Title: Other Plant Tissue Topics
1Other Plant Tissue Topics
2Somaclonal Variation
- Somaclonal variation is a general phenomenon of
all plant regeneration systems that involve a
callus phase - There are two general types
- Heritable, genetic changes (alter the DNA)
- Stable, but non-heritable changes (alter gene
expression, epigenetic) - With or without mutagen
3Somaclonal/Mutation Breeding
- Advantages
- Screen very high populations (cell based)
- Can apply selection to single cells
- Disadvantages
- Many mutations are non-heritable
- Requires dominant mutation (or double recessive
mutation) most mutations are recessive - Can avoid this constraint by not applying
selection pressure in culture, but you lose the
advantage of high through-put screening have to
grow out all regenerated plants, produce seed,
and evaluate the M2
4Somaclonal Breeding Procedures
- Use plant cultures as starting material
- Idea is to target single cells in multi-cellular
culture - Usually suspension culture, but callus culture
can work - Optional apply physical or chemical mutagen
- Apply selection pressure to culture?
- Target very high kill rate, you want very few
cells to survive, so long as selection is
effective - Regenerate whole plants from surviving cells
5Requirements for Somaclonal Breeding
- Effective screening procedure
- Most mutations are deleterious
- With fruit fly, the ratio is 8001 deleterious
to beneficial - Most mutations are recessive
- Must screen M2 or later generations
- Consider using heterozygous plants?
- Haploid plants seem a reasonable alternative if
possible - Very large populations are required to identify
desired mutation - Can you afford to identify marginal traits with
replicates statistics? Estimate 10,000 plants
for single gene mutant - Clear Objective
- Cant expect to just plant things out and see
what happens relates to having an effective
screen - This may be why so many early experiments failed
6Introduction into suspension
Sieve out lumps 1 2
Initial high density
Subculture and sieving
Plate out
7Synchronization
- Cold treatment 4oC
- Starvation deprivation of an essential growth
compound, e.g. N ?accumulation in G1 - Use of DNA synthesis inhibitors thymidine,
5-fluorodeoxyuridine, hydroxyurea - Colchicine method arresting the cells in
metaphase stage, measured in terms of mitotic
index ( cells in the mitotic phase)
8Selection
- Select at the level of the intact plant
- Select in culture
- single cell is selection unit
- possible to plate up to 1,000,000 cells on a
Petri-dish. - progressive selection over a number of phases
9Selection Strategies
- Positive
- Negative
- Visual
- Analytical Screening
10Positive selection
- Add into medium a toxic compound e.g. hydroxy
proline, kanamycin - Only those cells able to grow in the presence of
the selective agent give colonies - Plate out and pick off growing colonies.
- Possible to select one colony from millions of
plated cells in a days work. - Need a strong selection pressure - get escapes
11Negative selection
- Add in an agent that kills dividing cells e.g.
chlorate / BUdR. - Plate out leave for a suitable time, wash out
agent then put on growth medium. - All cells growing on selective agent will die
leaving only non-growing cells to now grow. - Useful for selecting auxotrophs.
12Visual selection
- Only useful for colored or fluorescent compounds
e.g. shikonin, berberine, some alkaloids - Plate out at about 50,000 cells per plate
- Pick off colored / fluorescent-expressing
compounds (cell compounds?) - Possible to screen about 1,000,000 cells in a
days work.
13Analytical Screening
- Cut each piece of callus in half
- One half subcultured
- Other half extracted and amount of compound
determined analytically (HPLC/ GCMS/ ELISA)
14Targets for Somaclonal Variation
- Herbicide resistance and tolerance
- Specific amino acid accumulators
- Screen for specific amino acid production
- e.g.Lysine in cereals
- Abiotic stress tolerance
- Add or subject cultures to selection agente.g.
salt, temperature stress - Disease resistance
- Add toxin or culture filtrate to growth media
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16T-DNA Tagging
- T-DNA is inherited as a single dominant gene
locus - Insertion of the T-DNA can result in a mutation
- Large T-DNA tag populations have been generated
a primary goal is to disrupt the function
(mutate) every gene, it is estimated that300,000
random insertions will saturate the genome with
mutations - Tag insertion of the T-DNA tags the region
in the genome because the T-DNA sequence is known
and it can be located in the genome
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20Embryo Culture
21Embryo Culture Uses
- Rescue F1 hybrids from wide crosses
- Overcome seed dormancy, usually with addition of
hormone (GA) to medium - To overcome immaturity in seeds
- To speed generations in a breeding program
- To rescue a cross or self (valuable genotype)
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23Haploid Plant Production
- Embryo rescue of interspecific crosses
- Bulbosum method
- Anther culture/Microspore culture
- Culturing of anthers or pollen grains
(microspores) - Derive a mature plant from a single microspore
- Ovule culture
- Culturing of unfertilized ovules (macrospores)
24Androgenesis
- History
- 1964, 1966 Datura innoxia (Guha and Maheshwari)
- 1967 Nicotiana tabacum (Nitsch)
- Critical factor - change in developmental
pattern from mature pollen to embryogenesis
25Factors influencing androgenesis
- Genotype of donor plants
- Anther wall factors
- Culture medium and culture density
- Stage of microspore or pollen development
- Effect of temperature and/or light
- Physiological status of donor plant
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28Tetrad
Pollen mother cell
Pollen forming
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32Bulbosum Method
Hordeum bulbosum Wild relative 2n 2X 14
Hordeum vulgare Barley 2n 2X 14
X
?
Embryo Rescue
Haploid Barley 2n X 7 H. Bulbosum chromosomes
eliminated
- This was once more efficient than microspore
culture in creating haploid barley - Now, with an improved culture media (sucrose
replaced by maltose), microspore culture is much
more efficient (2000 plants per 100 anthers)
33Ovule Culture
- Haploids can be induced from ovules
- The number of ovules is less and thus is used
less than anther culture - May be by organogenesis or embryogenesis
- Used in plant families that do not respond to
androgenesis - Liliaceae
- Compositae
34Haploids
- Typically weak, sterile plant
- Usually want to double the chromosomes, creating
a dihaploid plant with normal growth fertility - Chromosomes can be doubled by
- Colchicine treatment
- Spontaneous doubling
35Protoplasts
- Created by degrading the cell wall using enzymes
- Very fragile
36- Protoplasts can be induced to fuse with one
another - Electrofusion A high frequency AC field is
applied between 2 electrodes immersed in the
suspension of protoplasts- this induces charges
on the protoplasts and causes them to arrange
themselves in lines between the electrodes. They
are then subject to a high voltage discharge
which causes their membranes to fuse where they
are in contact. - Polyethylene glycol (PEG) causes agglutination
of many types of small particles, including
protoplasts which fuse when centrifuged in its
presence - Addition of calcium ions at high pH values
37Uses for Protoplast Fusion
- Combine two complete genomes
- Another way to create allopolyploids
- Partial genome transfer
- Exchange single or few traits between species
- May or may not require ionizing radiation
- Genetic engineering
- Micro-injection, electroporation, Agrobacterium
- Transfer of organelles
- Unique to protoplast fusion
- The transfer of mitochondria and/or chloroplasts
between species
38 chloroplast
mitochondria
Fusion
nucleus
heterokaryon
cybrid
hybrid
cybrid
hybrid
39Identifying Desired Fusions
- Complementation selection
- Can be done if each parent has a different
selectable marker (e.g. antibiotic or herbicide
resistance), then the fusion product should have
both markers - Fluorescence-activated cell sorters
- First label cells with different fluorescent
markers fusion product should have both markers - Mechanical isolation
- Tedious, but often works when you start with
different cell types - Mass culture
- Basically, no selection just regenerate
everything and then screen for desired traits
40Germplasm Preservation
- Extension of micropropagation techniques
- Two methods
- 1. Slow growth techniques
- ?Temp., ?Light, media supplements (osmotic
inhibitors, growth retardants), tissue
dehydration, etc - Medium-term storage (1 to 4 years)
- 2. Cryopreservation
- Ultra low temperatures. Stops cell division
metabolic processes - Very long-term (indefinite?)
41Why not seeds?
- Some crops do not produce viable seeds
- Some seeds remain viable for a limited duration
only and are recalcitrant to storage - Seeds of certain species deteriorate rapidly due
to seed borne pathogens - Some seeds are very heterozygous not suitable for
maintaining true to type genotypes - Effective approach to circumvent the above
problems may be application of cryopreservation
technology
42Cryogenic explants
- Undifferentiated plant cells
- Embryonic suspension
- Callus
- Pollen
- Seeds
- Somatic embryos
- Shoot apices
43Cryopreservation
- Requirements
- PreculturingUsually a rapid growth rate to
create cells with small vacuoles and low water
content - CryoprotectionGlycerol, DMSO, PEG, etc, to
protect against ice damage and alter the form of
ice crystals - FreezingThe most critical phase one of two
methods - Slow freezing allows for cytoplasmic dehydration
- Quick freezing results in fast intercellular
freezing with little dehydration
44Cryopreservation Requirements
- Storage
- Usually in liquid nitrogen (-196oC) to avoid
changes in ice crystals that occur above -100oC - Thawing
- Usually rapid thawing to avoid damage from ice
crystal growth - Recovery
- Thawed cells must be washed of cryo-protectants
and nursed back to normal growth - Avoid callus production to maintain genetic
stability
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54Synthetic Seeds
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