Monday 21 May 2012

INTRODUCTION OF PLANT TISSUE CULTURE


What is Plant Tissue Culture??

Plant tissue culture can be defined as culture of plant seeds, organs, explants, tissues, cells, or protoplasts on nutrient media under sterile conditions. Broadly refers to technique of growing plant cells, tissues, organs, seeds or other plant parts in a sterile environment on a nutrient medium. The first commercial use of plant propagation on artificial media was in the germination and growth of orchid plants in the 1920’s. It was only after the development of a reliable artificial medium by Murashige & Skoog in 1962 that plant tissue culture really took off commercially.

In agriculture, plant cell, tissue and organ culture is used for rapid and economic clonal multiplication of fruit and forest trees, for production of virus free genetic stocks and planting material as well as in the creation of novel genetic variations through somaclonal variation. Genetic engineering techniques are utilized to produce transgenic plants with desirable genes like disease resistance, herbicide resistance, increased shelf life of fruits etc.




History of Plant Tissue Culture

1902: First attempted by Haberlandt. They grew palisade cells from leaves of various plants but they did not divide.

1934: White generated continuously growing culture of meristematic cells of tomato on medium containing salts, yeast extract and sucrose and 3 vitamin B (pyridoxine, thiamine, nicotinic acid) – established the importance of additives.

1953: Miller and Skoog, University of Wisconsin – Madison discovered kinetin, a cytokine that plays an active role in organogenesis.

1958 – 1960: Morel cultured orchids and dahlias freed them from a viral disease.

1962: Murashige and Skoog published recipe for M&S medium.

60’s and 70’s: Murashige cloned plants in vitro. They raised haploid plants from pollen grains and used protoplast fusion to hybridize 2 species of tobacco into one plant contained 4N.

70’s and 80’s: Beginning of genetic engineering.


Why do plant tissue culture?

•  Fast commercial propagation of new cultivars

• Agriculture
– Fast selection for crop improvement – nutritional value, pest control, hardiness
– Cultivation virus free plants

• Pharmaceuticals – ginseng and taxol

• Cloning of rare and endangered plants

• Plant cultures in approved media are easier and safer to export.

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