Title: Micropropagation
1 the art and science of multiplying plants in
vitro.
2Rapid clonal in vitro propagation of plants from
cells, tissues or organs cultured aseptically on
defined media contained in culture vessels
maintained under controlled conditions of light
and temperature
3Toward Commercial Micropropagation 1950s Morel
Martin 1952 Meristem-tip culture for disease
elimination
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5Commercialization of Micropropagation 1970s
1980s Murashige 1974 Broad commercial
application
6Clone Genetically identical assemblage of
individuals propagated entirely by vegetative
means from a single plant.
7Conventional Propagation
- Cuttings
- Budding, grafting
- Layering
8Conventional Propagation Advantages
- Equipment costs minimal
- Little experience or technical expertise needed
- Inexpensive
- Specialized techniques for growth control (e.g.
grafting onto dwarfing rootstocks)
9Micropropagation Advantages
- From one to many propagules rapidly
- Multiplication in controlled lab conditions
- Continuous propagation year round
- Potential for disease-free propagules
- Inexpensive per plant once established
10Micropropagation Advantages
- Precise crop production scheduling
- Reduce stock plant space
- Long-term germplasm storage
- Production of difficult-to-propagate species
11- Micropropagation Production in the United States
- Foliage Plants 63,695,000
- Greenhouse Flowers 11,297,000
- Perennials 9,448,000
- Trees shrubs 15,294,000
- Vegetables 12,862,000
- Fruits 3,721,000
- Miscellaneous 4,545,000
- Total 120,862,000
12Micropropagation Disadvantages
- Specialized equipment/facilities required
- More technical expertise required
- Protocols not optimized for all species
- Plants produced may not fit industry standards
- Relatively expensive to set up?
13Micropropagation Applications
- Rapid increase of stock of new varieties
- Elimination of diseases
- Cloning of plant types not easily propagated by
conventional methods (few offshoots/ sprouts/
seeds date palms, ferns, nandinas) - Propagules have enhanced growth features
(multibranched character Ficus, Syngonium)
14- Explant
- Cell, tissue or organ of a plant that is used to
start in vitro cultures - Many different explants can be used for
micropropagation, but axillary buds and meristems
are most commonly used
15Choice of explant
- Desirable properties of an explant
- Easily sterilizable
- Juvenile
- Responsive to culture
- Shoot tips
- Axillary buds
- Seeds
- Hypocotyl (from germinated seed)
- Leaves
16Methods of micropropagation
- gt95 of all micropropagation
- Genetically stable
- Simple and straightforward
- Efficient but prone to genetic instability
- Little used. Potentially phenomenally efficient
- Axillary branching
- Adventitious shoot formation
- Somatic embryogenesis
17Axillary shoot proliferation Growth of axillary
buds stimulated by cytokinin treatment shoots
arise mostly from pre-existing meristems
18- Shoot Culture Method Overview
- Clonal in vitro propagation by repeated enhanced
- formation of axillary shoots from shoot-tips or
- lateral meristems cultured on media
- supplemented with plant growth regulators,
- usually cytokinins.
- Shoots produced are either rooted first in vitro
- or rooted and acclimatized ex vitro
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20- ADVANTAGES
-
- Reliable rates and consistency of shoot
multiplication - 3 -8 fold multiplication rate per month
- Pre-existing meristems are least susceptible to
- genetic changes
21- mericloning  A propagation method using shoot
tips in culture to proliferate multiple buds,
which can then be separated, rooted and planted
out
22- First commercially used with orchids -
conventional propagation rate of 1 per year. - Through protocorms, 1,000,000 per year.
Corm (Swollen stem)
Chop into pieces
Maturation
23Axillary shoot production
- Selection of plant material
- Establish aseptic culture
- Multiplication
- Shoot elongation
- Root induction / formation
- Acclimatization
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29Mother Block A slowly multiplying indexed and
stabilized set of cultures Serve as source of
cultures (explants) for Stage II multiplication
30Stage I - Sterilisation
- Bacteria and fungi will overgrow the explant on
the medium unless they are removed - Pre-treatments to clean up the explant
- Detergents
- Sterilants and Antibiotics
- Pre-treatments
- Transfer plants to a greenhouse to reduce endemic
contaminants - Force outgrowth of axillary buds
- Washing removes endemic surface contaminants
31- STAGE II Shoot Production
-
- Stage II selection of cytokinin type and
- concentration determined by
- Shoot multiplication rate
- Length of shoot produced
- Frequency of genetic variability
- Cytokinin effects on rooting and survival
32- STAGE II Shoot Production
- Subculture shoot clusters at 4 -5 week intervals
- 3 -8 fold increase in shoot numbers
- Number of subcultures possible is
- species/cultivar dependent
33- STAGE III Pretransplant (rooting)
- Goals
- Preparation of Stage II shoots/shoot clusters
- for transfer to soil (prehardening)
- Elongation of shoots prior to ex vitro rooting
- Fulfilling dormancy requirements
34STAGE IV Transfer to Natural Environment
Ultimate success of shoot culture depends on
ability to acclimatize vigorously growing
quality plants from in vitro to ex vitro
conditions
35- STAGE IV Transfer to Natural Environment
- Acclimatization
- Process whereby plants physiologically and
- anatomically adjust from in vitro to ex vitro
- cultural and environmental conditions
- Two reasons micropropagated plants may be
difficult to acclimatize ex vitro Low
photosynthetic competence - (heterotrophic nutrition)
- Poor control of water loss
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