy manipulation, gene transfer, and synthetic seed production. Nonetheless, tissue regeneration via organogenesis has also proved to be advantageous for studying regulatory mechanisms of plant development.

Choice of explant

The tissue obtained from a plant to be cultured is called an explant.

Explants can be taken from many different parts of a plant, including portions of shoots, leaves, stems, flowers, roots, single undifferentiated cells and from many types of mature cells provided are they still contain living cytoplasm and nuclei and are able de-differentiate and resume cell division. This has given rise to the concept of totipotentency of plant cells.[3] However this is not true for all cells or for all plants.[4] In many species explants of various organs vary in their rates of growth and regeneration, while some do not grow at all. The choice of explant material also determines if the plantlets developed via tissue culture are haploid or diploid. Also the risk of microbial contamination is increased with inappropriate explants.

The first method involving the meristems and induction of multiple shoots is the preferred method for the micropropagation industry since the risks of somaclonal variation (genetic variation induced in tissue culture) are minimal when compared to the other two methods. Somatic embryogenesis is a method that has the potential to be several times higher in multiplication rates and is amenable to handling in liquid culture systems like bioreactors.

Some explants, like the root tip, are hard to isolate and are contaminated with soil microflora that become problematic during the tissue culture process. Certain soil microflora can form tight associations with the root systems, or even grow within the root. Soil particles bound to roots are difficult to remove without injury to the roots that then allows microbial attack. These associated microflora will generally overgrow the tissue culture medium before there is significant growth of plant tissue.

Some cultured tissues are slow in their growth. For them there would be two options: (i) Optimizing the culture medium; (ii) Culturing highly responsive tissues or varieties.[5] Necrosis can spoil cultured tissues. Generally, plant varieties differ in susceptibility to tissue culture necrosis. Thus, by culturing highly responsive varieties (or tissues) it can be managed.[5]

Aerial (above soil) explants are also rich in undesirable microflora. However, they are more easily removed from the explant by gentle rinsing, and the remainder usually can be killed by surface sterilization. Most of the surface microflora do not form tight associations with the plant tissue. Such associations can usually be found by visual inspection as a mosaic, de-colorization or localized necrosis on the surface of the explant.

An alternative for obtaining uncontaminated explants is to take explants from seedlings which are aseptically grown from surface-sterilized seeds. The hard surface of the seed is less permeable to penetration of harsh surface sterilizing agents, such as hypochlorite, so the acceptable conditions of sterilization used for seeds can be much more stringent than for vegetative tissues.

Tissue cultured plants are clones. If the original mother plant used to produce the first explants is susceptible to a pathogen or environmental condition, the entire crop would be susceptible to the same problem. Conversely, any positive traits would remain within the line also.

Applications

Plant tissue culture is used widely in the plant sciences, forestry, and in horticulture. Applications include:

Laboratories

Although some growers and nurseries have their own labs for propagating plants by the technique of tissue culture, a number of independent laboratories provide custom propagation services. The Plant Tissue Culture Information Exchange lists many commercial tissue culture labs. Since plant tissue culture is a very labour-intensive process, this would be an important factor in determining which plants would be commercially viable to propagate in a laboratory.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Sathyanarayana, B.N. (2007). Plant Tissue Culture: Practices and New Experimental Protocols. I. K. International. pp. 106–. ISBN 978-81-89866-11-2.
  2. Bhojwani, S. S.; Razdan, M. K. (1996). Plant tissue culture: theory and practice (Revised ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 0-444-81623-2.
  3. Vasil, I.K.; Vasil, V. (1972). "Totipotency and embryogenesis in plant cell and tissue cultures.". In Vitro. 8: 117–125. doi:10.1007/BF02619487.
  4. Indra K. Vasil; Trevor A. Thorpe (1994). Plant Cell and Tissue Culture. Springer. pp. 4–. ISBN 978-0-7923-2493-5.
  5. 1 2 Pazuki, Arman & Sohani, Mehdi (2013). "Phenotypic evaluation of scutellum-derived calluses in 'Indica' rice cultivars" (PDF). Acta Agriculturae Slovenica. 101 (2): 239–247. doi:10.2478/acas-2013-0020.
  6. Mukund R. Shukla; A. Maxwell P. Jones; J. Alan Sullivan; Chunzhao Liu; Susan Gosling; Praveen K. Saxena (April 2012). "In vitro conservation of American elm (Ulmus americana): potential role of auxin metabolism in sustained plant proliferation". Canadian Journal of Forest Research. 42 (4): 686–697. doi:10.1139/x2012-022.
  7. Georgiev, Milen I.; Weber, Jost; MacIuk, Alexandre (2009). "Bioprocessing of plant cell cultures for mass production of targeted compounds". Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology. 83 (5): 809–23. doi:10.1007/s00253-009-2049-x. PMID 19488748.
  8. Manoj K. Rai; Rajwant K. Kalia; Rohtas Singh; Manu P. Gangola; A.K. Dhawan (April 2011). "Developing stress tolerant plants through in vitro selection—An overview of the recent progress". Environmental and Experimental Botany. 71 (1): 89–98. doi:10.1016/j.envexpbot.2010.10.021.
  9. Aina, O; Quesenberry, K.; Gallo, M (2012). "In vitro induction of tetraploids in Arachis paraguariensis". Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture (PCTOC). 111: 231–238. doi:10.1007/s11240-012-0191-0.

Sources

  • George, Edwin F.; Hall, Michael A.; De Klerk, Geert-Jan, eds. (2008). Plant propagation by tissue culture. 1. The background (3rd ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-1-4020-5004-6. 
  • Yadav, R.; Arora, P.; Kumar, D.; Katyal, D.; Dilbaghi, N.; Chaudhury, A. (2009). "High frequency direct plant regeneration from leaf, internode, and root segments of Eastern Cottonwood (Populus deltoides)". Plant Biotechnology Reports. 3 (3): 175–182. doi:10.1007/s11816-009-0088-5. 
  • Singh, S.K.; Srivastava, S. (2006). Plant Tissue Culture. Campus Book International. ISBN 978-81-8030-123-0. 
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