Plant Tissue Culture Techniques: 6 Methods & Protocols
Plant Genotype
All species of the plants don’t equally respond in tissue culture. Large differences exist between different genotypes, species, or cultivars, making some easily grown and some non-responsive or recalcitrant.
Explant culture
In biology, explant culture is a technique to organotypically culture cells from a piece or pieces of tissue or organ removed from a plant or animal. The term explant can be applied to samples obtained from any part of the organism. The extraction process is extensively sterilized, and the culture can be typically used for two to three weeks.
Types of explants used in tissue culture.
All parts of plants can be used as explants for tissue culture purposes: leaves, stems, a portion of shoots, flowers, anthers, ovary, single undifferentiated cells, or mature tissues. However, the cells should be capable of de-differentiating and resume cell division and have cytoplasm.
Some parts, like the root tip, are rarely used as explants for tissue culture processes. Root tips are difficult to isolate and contain microbes in their tissues, forming a strong association with them. Also, soil particles are attached to roots which are difficult to remove without damaging some tissues.
The age of the explant is an important factor. Young tissues are newly generated, they are better suited for the rough process of surface sterilization.
Different seasons have different effects on the explants. Explants collected during the spring while in their flush state are good examples & in winter their dormant state stop them from growing as explants.
Smaller explants are difficult to culture and are less responsive than the larger size explants. Smaller explants require additional components to sustain the culture.[COLOR="Silver"]
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