Propagating Plants by Tissue Culture

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Horticultural Science Horticulture CD
Advertisements

By: Johnny M. Jessup Agriculture Teacher/FFA Advisor
Techniques of Plant Propagation
Biotechniques. Tissue Culture (micro-propagation) A method of rapidly cloning desired plants [few weeks]. Plant cells are totipotent (can grow into whole.
Plant Tissue Culture Do you want a footer?.
Chapter 27: Vegetative propagation Leaving Certificate Biology Higher Level.
Cloning Describe the production of natural clones in plants: vegetative propagation in elm trees.
Asexual Reproduction in Flowering Plants or Vegetative Propagation
5 d) Cloning 5.17 describe the process of micropropagation (tissue culture) in which small pieces of plants (explants) are grown in vitro using nutrient.
Asexual Propagation AG-GH-2.
Plant Tissue Culture A rice plant growing in nutrient rich agar
PLANT PROPAGATION Propagation The multiplication of a kind or species. Reproduction of a species.
GREENHOUSE MANAGEMENT Asexual Propagation. Objectives Define terms associated with asexual propagation. Explain how the different methods of asexual propagation.
Vegetative Propagation of Horticulture Plants by Cuttings
Plant Tissue Cultures.
Plant Tissue Culture Used for 1. Micropropagation 2. Regeneration
Cloning Part 2.
Laboratory Exercise – Seed germination of Bean and Corn
Asexual Reproduction in Plants
Plant Propagation The reproduction of new plants from seeds or vegetative parts of a plant.
Reminder - Your Tasks for Monday 1. Home Learning – Assessed Report Using drosophila as an example explain the process of differentiation of cells into.
Cloning outline the differences between reproductive and non-reproductive cloning; describe the production of natural clones in plants using the example.
F215 control, genomes and environment Module 2 – Biotechnology and gene technologies.
Recognizing the Agricultural Applications of Biotechnology.
Plant Propagation
Tissue Culture Unit one Cell and Molecular Biology Advanced Higher Biology.
Unit 1 Cell and Molecular Biology Section 3 Cell, tissue and plant tissue culture.
Structure, function and growth of prokaryote and eukaryote cells
Cloning Noadswood Science, Cloning To understand the process of cloning Friday, September 18, 2015.
Biotechnology in Agriculture Chapter 11.
Lesson 6 Propagating Plants by Tissue Culture. Next Generation Science/Common Core Standards Addressed! zHS ‐ LS1 ‐ 1. Construct an explanation based.
Recognizing the Agricultural Applications of Biotechnology.
Unit Plant Science. Problem Area Reproduction in Plants.
Horticulture Science Lesson 19 Propagating Plants by Tissue Culture
Softwood and Semihardwood Cuttings and Micro propagation
Plant Tissue Culture.
Basic Principles of Agricultural/Horticultural Science
Plant and Mammalian Tissue Culture Plant Culture Laboratory - Start Flytrap or Rose Culture.
Chpt. 8 Cell Diversity Cells are not identical - they diversify their structure to suit their function!!!!!!!
2.5 Asexual reproduction in plants. Propagation  Asexual reproduction: Asexual reproduction is a mode of reproduction by which offspring arise from a.
Plant Tissue Culture Project. What is Plant Tissue Culture? Plant tissue culture is a form of asexual propagation of plants under laboratory conditions.
Basic Principles & Protocol in Plant Tissue Culture
Mitosis is the type of cell division that produces new cells for growth and to replace old cells that are worn out, damaged or dead. An application of.
CONTENT INTRODUCTION REQUIREMENT PROCEDURE IMPORTANCE DISADVANTAGES
Plant Propagation Essential Standard 4.00: Examine factors relating to plant growth and development.
PROPAGATING PLANTS ASEXUALLY Unit. Plant Science Problem Area. Plant Propagation.
Plant Propagation By: Johnny M. Jessup Agriculture Teacher/FFA Advisor.
Sexual & Asexual Reproduction. Introduction  Plant reproduction is necessary for the survival and perpetuation of plant species.  Plants have the capability.
What is Tissue Culture A very technical method of asexual propagation The growing of plantlets from small pieces of plant tissue from a parent plant.
MICROPROPAGATION.
IGCSE BIOLOGY SECTION 5 LESSON 3. Content Section 5 Uses of biological resources a)Food production b)Selective breeding c)Genetic modification (genetic.
Unit C 4-10 Basic Principles of Agricultural/Horticultural Science.
Unit 17 Agriscience Plant Reproduction The reason plants do such a good job of surviving all the problem That the environment throws at them is that they.
Plant Propagation Creating New Plants. Sexual Reproduction (recap) Fusion of the pollen with the ovule to create an embryo found encased in a seed. Fusion.
OBJECTIVE: HOW AND WHY DO PEOPLE/SCIENTISTS MANIPULATE DNA IN LIVING CELLS? Genetic Engineering.
Sexual & Asexual Reproduction Vegetative Parts in Asexual Reproduction: Presentation 3 of 3.
Tissue Culture Tissue Culture is a method in which a few cells from the vegetative plant body are taken and kept in a nutrient medium.
4.00: Analyze the process of growth in horticultural plants
Title: Clones in nature
Clone A group of genetically identical organisms.
Miss Minix Tarleton State University
MICROPROPAGATION.
Propagating Plants Asexually
Plant Tissue Culture Do you want a footer?.
& presents Plant Tissue Culture.
Micro-propagation Tissue Culture.
Plant Propagation Horticulture Ms. Bond.
Micropropagation Dr. Kunzes Angmo Lecturer Department of Biotechnology
Plant Tissue Culture Definitions and How To’s
Plant Tissue Culture?.
Presentation transcript:

Propagating Plants by Tissue Culture

Terms agar aseptic autoclave callous explants laminar airflow hoods plantlets tissue culture

Totipotency… each living cell has a complete genetic blue print cells lines differentiate unlike animal cells, living plant cells can re-differentiate

What is tissue culture and why is it important? Tissue culture is a very technical method of asexual propagation that involves the growing of plant cells or tissues on artificial media under sterile conditions. It is also referred to as micropropagation.

What is tissue culture and why is it important? Research is producing advances in tissue culture techniques. As a result, more and more types of plants are being propagated by tissue culture, including: 1. Foliage plants 2. Woody ornamentals 3. Perennials 4. Cut flowers

What is tissue culture and why is it important? There are several advantages to tissue culture over other methods of propagation. 1. Large numbers of plants can be produced from a single plant in a relatively small space and in a short period of time. This reduces growing space, labor, and plant maintenance requirements. 2. Viruses and other systemic diseases are eliminated by propagating the quickly dividing cells of the shoot tip.

What is tissue culture and why is it important? 3. Tissue culture gives the grower a means to produce plants with identical traits. 4. Horticultural cultivars can be improved by selecting plants that vary slightly from the parent plant. Examples of characteristics subject to improvement are leaf shape, disease resistance, growth habit, and flower color.

What is tissue culture and why is it important? 5. Tissue culture is a required technique for producing genetically engineered plants. Genetically modified cells must be induced to divide and undergo cell differentiation in vitro, or in glass, before they are grown to maturity. 6. Tissue culture results in excellent basal branching of some plants. Some foliage plants produced by tissue culture have excellent multi-stem characteristics.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? The tissue culture propagation process can be defined in four main stages. In the first stage, small pieces of plant material, called explants, are carefully removed from the parent plant. Explants are obtained from actively growing parts (e.g., shoot tips, sections of leaves, stems and roots, or embryos) of a desired plant.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? Explants have bacteria or fungal spores on the tissue surface. Therefore, they must be cleaned before being placed in the culture. A short bath in a 10 percent bleach solution, followed by a rinse in sterile water, is often effective in killing microorganisms.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? 1. From this point until stage 4, tissue culture must be done under aseptic, or sterile, conditions. The presence of any bacteria or fungal spores will contaminate the culture.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? 2. Tissue culture labs are designed to provide a clean environment. Technicians scrub much like surgeons do before surgery. Media, tools, and bottles or jars are sterilized in an autoclave. Autoclaving involves the heating of the materials to 245°F for 15 minutes to kill all bacteria and fungi. Also, to lessen the chance of contamination, work with the cultures is done under laminar airflow hoods. Laminar airflow hoods filter bacteria and fungal spores from the air.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? 3. Explants are placed on sterile agar media in glass bottles or test tubes. Agar is a gel that contains water, sugars, nutrients, and plant hormones to support and promote plant growth.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? In stage 2, the cells of the explants multiply in one of two ways. 1. They may form callous tissue, which is a group of cells with no particular function. Given the right hormones in the medium, these callous cells differentiate and develop into small plantlets consisting of leaves and stems.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? 2. The other possibility for stage 2 involves the rapid multiplication of plantlets. Cytokinins placed in the medium encourage an increase in the number of buds on the explants, usually six to eight per shoot. Each bud is capable of becoming a plant and producing more buds.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? Branching occurs as these buds develop into shoots, or plantlets. These plantlets are divided and transferred to test tubes or jars. New plantlets are continually cycled to new containers. In this way, a single explant can produce millions of plantlets in a year.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? When the plantlets have developed, they are ready for the third stage, the formation of roots. Shoots are transplanted to a medium containing a higher level of auxins. The auxins induce the growth of roots. The plantlets are also given higher light intensity in preparation for stage 4.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? In stage 4, the plantlets are removed from the glass containers and divided. Agar is washed from the plants. They are planted in a sterile growing medium and placed in a greenhouse.

What process is used for tissue culture propagation? Since the humidity in the greenhouse is much lower than in the glass containers, care must be taken during this transition to acclimatize the plants to a drier environment. It is a common practice to place the young plants under a misting system until they grow accustomed to the environment and develop a stronger root system.