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Plant Tissue Culture Media

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Plant cell division- Somatic cells are diploid. Mitosis ... Body building Plants -auxin - Roots -cytokinin - Shoots -gibberellin Cell Enlargement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant Tissue Culture Media


1
Plant Tissue Culture Media
  • Whats really important?

2
Plant Tissue CultureWhy does it work?
  • Plant cells Dedifferentiate
  • Plant cell division- Somatic cells are diploid
  • Mitosis Chromosomes duplicate and form clones
  • Meiosis The process of forming sex cells, 2n
    splits and become 1n gametes

3
Major ConstituentsWhy are these things in media?
  • Salt Mixtures
  • Organic Substances
  • Natural Complexes
  • Inert Supportive Materials
  • Growth Regulators

4
Macro-nutrient saltsWhat the ?
  • NH4NO3 Ammonium nitrate
  • KNO3 Potassium nitrate
  • CaCl2 -2 H2O Calcium chloride (Anhydrous)
  • MgSO4 -7 H2O Magnesium sulfide (Epsom Salts)
  • KH2PO4 Potassium hypophosphate
  • FeNaEDTA Fe/Na ethylene-diamine-tetra acetate
  • H3BO3 Boric Acid
  • MnSO4 - 4 H2O Manganese sulfate
  • ZnSO4 - 7 H2O Zinc sulfate
  • KI Potassium iodide
  • Na2MoO4 - 2 H2O Sodium molybdate
  • CuSO4 - 5 H2O Cupric sulfate
  • CoCl2 - H2O Cobaltous sulfide

5
Macronutrient saltsFunction of nutrients in
plant growth
  • Nitrogen Influences plant growth rate,
    essential in plant nucleic acids (DNA), proteins,
    chlorophyll, amino acids, and hormones.
  • Phosphorus Abundent in meristimatic and fast
    growing tissue, essential in photosynthesis,
    respiration,
  • Potassium Necessary for cell division,
    meristematic tissue, helps in the pathways for
    carbohydrate, protein and chlorophyll synthesis.

6
Macronutrient saltsFunction of nutrients in
plant growth
  • Calcium - Involved in formation of cell walls and
    root and leaf development. Participates in
    translocation of sugars, amino acids, and ties up
    oxalic acid (toxin)
  • Iron - Involved in respiration , chlorophyll
    synthesis and photosynthesis. FeNaEDTA sodium
    salt of EDTA sequesters iron, making it available
    to plants.
  • Magnesium - Involved in photosynthetic and
    respiration system. Active in uptake of phosphate
    and translocation of phosphate and starches.
  • Sulfur - Involved in formation of nodules and
    chlorophyll synthesis, structural component of
    amino acids and enzymes.
  • Manganese - Involved in regulation of enzymes and
    growth hormones. Assists in photosynthesis and
    respiration.

7
Macronutrient saltsFunction of nutrients in
plant growth
  • Molybdenum - Involved in enzymatic reduction of
    nitrates to ammonia. Assists in conversion of
    inorganic phosphate to organic form.
  • Zinc - Involved in production of growth hormones
    and chlorophyll. Active in respiration and
    carbohydrate synthesis.
  • Boron - Involved in production of growth hormones
    and chlorophyll. Active in respiration and
    carbohydrate synthesis.
  • Copper -Involved in photosynthetic and
    respiration systems. Assists chlorophyll
    synthesis and used as reaction catalyst.

8
Organic Compounds
  • Carbon Sources Sucrose, Glucose (Sometimes used
    with monocots), Fructose (Plants Need Carbon)
  • Vitamins
  • Adenine part of RNA and DNA
  • Inositol part of the B complex, in phosphate
    form is part of cell membranes, organelles and is
    not essential to growth but benificial
  • Thiamine essential as a coenzyme in the citric
    acid cycle.

9
  • Amino Acids -The most common sources of organic
    nitrogen used in culture media are amino acid
    mixtures, (e.g., casein hydrolysate),
    L-glutamine, L-asparagine, and adenine. When
    amino acids are added alone, they can be
    inhibitory to cell growth. Tyrosine has been used
    to stimulate morphogenesis in cell cultures but
    should only be used in an agar medium.
    Supplementation of the culture medium with
    adenine sulfate can stimulate cell growth and
    greatly enhance shoot formation. L-tyrosine -
    stimulates shoot formation.

10
Still other organics
  • Organic Acids
  • Citric acid (150 mg/l) typically used with
    ascorbic acid (100 mg/l) as an antioxidant.
  • Can also use some of Kreb Cycle acids
  • Phenolic compounds
  • Phloroglucinol - Stimulates rooting of shoot
    sections

11
Natural ComplexesHome Made Bombs
  • -Coconut endosperm
  • -Fish emulsion
  • -Protein hydrolysates
  • -Tomato juice
  • -Yeast extracts
  • -Potato agar

12
CharcoalWheres the toilet?
  • Activated charcoal is used as a detoxifying
    agent. Detoxifies wastes from plant tissues,
    impurities
  • Impurities and absorption quality vary
  • Concentration normally used is 0.3 or lower
  • Charcoal for tissue culture
  • acid washed and neutralized
  • never reuse

13
Growth regulatorsBody building Plants
  • -auxin - Roots
  • -cytokinin - Shoots
  • -gibberellin Cell Enlargement
  • -abscisic acid Plant stress hormone
  • -ethylene BAD!

14
Auxins
  • Order of effectiveness in callus formation,
    rooting of cuttings, and the induction of
    adventive embryogenesis
  • IAA
  • IBA
  • NAA
  • 2,4-D
  • 2,4,5-T
  • Pictoram

15
Auxins
  • The various auxins differ in their physiological
    activity and in the extent to which they move
    through tissue, are bound to the cells, or
    metabolized.

16
Auxins
  • Auxins are generally included in a culture medium
    to stimulate callus production and cell growth,
    to initiate shoots, particularly roots, and to
    induce somatic embryogenesis and stimulate growth
    from shoot apices and shoot tip cultures.

17
Auxins
  • Naturally occurring IAA has been shown to have
    less physiological activity than synthetic
    auxins. 2,4- D has eight to twelve times the
    activity,
  • 2,4,5-T has four times the activity,
  • PCPA and Picloram have two to four times the
    activity, and NAA has two times the activity of
    IAA. Although 2,4-D, 2,4,5-T, PCPA, and Picloram
    are often used to induce rapid cell
    proliferation, exposure to high levels or
    prolonged exposure to these auxins, particularly
    2,4-D, results in suppressed morphogeneic
    activity

18
Cytokinins
  • -Enhances adventitious shoot formation
  • BA
  • 2iP
  • Kinetin
  • Zeatin
  • PBA

19
Cytokinis
  • Zeatin and 2iPare considered to be naturally
    occurring cytokinins, while BA and kinetin are
    synthetically derived cytokinins. Adenine,
    another naturally occurring compound, has a base
    structure similar to that of the cytokinins and
    has shown cytokinin-like activity in some cases.

20
Cytokins
  • Many plant tissues have an absolute requirement
    for a specific cytokinin for morphogenesis to
    occur, whereas some tissue are considered to be
    cytokinin independent, i.e., no cytokinin or a
    specific cytokinin may be required for
    organogenesis. The cytokinins are generally added
    to a culture medium to stimulate cell division,
    to induce shoot formation and axillary shoot
    proliferation, and to inhibit root formation.

21
Auxins and Cytokinis
  • The type of morphogenesis that occurs in a plant
    tissue culture largely depends upon the ratio and
    concentrations of auxins and cytokinins present
    in the medium. Root initiation of plantlets,
    embryogenesis, and callus initiation all
    generally occur when the ration of auxin to
    cytokinin is high, whereas adventitious and
    axillary shoot proliferation occur when the
    ration is low. The concentrations of auxins and
    cytokinins are equally as important as their
    ratio.

22
Gibberellin
  • Not generally used in tissue culture
  • Tends to suppress root formation and adventitious
    embryo formation

23
Abscisic Acid
  • Primarily a growth inhibitor but enables more
    normal development of embryos, both zygotic and
    adventitious

24
Ethylene
  • Question is not how much to add but how to get
    rid of it in-vitro
  • Natural substance produced by tissue cultures at
    fairly high levels especially when cells are
    under stress
  • Enhances senescense
  • Supresses embryogenesis and development in general

25
Hormone Combinations
  • Callus development
  • Adventitious embryogenesis
  • Rooting of Shoot cuttings
  • Adventitious shoot and root formation

26
Callus development
  • Auxin alone
  • Pictoram 0.3 to 1.9 mg/l
  • 2,4-D 1.0 to 3.0 mg/l
  • Auxin and Cytokinin
  • IAA 2.0 to 3.0 mg/ l
  • 2iP 0.1 mg/l
  • NAA 0.1 mg/l
  • 2iP 0.1 mg/l

27
Adventitious Embryogenesis
  • Induction is the first step (biochemical
    differentiation
  • High auxin in media
  • Development is the second step which includes
    cell and tissue organization, growth and
    emergence of organ or embryo
  • no or very low auxin. Can also add ABA 10 mg/l,
    NH4 and K (dont know which step)

28
Rooting of Shoot Cutttings
  • Induction need high auxin, up to 100 mg/l for
    3-14 days
  • Development no auxin, in fact auxin may inhibit
    growth
  • Can also add phloroglucinol and other phenolics
    but we dont know for sure how they fit in

29
Adventitious shoot and root development
  • Skoog and Millers conclusions
  • -formation of shoots and roots controlled by a
    balance between auxin and cytokinin
  • -high auxin/low cytokinin root development
  • -low auxin/high cytokinen shoot development
  • -concept applies mainly to herbaceous genera and
    easy to propagate plants
  • -we lump together induction and development
    requirements

30
Summary
  • Auxin Cytokinin
  • callus high low
  • axillary shoots low to none very high
  • adventi. shoots equal equal
  • rooting high low
  • embryogenesis high low
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