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Plant Tissue Culture Media

Plant Tissue Culture Media. Logical Basis. For healthy and vigorous growth, intact plants need to take up from soil of an essential elements. Essential elements (Epstein, 1971): A plant grown in a medium adequately purged of that elements, failed to grow properly or to complete its life cycle

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Plant Tissue Culture Media

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  1. Plant Tissue Culture Media

  2. Logical Basis For healthy and vigorous growth, intact plants need to take up from soil of an essential elements. • Essential elements (Epstein, 1971): • A plant grown in a medium adequately purged of that elements, failed to grow properly or to complete its life cycle • It is a constituent of a molecule that is known to be an essential metabolite

  3. Essential element • Macro element/major plant nutrition: • Relatively large amount required • a. Carbon (C) d. Nitrogen (N) g. Potassium (K) • b. Hydrogen (H) e. Calcium (Ca) h. Phosphorus (P) • c. Oxygen (O) f. Magnesium (Mg) i. Sulphur (S) • Micro element/ minor plant nutrient/trace elements: • Small quantities required • a. Iron (Fe) f. Sodium (Na) • b. Chlorine (Cl) g. Manganese (Mn) • c. Zinc (Zn) h. Boron (B) • d. Copper (Cu) i. Molybdenum (Mo) • e. Nickel (Ni)

  4. Why plant in vitro culture needs media? Functions of media: • Provide water • Provide mineral nutritional needs • Provide vitamins • Provide growth regulators • Provide amino acids • Provide sugars • Access to atmosphere for gas exchange • Removal of plant metabolite waste

  5. Plant tissue culture media • Macronutrients (always employed) • Micronutrients (nearly always employed, although sometimes just one element, iron, has been used) • Vitamins (generally incorporated , although the actual number of compounds added, varies greatly) • Amino acids and other nitrogen supplements (usually omitted, but sometimes used with advantage) • Sugar (nearly always added, but omitted for some special purposes) • Undefined supplements (which, when used, contribute some above components, and also plant growth substances or regulants) • Buffers (have seldom been used in the past, but recently suggest that the additions of organic acids or buffers could be beneficial in some circumstances) • A solidifying agent (used when a semi solid medium is required)

  6. Macronutrient • Macronutrients for plant tissue culture are provided from salt, however plant absorb entirely as ions • Nitrogen is mainly absorbed in the form of ammonium or nitrate • Phosphorus as the phosphate ions • Sulphur as sulphate ions • The most important step in deriving medium is the selection of macronutrient ions in the correct concentration and balanced • The salts normally used to provide macroelements also provide sodium and chlorine, however, plant cell tolerate high concentration of both ions without injury, these ions are frequently given little importance when contemplating media changes

  7. Quantity of the Macronutrient

  8. Nitrogen • It is essential to plant life • Both growth and morphogenesis is markedly influenced by the availability of nitrogen and the form in which it is presented • Most media contain more nitrate than ammonium ions. Most intact plants, tissues and organ taken up nitrogen effectively, and grow more rapidly on nutrient solutions containing both nitrate and ammonium ions • Nitrate has to be reduced to ammonium before being utilized biosynthetically • Ammonium in high concentration is latent toxic • For most type of culture, nitrate needs to be presented together with the reduced form of nitrogen and tissue will usually fail to grow on a medium with nitrate as the only nitrogen source

  9. NH4+ and NO3- Regulate Medium pH and Root Morphogenesis of Rose Shoots

  10. Amino acids • Amino acids can be added to satisfy the requirement for reduced nitrogen, but as they are expensive to purchase, they will only be used on media for mass propagation where this results in improved result • A casein hydrolysate, yeast extract which mainly consist of a mixture of amino acids substantially increased the yield of callus • Organic supplements have been especially beneficial for growth or morphogenesis when cells were cultured on media which do not contain ammonium ions • Glycine os an ingredient of many media. It is difficult to find hard evidence that glycine is really essential for so many tissue culture, but possible it helps to protect cell membranes from osmotic and temperature stress

  11. Amino Acids • The most common sources of organic nitrogen used in culture media are amino acid mixtures. • Its uptake more rapidly than in organic amino acids . (e.g., casein hydrolysate), L-glutamine, L-asparagine, and adenine. When amino acids are added alone, they can be inhibitory to cell growth. .

  12. Beneficial effects of amino acids • Rapid growth • Protoplast cell division • Conservation of ATP • AS chelating agent • Enhanced nitrogen assimilation • Not toxic as ammonium • As buffer

  13. Phosphorous • It is a vital element in plant biochemistry • It occurs in numerous macromolecules such as nucleic acids, phospholipids and co-enzymes • It functions in energy transfer via pyrophosphate bond I ATP • Phosphate groups attached to different sugar provide energy in respiration and photosynthesis and phosphate bound to proteins regulate their activity • Phosphorous is absorbed into plants in the form of the primary or secondary orthophosphate anions by an active process which requires the expenditure of respiratory energy • Phosphate in not reduced in plants, but it remains in the oxydised form • It is used in plant as the fully oxydised orthophosphate form

  14. Potassium • It is not metabolized • It is a major cation within the plants • It contributes significantly to the osmotic potential of cells • It is transported quickly across cell membrane and two of its major role is regulating the pH and osmotic environment within the cells • Many protein show a high specificity for potassium which acting as a cofactor, alters their configuration so that it become active enzyme • It is also neutralize organic anions produce in the cytoplasm and so stabilize the pH and osmotic potential of the cells

  15. Sodium • It is taken up into plant but in most cases it is not required for growth and development • Many plants actively secret it from their roots to maintain a low internal concentration • It is only appeared to be essential to salt tolerance plant

  16. Magnesium • It is an essential component of the chlorophyll molecules • It is also required non-specifically for the activity of many enzymes, especially in the transfer of phosphate • ATP synthesis has an absolute requirement for magnesium and it is a bridging element in the aggregation of ribosome sub-unit • It is the central atom in the phorphyrin structure of the chlorophyll molecules

  17. Sulfur • It is mainly absorbed as sulfate • Its uptake is coupled to nitrogen assimilation • It is incorporated into chemical compounds mainly as reduced –SH, -S_ or –S-S groups • It is used in lipid synthesis and in regulating the structure of proline through the formation of S-S bridges • It acts as a ligand joining ion of iron, zinc, copper to metalloportein and enzymes

  18. Calcium • It helps to balance anion within the plant • It is not readily mobile • It is involved in the structure and physiologically properties of cell membranes and the middle lamella of the cell walls • The enzyme -(1-3)-glucan synthase depends on calcium ions • It is a cofactor in the enzymes responsible for the hydrolisis of ATP

  19. Chlorine • It has been found to be essential for plant growth • It is sometimes considered as micro nutrient, because it is required in a small amount • It is required for water – splitting protein complex of photosystem II • It can function in osmoregulation in particular stomata guard cell

  20. Micronutrients • Plant requirement for microelement have only been elucidated in the 19th century • In the early of 20th century, uncertainty still existed over the nature of the essential microelements • many tissue undoubtedly grown successfully because they were cultured on media prepared from impure chemicals or solidified with agar which acted as a micronutrient source • In the first instance, the advantage of adding micronutrients was mainly evaluated by their capability to improve the callus growth or root culture • Knudson (1922) incorporated Fe and Mn on very successful orchid seed media • Heller (1953) was first well demonstrated the advantages of microelement on tissue culture media

  21. Why in the first development many tissue were undoubtedly grown successfully in tissue culture media without micronutrient? • Media is solidified with agar which acted as a micronutrient source • Plant cells are more demanding for micronutrients when undergoing morphogenesis

  22. MS medium was formulated from the ash content of tobacco callus. The higher concentration of salts substantially enhanced cell division Quantity of the Micronutrient

  23. Boron (B) • It is involved in plasma membrane integrity and function, probably by influencing membrane protein and cell wall intactness • It is required for the metabolism of phenolic acids, and for lignin biosynthesis • It is probably a component, or co-factor of the enzyme which converts p-coumaric acid to 5-hydroxyferulate • It is necessary for the maintenance of meristematic activity, most likely because it is involved in the synthesis of N-bases • It is also thought to be involved in the maintenance of membrane structure and function, possibly by stabilizing natural metal chelates, which are important in wall and membrane structure and function

  24. Manganese (Mn) • It is the most important micro nutrients • It has similar properties to Magnesium, it is apparently able to replace magnesium is some enzyme systems • It is involved in respiration and photosynthesis as metalloprotein structure • It is known to be required for the activity of several enzymes • It is necessary for the maintenance of chloroplast ultra structure • It is involved in regulation of enzymes and growth hormones. • It assists in photosynthesis and respiration.

  25. Zinc (Zn) • It is a component of stable metallo enzymes with many diverse function • It is required in more than 300 enzymes • Its deficient plants will suffer from reduced enzyme activities and as a consequent will diminute in protein, nucleic acid and chlorophyl synthesis • There is a close relationship between zinc concentration of plants and their auxin content

  26. Copper (Cu) • Plant only contains a few part of million of Cu • It becomes attached to enzymes, many of which bind to and reach with oxygen • It occurs in plastocynain, a pigment participating in electron transport • Highly concentration of Cu can be toxic

  27. Molybdenum (Mo) • It is utilized in the form of hexavalent Mo • It is absorbed as the molybdate ions • It is a component of several plant enzymes, two being nitrate reductase and nitrogenase, in which it is a cofactor together with iron

  28. Cobalt (Co) • It is sometimes not regarded as an essential elements • It might have a role in regulating morhogenesis of higher plants • It is the metal component of vitamin B12 which is concerned with nucleic acid synthesis, though evidence that it has any marked stimulatory effect on growth and morphogenesis is hard to find • It can have a protective action against metal chelate toxicity and it is able to inhibit oxidative reaction catalyzed by copper and iron • Cobalt can inhibit ethylene biosynthesis

  29. Nickel (Ni) • It is a component of urease enzyme which convert urea to ammonia • It has been shown to be an essential micronutrient for some legumes • The presence of Ni strongly stimulate the cell growth in a medium containing urea as a nitrogen source • Agar contains relatively high levels of nickel and the possibility of urea toxicity may have been avoided because in tissue culture media, urea diffuses into the medium

  30. Iodine (I) • It is not recognized as a essential element for plants, although it may be necessary for the growth of some algae and small amount was accumulated in higher plant • It has been added to many tissue culture media • In improve the in vitro root growth • It prevent the explant browning • It enhance the destruction and/or the lateral transport of auxin

  31. Iron (Fe) • A key properties of iron is its capacity to be oxidized easily from the ferrous (Fe(II)) to the ferric (Fe(III)) state and for ferric compounds to be readily reduced back to the ferrous form • Iron is primarily used in the chloroplasts, mitochondria and peroxisomes for effecting oxidation/reduction reaction • It is a component of ferredoxin proteins which function as electron carriers in photosynthesis • Iron is an essential micronutrient for plant tissue culture and can be taken up as either ferrous or ferric ions • Iron may not be available to plant cells, unless the pH falls sufficiently to bring free ions back to solutions • Iron can be chelated with EDTA • The addition of Fe-EDTA chelate greatly improved the availability of the element

  32. Chelating agent • Some organic compounds are capable of forming complexes with metal cations, in which the metal is held with fairly tight chemical bonds • Metal can be bound (sequestered) by a chelating agent and held in solution under conditions where free ions would react with anions to form insoluble compounds, and some complexes can be more chemically reactive than the metals themselves • Chelating agents vary in their sequestering capacity according to chemical structure and their degree of ionisation, which changes with pH of the solution • Naturally –occurring compounds can act as chelating agents such as proteins, peptides, carboxylic acids and amino acids • There are also synthetic chelating agents with high avidity for divalent and trivalent ions

  33. Chelating agents

  34. Carbon Source • Most plant tissue cultures are not highly autotrophic due to limitation of CO2. Therefore, sugar is added to the medium as an energy source. • Sucrose is the most common sugar added, although glucose, fructose, manitol and sorbitol are also used in certain instances. • The concentration of sugars in nutrient media generally ranges from 20 to 40 g/l. • Sugars also contribute to the osmotic potential in the culture • The presence of sucrose specifically inhibits chlorophyll formation and photosynthesis, making autotrophic growth less feasible • Sucrose in the culture media is usually hydrolyzed totally or partially into the component monosaccharides glucose and fructose • The general superiority of sucrose over glucose may be on account of the more effective translocation of sucrose to apical meristems

  35. Organic supplement • Vitamins: Only thiamine (vitamin B1) is essential for most plant cultures, it is required for carbohydrate metabolism and the biosynthesis of some amino acids • Thiamine (vitamin B1) Essential as a coenzyme in the citric acid cycle • Nicotinic acid (niacin) and pyridoxine (B6)

  36. Organic supplement • Myo-inositol Although it is not essential for growth of many plant species, its effect on growth is significant. Part of the B complex, in phosphate form is part of cell membranes, organelles and is not essential to growth but beneficial • Complex organics Such as coconut milk, coconut water, yeast extract, fruit juices and fruit pulps.

  37. Physical support agents • A. Gelling agents • When semi-solid or solid culture media are required, gelling agents are used. • An example: • Agar, agarose, gelrite, phytagel • Structural supports • Filter paper bridges, liquid permeable membrane support systems

  38. Agar • Agar is the most commonly used gelling agent • It is a natural product extracted from species of red algae, especially Gelidiumamansii • It is synthetic polysaccharide gelling agents Agar consists of 2 components • Agarose is an alternating D-galactose and 3,6-anhydro-L-galactose with side chains of 6-methyl-D-galactose residues (50 -90%). • Agaropectin is like agarose but additionally contains sulfate ester side chains and D-glucuronic acid. • Agar tertiary structure is a double helix the central cavity of which can accommodate water molecules

  39. Advantages: • Agar is an inert component, form a gel in water that melt at 100 ° C and solidify at nearly 45 ° C • Concentrations commonly used in plant culture media range between 0.5% and 1% • If necessary, agar can be washed to remove inhibitory organic and inorganic impurities. • Gels are not digested by plant enzymes • Agar does not strongly react with media constituent • Disadvantages: • Agar does not gel well under acidic conditions (pH <4.5). • The inclusion of activated charcoal in media may also inhibit gelling of agar.

  40. Agarose • It is extracted from agar leaving behind agaropectin and its sulfate groups. • It is used when the impurities of agar are a major disadvantage.

  41. Gelrite™ • Gelrite consists of a polysaccharide produced by the bacterium Pseudomonas elodea. • It gives clear-solidified medium that leads to detection of contamination at an early stage. • Gelrite requires more stirring than agar. • Concentration of divalent cations such as calcium and magnesium must be within the range of 4-8 mM/L or the medium will not solidify

  42. Phytagel™ • It is an agar substitute produced from a bacterial substrate composed of glucuronic acid, rhamnose and glucose. • It produces a clear, colorless, high-strength gel, which aids in detection of microbial contamination. • It is used at a concentration of 1.5-2.5 g/L. • It should be prepared with rapid stirring to prevent clumping.

  43. Commercial Media Formulations • Murashige and Skoog (MS) • Linsmaier and Skoog (LS) • White Medium • Gamborg medium • Schenk and Hildebrandt medium • Nitsch and Nitsch Medium • Lloyd and McCown Woody plant medium • Knudson’s medium

  44. Hormone (the Greek word hormaein, meaning "to excite"). Small organic molecule that elicits a physiological response at very low concentrations Chemical signals that coordinate different parts of the organism Internal and external signals that regulate growth are mediated, at least in part, by growth-regulating substances, or hormones

  45. Plant Hormone • A natural substance which produced by plant and acts to control plant activities. • Chemical messengers influencing many patterns of plant development • Naturally occurring or synthetic compounds that affect plant growth and development Plant hormones differ from animal hormones in that:  • No evidence that the fundamental actions of plant and animal hormones are the same. • Unlike animal hormones, plant hormones are not made in tissues specialized for hormone production. (e.g., sex hormones made in the gonads, human growth hormone - pituitary gland)  • Unlike animal hormones, plant hormones do not have definite target areas (e.g., auxins can stimulate adventitious root development in a cut shoot, or shoot elongation or apical dominance, or differentiation of vascular tissue). 

  46. Characteristics • Synthesized by plants. • Show specific activity at very low concentrations • Display multiple functions in plants. • Play a role in regulating physiological phenomena in vivo in a dose-dependent manner • They may interact, either synergistically or antagonistically, to produce a particular effect.

  47. Synthetic plant hormone Plant growth regulators • Growth-inhibiting chemicals • Growth-promoting chemicals • Root-promoting chemicals

  48. Plant hormones as “Chemical Messengers” • Auxins • Cytokinins • Gibberellins • Ethylene

  49. Auxins

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