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MICROPROPAGATION

MICROPROPAGATION. Introduction. In nature plants propagate either Sexually (seeds generation) results heterogeneity Or Asexually (vegetative multiplication) produce genetically identical plants.

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MICROPROPAGATION

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  1. MICROPROPAGATION

  2. Introduction In nature plants propagate either Sexually (seeds generation) results heterogeneity Or Asexually (vegetative multiplication) produce genetically identical plants. Multiplication of genetically identical copies of a cultivar by asexual reproduction is called clonal propagation. Via tissue culture called micropropagation,

  3. Basic in vitro propagation ...

  4. What is Micropropagation? “… the asexual or vegetative propagation (multiplication) of plants in vitro “ Implies - regeneration - multiplication - uniformity ??

  5. Micropropagation • The art and science of plant multiplication in vitro • Usually derived from meristems (or vegetative buds) without a callus stage • Tends to reduce or eliminate somaclonal variation, resulting in true clones • Can be derived from other explant or callus (but these are often problematic)

  6. Methods of micropropagation • Axillary branching • Adventitious shoot formation (organogenesis) • Somatic embryogenesis • >95% of all micropropagation • Genetically stable • Simple and straightforward • Efficient but prone to genetic instability • Little used. Potentially phenomenally efficient

  7. Axillary shoot proliferation Growth of axillary buds stimulated by cytokinin treatment; shoots arise mostly from pre-existing meristems • 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

  8. Features of Micropropagation • Clonal reproduction • Way of maintaining heterozygozity • Multiplication Stage can be recycled many times to produce an unlimited number of clones • Routinely used commercially for many ornamental species, some vegetatively propagated crops • Easy to manipulate production cycles • Not limited by field seasons/environmental influences • Disease-free plants can be produced • Has been used to eliminate viruses from donor plants

  9. Micropropagation advantages • From one to many propagules rapidly • Multiplication in controlled laboratorium conditions • Continuous propagation year round • Potential for disease-free propagules • Inexpensive per plant once established • Precise crop production scheduling • Reduce stock plant space

  10. Micropropagation 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

  11. Micropropagation 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) • Propagules have enhanced growth features (multibranched character)

  12. Micropropagation (contin) • Positives and negatives of micropropagation • positives • rapid multiplication rates • low space requirement • negatives • labor costs • expensive (equipment, facilities, supplies) • loss by contamination • danger of variation

  13. Steps of Micropropagation • Stage 0 – Selection & preparation of the mother plant • sterilization of the plant tissue takes place • Stage I  - Initiation of culture • explant placed into growth media • Stage II - Multiplication • explant transferred to shoot media; shoots can be constantly divided • Stage III - Rooting • explant transferred to root media • Stage IV - Transfer to soil • explant returned to soil; hardened off

  14. STAGES 1. Selection of plant material 2. Establish aseptic culture 3. Multiplication 4. Shoot elongation 5. Root induction / formation 6. Acclimatization

  15. STAGES 1. Selection of plant material 2. Establish aseptic culture 3. Multiplication 4. Shoot elongation 5. Root induction / formation 6. Acclimatization

  16. Tip bud Starting material formicropropagation Leaf Axillary bud Internode Root

  17. Selection of plant material ... • Part of plant • Genotype • Physiological condition • Season • Position on plant • Size of explant

  18. Physiological state - of stock plant • Vegetative / Floral • Juvenile / Mature • Dormant / Active • Carbohydrates • Nutrients • Hormones

  19. STAGES 1. Selection of plant material 2. Establish aseptic culture 3. Multiplication 4. Shoot elongation 5. Root induction / formation 6. Acclimatization

  20. Disinfestation • Stock plant preparation • Washing in water • Disinfecting solution • Internal contaminants • Screening

  21. The medium • Minerals • Sugar • Organic ‘growth factors’ • Growth regulators • Gelling agent • Other additives

  22. Physical Environment • Temperature • Moisture • Light

  23. STAGES 1. Selection of plant material 2. Establish aseptic culture 3. Multiplication 4. Shoot elongation 5. Root induction / formation 6. Acclimatization

  24. Origins of new shoots ... • Terminal extension • Lateral / Axillary buds • Adventitious (de novo, re-differentiation) • Callus differentiation

  25. auxins cytokinins gibberelic acid ethylene abscisic acid Role of growth regulators ... • Cell division • Differentiation • Cell expansion • Apical dominance

  26. STAGES 1. Selection of plant material 2. Establish aseptic culture 3. Multiplication 4. Shoot elongation 5. Root induction / formation 6. Acclimatization

  27. Shoot elongation ... • Basal ‘hormone free’ medium • Gibberellins • Carry-over of hormones

  28. STAGES 1. Selection of plant material 2. Establish aseptic culture 3. Multiplication 4. Elongation 5. Root induction / formation 6. Acclimatization

  29. Root initiation ... • Auxins • Co-factors • C : N ratio • Light / darkness • Initiation vs growth • Juvenility / rejuvenation • Genotype

  30. STAGES 1. Selection of plant material 2. Establish aseptic culture 3. Multiplication 4. Elongation 5. Root induction / formation 6. Acclimatization

  31. Acclimatization (hardening) - survival of the new plant when removed from the in vitro environment

  32. Micropropagation of almost all the fruit crops and vegetables is possible • Some examples: dwarfing sweet cherry, Shade trees, Ornamental shrubs, Roses, Clematis, Lilacs, Saskatoon berries, Nutraceutical Plants, Rhododendron, Azalea, mustard, corn, soybeans, wheat, rice, cotton, tomato, potato, citrus, turf, legumes

  33. Advantages of Micropropagation • economical in time and space • greater output -can produce millions of uniformly flowering and yielding plants • African Biotechnologies - fruit crops banana and indoor pot flowers- 6 million pieces per year • disease free • elite plants with exceptional characteristics

  34. Advantages Cont’d • facilitates safer movements of germplasm across nations - In vitrogermplasm assures the exchange of pest and disease free material • great for • vegetatively reproduced crops • crops which produce few seeds or highly heterozygous seeds.

  35. Uses of Micropropagation • Used to create transgenic, first generation plants • Used in horticulture to produce orchids, African Violets, lilies, and ferns • Used in nurseries to grow fruit trees, evergreens, roses, and shade trees

  36. Benefits of Micropropagation • Many genetically identical plants can be created from one parent plant • Because plants are clones, the uniformity assures quality • Allows many plants to grow in a small place in a short time • In some species this method will produce healthier plants

  37. Thank You

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