Wednesday, July 4, 2018

TISSUE CULTURE

As traditional breeding techniques failed to keep pace with demand and to provide sufficiently fast and efficient systems for crop improvement, another technology called  tissue culture  got developed. What does tissue culture mean? It was learnt by scientists, during 1950s, that whole plants could be regenerated from  explants,  i.e., any part of a plant taken out and grown in a test tube, under sterile conditions in special nutrient media. This capacity to generate a whole plant from any cell/explant is called  totipotency.  You will learn how to accomplish this in higher classes. It is important to stress here that the nutrient medium must provide a carbon source such as sucrose and also inorganic salts, vitamins, amino acids and growth regulators like auxins, cytokinins etc. By application of these methods it is possible to achieve propagation of a large number of plants in very short durations. This method of producing thousands of plants through tissue culture is called  micropropagation. Each of these plants will be genetically identical to the original plant from which they were grown, i.e., they are  somaclones. Many important food plants like tomato, banana, apple, etc., have been produced on commercial scale using this method. Try to visit a tissue culture laboratory with your teacher to better understand and appreciate the process.                                       Another important application of the method is the recovery of healthy plants from diseased plants. Although the plant is infected with a virus, the  meristem  (apical and axillary) is free of virus. Hence, one can remove the  meristem and grow it  in vitro  to obtain virus-free plants. Scientists have succeeded in culturing meristems of banana, sugarcane, potato, etc.                         Scientists have even isolated single cells from plants and after digesting their cell walls have been able to isolate naked protoplasts (surrounded by plasma membranes).  Isolated protoplasts from two different varieties of plants – each having a desirable character – can be fused to get hybrid protoplasts, which can be further grown to form a new plant. These hybrids are called  somatic hybrids  while the process is called  somatic hybridisation. Imagine a situation when a protoplast of tomato is fused with that of potato, and then they are grown – to form new hybrid plants combining tomato and potato characteristics. Well, this has been achieved – resulting in formation of tomato; unfortunately this plant did not have all the desired  combination of  characteristics for its commercial utilisation. 

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