Plant propagation by tissue culture, george 2007 parte1

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Plant Propagation by Tissue Culture 3rd Edition


Plant Propagation by Tissue Culture 3rd Edition Volume 1. The Background Edited by

Edwin F. George Merriott, Somerset, United Kingdom

Michael A. Hall Institute of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, United Kingdom

and Geert-Jan De Klerk Plant Research International, Wageningen, The Netherlands


A C.I.P. Catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress.

ISBN 978-1-4020-5004-6 (HB) ISBN 978-1-4020-5005-3 (e-book) Published by Springer, P.O. Box 17, 3300 AA Dordrecht, The Netherlands. www.springer.com

Printed on acid-free paper

All Rights Reserved Š 2008 Springer No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording or otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher, with the exception of any material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work.


Contents Preface

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Biographical Notes on Contributors

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1

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background E.F. George

1

2

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods E.F. George and P.C. Debergh

29

3

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I : Macro- and Micro-Nutrients E.F. George and G-J. de Klerk

4

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II : Organic Additions, Osmotic and pH Effects, and Support Systems T. Thorpe, C. Stasolla, E.C. Yeung, G-J. de Klerk, A. Roberts and E.F. George

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5

Plant Growth Regulators I: Introduction; Auxins, their Analogues and Inhibitors I. Machakova, E. Zazimalova and E.F. George

175

6

Plant Growth Regulators II: Cytokinins, their Analogues and Antagonists J. van Staden, E. Zazimalova and E.F. George

205

7

Plant Growth Regulators III: Gibberellins, Ethylene, Abscisic Acid, their Analogues and Inhibitors; Miscellaneous Compounds I.E. Moshkov, G.V. Novikova, M.A. Hall and E.F. George

227

8

Developmental Biology D. Chriqui

283

9

Somatic Embryogenesis S. Von Arnold

335

10

Adventitious Regeneration P.B. Gahan and E.F. George

355

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Stock Plant Physiological Factors Affecting Growth and Morphogenesis J. Preece

403

12

Effects of the Physical Environment E.F. George and W. Davies

423

13

The Anatomy and Morphology of Tissue Cultured Plants M. Ziv and J. Chen

465

Index

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479

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Preface It is now more than twenty years since the first edition of this work appeared and nearly fifteen since the second. Whilst much of the information in those editions has stood the test of time, inevitably, because of the pace of research, a new edition is clearly timely. This is true, not only because many more species have been the subject of propagation studies, but because the background to the field – with which this volume deals – has changed almost out of all recognition. In particular, our knowledge of plant development, genetics physiology, biochemistry and molecular biology has expanded exponentially – often through work on mutants of Arabidopsis – and opened up many new avenues for the plant propagator to explore. Equally, the commercial significance of plant propagation has increased significantly. As an example, in the second edition there was a single chapter on plant growth regulators – in this there are three, reflecting the fact that not only is there more information on those PGRs we recognised in 1993, but that several new ones are now known. Equally, fifteen years ago we knew little of the molecular basis of plant development e.g. flower and shoot development, in this edition it has merited a whole chapter, much of which relates to discoveries in the last decade. Because of these factors, it was felt that a different approach was required for this edition. The second edition was researched and written by Edwin George alone but it would now be very difficult for a single author to gain the breadth of expertise necessary to cover all the relevant aspects of this many-faceted subject. Hence, it was decided to adopt a multi-author approach, with chapters written by experts in their fields. These build upon the sound framework of the previous editions (which those with a knowledge of the previous works will recognise). Many sections of the previous work have been retained, but inevitably, apart from up-to-date reference lists, the text has undergone major revision in many areas. Like the previous edition, the current one will appear in two volumes, but coverage has been extended and the order in which subjects are covered has been changed. Therefore, some topics, previously covered in Part 1, will now be discussed in Part 2. The ethos of the work is, as before, to produce an encyclopaedic text. The first initiative to begin the new revision of Plant Propagation by Tissue Culture was made by Prof. A.C. Cassells and the editors are grateful to him for his early leadership. No work of this size can be accomplished successfully without much goodwill and hard work by the contributors, and to them the editors express their deepest thanks. We also express our sincere thanks to all those who have allowed us to use their material in diagrams and illustrations. We are very appreciative of the hard work by Dr. Susan Rafferty-McArdle of University College Cork in formatting the text, and to Dr. Jacco Flipsen of Springer for his support. Edwin George Mike Hall Geert-Jan de Klerk May 2007

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Biographical Notes on Contributors researcher. His areas of interest include developmental plant physiology, experimental plant morphogenesis and micropropagation, mainly of woody plants. He was a former Chairman of the International Association for Plant Tissue Culture and former editor-in-chief of In Vitro Cellular and Developmental Biology – Plant.

Chapter 1. Edwin. F. George trained as a botanist at Imperial College, London and subsequently gained a PhD, working on breeding and selection of sugar cane at the Mauritius Sugar Industry Research Institute. He was later employed by ICI Ltd. and Plant Protection Ltd. to study plant growth regulating compounds and subjects for corporate research. He finally became an independent consultant and researched extensively into plant genetic engineering and especially plant tissue culture. This resulted in the books Plant Culture Media, Vols. 1 and 2 (1987), and Plant Propagation by Tissue Culture. The latter work was first published in 1984 and then extensively revised and extended to two volumes in 1993 and 1996. The present book is based on the first volume of the 2nd edition of Plant Propagation by Tissue Culture. Dr. George prepared the diagrams for the current revision although he is now retired.

Edward C Yeung was a PhD student of I Sussex at Yale University. He is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Plant Science at the University of Manitoba (Canada). His research interests are structural, physiological and biochemical ontogeny of plant embryogenesis and floral biology of orchids Claudio Stassolla was a PhD student of Edward Yeung at the University of Manitoba, (Canada). His research is on plant somatic embryogenesis in vitro. Andy V Roberts is Emeritus Professor in the School of Health and Biosciences at the University of East London (UK). His research interests are the use of in vitro methods for the propagation and genetic improvement of woody plants, particularly roses.

Chapter 2. Pierre C Debergh is Emeritus-Professor of the University of Gent (Belgium) since 2004 and specialised in micropropagation since 1968. His major interest is in tissue culture (sensu largo) and horticulture applied to western and developing countries (Asia, Africa and the Carribean). He is editor of Plant Cell Reports; Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture and the South African Journal of Botany. He is author of approx. 100 publications and supervisor of 35 PhD dissertations and more than 250 MSc dissertations.

Geert-Jan de Klerk (see chapter 3) Chapter 5. Ivana Machackova is a Professor at the Institute of Experimental Botany of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic in Prague (Czech Republic). She is Head of the Laboratory of Plant Morphogenesis and Director of the Institute. She lectures in the Department of Plant Physiology at the Charles University in Prgaue. Her research interests are in the area of plant growth substances (auxins, ethylene, abscisic acid and melatonin); their modes of action and metabolism, regulation of their levels in relation to plant development and electrophysiology.

Chapter 3. Geert-Jan de Klerk is senior scientist in plant tissue culture since 1986, first in The Centre for Plant Tissue Culture Research in Lisse (Netherlands) and now in Plant Research International, Wageningen University (Netherlands). His main research interests concern plant developmental biology. He is editorin-chief of Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture and editor of Propagation of Ornamental Plants.

Eva Zazimalova is an Associate Professor of Plant Physiology at the Institute of Experimental Botany of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic in Prague. She is Head of the Laboratory of Hormonal Regulation in Plants and Deputy Director of the Institute. She also teaches in the Department of Plant Physiology at the Charles University in Prague. Her research is in the fields of auxin and cytokinins (mode of action of auxin, auxin binding site(s), regulation of levels of auxins and cytokinins in relation to cell division and elongation and the mechanism of polar transport of auxin).

Chapter 4. Trevor A Thorpe was a PhD student of Toshio Murashige at the University of California, Riverside (USA). He was a Faculty Professor and now Professor Emeritus in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He retired in 1997 but is still an active ix


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Biographical Notes on Contributors

Chapter 6. Johannes van Staden was awarded his PhD (Botany) in 1970 and lectured in this field until 2003. He is a Professor and Director of the Research Institute for Plant Growth and Development, School of Biological and Conservation Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa). His main interests are in the hormonal regulation of plant growth, seed germination, plant tissue culture and ethnobotany/medicine. Eva Zazimalova (see chapter 5). Chapter 7. Igor E Moshkov is a Leading Researcher in plant physiology and biochemistry and Deputy Director at the Timiryazev Institute of Plant Physiology, Russian Academy of Science, Moscow. His research is focussed on ethylene signal perception and transduction, the interaction between ethylene and cytokinin at the level of hormone perception and signal transduction pathways and GTP-binding proteins in phytohormone signalling. Galina V Novikova is a Leading Researcher in plant physiology and biochemistry at the Timiryazev Institute of Plant Physiology, Russian Academy of Science, Moscow. Her research is related to the mode of action of phytohormone action (cytokinins and ethylene) and interactions of the phytohormones, protein phosphorylation/dephosphorylation in relation to phytohormone signal perception and transduction and MAPK cascades in phytohormone signal transduction. Michael A Hall has been Professor of Botany at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth (UK) since 1981. His research is involved with signal perception and transduction mechanisms for plant hormones, especially ethylene, as well as the role of hormones in the responses of plants to environmental stress. Chapter 8. Dominique Chriqui is Professor and Director of a laboratory of plant development at the University Pierre and Marie Curie, Paris (France). She has been involved for many years in research on the cellular and molecular features that underlie morphogenic events such as rhizogenesis and shoot regeneration, both in planta and in vitro. She is now particularly interested in the early events of the regenerative process and in the interfaces between hormones, cell cycle and developmental genes and has published approx. 100 papers in the field of plant morphogenesis.

Chapter 9. Sara von Arnold holds a PhD from Uppsala University (1979), Sweden. She has been a full Professor in the Cell Biology of forest trees at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala since 1988. Her research focusses on developmental processes in conifers and especially somatic embryogenesis. Chapter 10. Peter B Gahan is Emeritus Professor of Cell Biology at King’s College London (UK) with fifty years of research and teaching experience in plant and animal biology. He is interested in the mechanism of competence and recalcitrance of plant cells to regenerate and also in the role of DNA as a messenger between cells and tissues. Chapter 11. John Preece is a horticulture professor in the Department of Plant, Soil and Agricultural Systems at Southern Illinois University Carbondale (USA). He teaches courses in General Horticulture, Plant Propagation and Plant Growth and Development. He conducts research on various aspects of woody plant propagation. Along with his postgraduates, he was the first to publish micropropagation protocols for a number of woody species and the first to work out somatic embryogenesis and shoot morphogenesis of Fraxinus americana (white ash) and Juglans nigra (eastern black walnut). Chapter 12. William (Bill) Davies is currently Professor of Environmental Plant Biology at Lancaster University (UK) and Director of the Lancaster Environmental centre, one of the largest groups of environmetal researchers in Europe. He obtained his first degree in Horticultural Science from the University of Reading (UK) and his PhD in Forestry and Botany from the University of Wisconsin, Madison (USA). His research interests include regulation of growth and functioning of plants experiencing environmental stress; stomatal physiology, root to shoot communication via chemical signalling in plants; environmental physiology of crops and native species; crop improvement for water-scarce environments; irrigation science and enhancing the efficiency of crop water use through novel management techniques. He has published more than 200 papers in international plant science journals and edited 17 books. He is a member of the ISI database of ‘Highly Cited Researchers’ in Plant and Animal Sciences. He is a member of the Defra Horticulture


Biographical Notes on Contributors

Link programme Management Committee and editorin-chief of the Journal of Experimental Botany. Chapter 13. Meira Ziv is a Professor in the Robert H Smith Institute of Plant Science and Genetics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Israel). Her research interests are in the physiology and morphogenesis of plant organogenesis and somatic embryogenesis in large scale liquid cultures; shoot-malformation, hyperhydricity and the role of oxidative stress in the

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control of plant development in bioreactor cultures for efficient acclimatization and survival ex vitro; bulb and corm development in geophytes cultured in liquid cultures in relation to carbohydrate metabolism. Jianxin Chen is a research scientist in the Department of Biology at Brock University, Ontario (Canada). His interests are in large-scale micropropagation, metabolic pathways and cloning of medicinal plants and plant breeding.


Chapter 1 Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background 1. INTRODUCTION organogenesis or morphogenesis (the development of form).

Plant tissue culture is the science of growing plant cells, tissues or organs isolated from the mother plant, on artificial media. It includes techniques and methods used to research into many botanical disciplines and has several practical objectives. Before beginning to propagate plants by tissue culture methods, it is necessary to have a clear understanding of the ways in which plant material can be grown and manipulated in ‘test tubes’. This chapter therefore describes the techniques that have been developed for the isolation and in vitro culture of plant material, and shows where further information can be obtained. Both organised and unorganised growth are possible in vitro.

1.2. UNORGANISED GROWTH

The growth of higher plants depends on the organised allocation of functions to organs which in consequence become differentiated, that is to say, modified and specialised to enable them undertake their essential roles. Unorganised growth is seldom found in nature, but occurs fairly frequently when pieces of whole plants are cultured in vitro. The cell aggregates, which are then formed, typically lack any recognisable structure and contain only a limited number of the many kinds of specialised and differentiated cells found in an intact plant. A differentiated cell is one that has developed a specialised form (morphology) and/or function (physiology). A differentiated tissue (e.g. xylem or epidermis) is an aggregation of differentiated cells. So far, the formation of differentiated cell types can only be controlled to a limited extent in culture. It is not possible, for example, to maintain and multiply a culture composed entirely of epidermal cells. By contrast, unorganised tissues can be increased in volume by subculture and can be maintained on semisolid or liquid media for long periods. They can often also be used to commence cell suspension cultures. Differentiation is also used botanically to describe the formation of distinct organs through morphogenesis.

1.1. ORGANISED GROWTH

Organised growth contributes towards the creation or maintenance of a defined structure. It occurs when plant organs such as the growing points of shoots or roots (apical meristems), leaf initials, young flower buds or small fruits, are transferred to culture and continue to grow with their structure preserved. Growth that is coherently organised also occurs when organs are induced. This may occur in vitro either directly upon an organ or upon a piece of tissue placed in culture (an explant), or during the culture of previously unorganised tissues. The process of de novo organ formation is called

2. TISSUE CULTURE • Shoot tip, or shoot cultures, started from excised shoot tips, or buds, larger than the shoot apices employed to establish meristem cultures, having several leaf primordia. These shoot apices are usually cultured in such a way that each produces multiple shoots. • Node cultures of separate lateral buds, each carried on a small piece of stem tissue; stem pieces carrying either single or multiple nodes may be cultured. Each bud is grown to provide a single shoot. • Isolated root cultures. The growth of roots, unconnected to shoots: a branched root system may be obtained.

2.1. CULTURES OF ORGANISED STRUCTURES

Organ culture is used as a general term for those types of culture in which an organised form of growth can be continuously maintained. It includes the aseptic isolation from whole plants of such definite structures as leaf primordia, immature flowers and fruits, and their growth in vitro. For the purposes of plant propagation, the most important kinds of organ culture are: • Meristem cultures, in which are grown very small excised shoot apices, each consisting of the apical meristematic dome with or without one or two leaf primordia. The shoot apex is typically grown to give one single shoot. 1

E. F. George et al. (eds.), Plant Propagation by Tissue Culture 3rd Edition, 1–28. © 2008 Springer.


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Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

• Embryo cultures, where fertilised or unfertilised zygotic (seed) embryos are dissected out of developing seeds or fruits and cultured in vitro until they have grown into seedlings. Embryo culture is quite distinct from somatic embryogenesis (see below). These types of cultures are described in more detail later in this chapter. 2.2. CULTURES OF UNORGANISED TISSUES

‘Tissue culture’ is commonly used as a collective term to describe all kinds of in vitro plant cultures although strictly it should refer only to cultures of unorganised aggregates of cells. In practice the following kinds of cultures are most generally recognised: • Callus (or tissue) cultures. The growth and maintenance of largely unorganised cell masses, which arise from the uncoordinated and disorganised growth of small plant organs, pieces of plant tissue, or previously cultured cells. • Suspension (or cell) cultures. Populations of plant cells and small cell clumps, dispersed in an agitated, that is aerated, liquid medium. • Protoplast cultures. The culture of plant cells that have been isolated without a cell wall. • Anther cultures. The culture of complete anthers containing immature pollen microspores. The objective is usually to obtain haploid plants by the formation of somatic embryos (see below) directly from the pollen, or sometimes by organogenesis via callus. Pollen cultures are those initiated from pollen that has been removed from anthers. 2.3. USING TISSUE CULTURES FOR PLANT PROPAGATION

The objective of plant propagation via tissue culture, termed micropropagation, is to propagate plants true-to-type, that is, as clones. Plants obtained from tissue culture are called microplants and can be derived from tissue cultures in three ways: • from pre-existing shoot buds or primordial buds (meristems) which are encouraged to grow and proliferate; • following shoot morphogenesis when new shoots are induced to form in unorganised tissues or directly upon explanted tissues of the mother plant; • through the formation of somatic embryos which resemble the seed embryos of intact plants, and which can grow into seedlings in the same way. This process is called somatic embryogenesis.

To obtain plants by the first two of these methods, it is necessary to treat shoots of an adequate size as miniature cuttings and induce them to produce roots. The derivation of new plants from cells, which would not normally have taken part in the process of regeneration, shows that living, differentiated plant cells may express totipotency, i.e. they each retain a latent capacity to produce a whole plant. Totipotency is a special characteristic of cells in young tissues and meristems. It can be exhibited by some differentiated cells, e.g. cambial cells and leaf palisade cells but not those which have developed into terminally differentiated structures (e.g. sieve tubes or tracheids). Theoretically, plant cells, organs, or plants, can all be cloned, i.e., produced in large numbers as a population where all the individuals have the same genetic constitution as the parent. Present tissue culture techniques do not permit this in every case and irregularities do sometimes occur, resulting in ‘somaclonal variants’ (Larkin and Scowcroft, 1981). Nevertheless, as will be described in the chapters, which follow, a very large measure of success can be achieved and cultures of various kinds can be used to propagate plants. 2.4. INITIATING TISSUE CULTURES

2.4.1. Explants

Tissue cultures are started from pieces of whole plants. The small organs or pieces of tissue that are used are called explants. The part of the plant (the stock plant or mother plant) from which explants are obtained, depends on: • the kind of culture to be initiated; • the purpose of the proposed culture; • the plant species to be used. Explants can therefore be of many different kinds. The correct choice of explant material can have an important effect on the success of tissue culture. Plants growing in the external environment are invariably contaminated with micro-organisms and pests. These contaminants are mainly confined to the outer surfaces of the plant, although, some microbes and viruses may be systemic within the tissues (Cassells, 1997). Because they are started from small explants and must be grown on nutritive media that are also favourable for the growth of microorganisms, plant tissue cultures must usually be established and maintained in aseptic conditions. Most kinds of microbial organism, and in particular bacteria and fungi, compete adversely with plant material growing in vitro. Therefore, as far as


Chapter 1

possible, explants must be free from microbial contaminants when they are first placed on a nutrient medium. This usually involves growing stock plants in ways that will minimise infection, treating the plant material with disinfecting chemicals to kill superficial microbes, and sterilising the tools used for dissection and the vessels and media in which cultures are grown (for a review see Cassells and Doyle, 2005). Some kinds of plants can, however, be micropropagated in non-sterile environments (see Chapter 3). 2.4.2. Isolation and incubation

The work of isolating and transferring cultured plant material is usually performed in special rooms or inside hoods or cabinets from which microorganisms can be excluded. Cabinets used for isolation can be placed in a draught-free part of a general laboratory, but are much better situated in a special inoculation or transfer room reserved for the purpose. The accommodation, equipment and methods that are required for successful inoculation and transfer are described in Volume 2. Cultures, once initiated, are placed in incubators or growth rooms where lighting, temperature and humidity can be controlled. The rate of growth of a culture will depend on the temperature (and sometimes the lighting) regime adopted.

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• an energy source (usually sucrose). The components of plant tissue culture media are discussed in Chapters 3 and 4. The compositions of specific media are described in Volume 2. Growth and development of plant cultures usually also depends on the addition of plant growth regulators to the medium (see Chapters 5, 6 and 7). Plant growth regulators are compounds, which, at very low concentration, are capable of modifying growth or plant morphogenesis. Many workers define a medium as a completed mixture of nutrients and growth regulators. This is a rather inflexible method, as growth regulators frequently need to be altered according to the variety of plant, or at different stages of culture, whilst the basic medium can stay unchanged. It is therefore recommended that nutritional and regulatory components should be listed separately. Plant material can be cultured either in a liquid medium or on a medium that has been partially solidified with a gelling agent (see Chapter 4). The method employed will depend on the type of culture and its objective. 2.4.5. Solidified media

Plant cultures are commenced by placing one or more explants into a pre-sterilised container of sterile nutrient medium. Some explants may fail to grow, or may die, due to microbial contamination: to ensure the survival of an adequate number, it therefore is usual to initiate several cultures at the same time, each being started from an identical organ or piece of tissue. Explants taken from stock plants at different times of the year may not give reproducible results in tissue culture. This may be due to variation in the level of external contaminants or because of seasonal changes in endogenous (internal) growth regulator levels in the stock plant (see Chapter 11).

Media which have had a gelling agent added to them, so that they have become semi-solid, are widely used for explant establishment; they are also employed for much routine culture of callus or plant organs (including micropropagation), and for the long-term maintenance of cultures. Agar is the most common solidifying agent, but a gellan gum is also widely used (Chapter 4). Cultures grown on solid media are kept static. They require only simple containers of glass or plastic, which occupy little space. Only the lower surface of the explant, organ or tissue is in contact with the medium. This means that as growth proceeds there may be gradients in nutrients, growth factors and the waste products of metabolism, between the medium and the tissues. Gaseous diffusion into and out of the cells at the base of the organ or tissue may also be restricted by the surrounding medium.

2.4.4. Media

2.4.6. Liquid media

2.4.3. The cultural environment

Plant material will only grow in vitro when provided with specialised media. A medium usually consists of a solution of salts supplying the major and minor elements necessary for the growth of whole plants, together with: • various vitamins (optional); • various amino acids (optional);

Liquid media are essential for suspension cultures, and are preferred for critical experiments on the nutrition, growth and cell differentiation in callus tissues. They are also used in some micropropagation work. Very small organs (e.g. anthers) are often floated on the top of liquid medium and plant cells or protoplasts can be cultured in very shallow layers of


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Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

static liquid, providing there is sufficient gaseous diffusion. Larger organs such as shoots (e.g. proliferating shoots of shoot cultures) can also often be grown satisfactorily in a shallow layer of nonagitated liquid where part of the organ protrudes above the surface. However, some method of support is necessary for small organs or small pieces of tissue, which would otherwise sink below the surface of a static liquid medium, or they will die for lack of aeration. Systems of support which have been found to be effective and which can be used instead of agarsolidified media are described in Chapters 4. Many tissues and organs, small and large, also grow well unsupported in a liquid medium, providing it is aerated by shaking or moving (see below). Some kind of agitation is essential for suspension cultures to prevent cells and cell aggregates settling to the bottom of the flask. Other purposes served by agitation include: the provision of increased aeration, the reduction of plant polarity, the uniform distribution of nutrients and the dilution of toxic explant exudates (Lim-Ho, 1982). There are several alternative techniques. Plant cell suspensions can be cultured very satisfactorily when totally immersed in a liquid culture medium, providing it is shaken (by a rotary or reciprocating shaking machine) or stirred (e.g. by a magnetic stirrer) to ensure adequate aeration. This method may also be used for culturing organs of some plants (e.g.

proliferating shoot cultures), but the fragmentation, which occurs, can be disadvantageous. Periodic immersion may be achieved by growing cultured material in tubes or flasks of liquid medium which are rotated slowly. Steward and Shantz (1956) devised so-called ‘nipple flasks’ for this purpose which had several side-arms. They were fixed to a wooden wheel, which was rotated so that tissue in the arms of each flask was alternately bathed in medium and drained or exposed to the air (Fig. 1.1). This technique ensured that callus tissue for which they were used was well aerated. The medium usually became turbid as cells dissociated from the callus and started a cell suspension. Flasks of this sort are seldom used to-day because of their cost. A similar alternating exposure can be achieved by placing calluses in vessels, which are rotated slowly. An alternative to the costly rotating systems to achieve periodic immersion of the cultures, is the increasingly popular temporary immersion system in which static vessels are periodically or temporarily flooded with culture medium (Fig. 1.2; Teisson and Alvard, 1995). Medium is pumped from a reservoir container into the culture vessel for experimentally determined time intervals repeated over a 24 hour cycle. This system prevents anoxia and has the advantage that the medium can easily be changed in the reservoir.

Fig. 1.1 A nipple flask for growing callus in a liquid medium.


Chapter 1

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Fig. 1.2 An illustration of the RITA ebb and flow culture vessel.

Fig. 1.3 An illustration of micropropagation in a bioreactor. a. air inlet; b. sparger; c. raft supporting explants; d. air outlet; e. membrane filter. The bioreactor culture is initiated by inoculation with nodes or buds from conventional agar culture. For details of bioreactor design see Fig. 1.9.

Liquid medium in flasks or column bio-reactors (fermentors) can be circulated and at the same time aerated, by the introduction of sterile air. Shearing

forces within air-lift reactors are much less than in mechanically-stirred vessels so that plant cell suspensions suffer less damage. Bio-reactors are


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Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

used in the pharmaceutical industry to produce high value plant secondary products and to carry out substrate conversions. Low cost bio-reactors developed for micropropagation have been described in detail in Hvoslef-Eide and Preil (2005) (Fig. 1.3). Rather than immersing callus or organ cultures, liquid medium may be slowly dripped onto the growing tissues or applied as a mist and afterwards the liquid drained or pumped away for recirculation (Weathers and Giles, 1987). A particular advantage of this technique is the ability to grow cultures in a constant and non-depleted medium; nutrients can be varied frequently and rapidly and their availability controlled by altering either concentration or flow rate. Toxic metabolites, which in a closed container might accumulate and inhibit growth, can be removed continuously. As complicated apparatus is needed, the method has not been widely used. The relative merits of solid and liquid media (and combinations of both) are discussed further in Chapter 12. 2.5. PROBLEMS OF ESTABLISHMENT

2.5.1. Phenolic oxidation

Some plants, particularly tropical species, contain high concentrations of phenolic substances that are oxidised when cells are wounded or senescent. Isolated tissue then becomes brown or black and fails to grow. The prevention of blackening, which can be a serious problem in tissue culture, is discussed in Chapter 11. 2.5.2. Minimum inoculation density

Certain essential substances can pass out of plant cells by diffusion. Substances known to be released into the medium by this means include alkaloids, amino acids, enzymes, growth substances and vitamins (Street, 1969). The loss is of no consequence when there is a large cluster of cells growing in close proximity or where the ratio of plant material to medium is high. However, when cells are inoculated onto an ordinary growth medium at a low population density, the concentration of essential substances in the cells and in the medium can become inadequate for the survival of the culture. For successful culture initiation, there is thus a minimum size of explant or quantity of separated cells or protoplasts per unit culture volume. Inoculation density also affects the initial rate of growth in vitro. Large explants generally survive more frequently and grow more rapidly at the outset than very small ones. In practice, minimum inoculation density varies

according to the genotype of plant being cultured and the cultural conditions. For commencing suspension cultures it is commonly about 1-1.5 x 104 cells/ml. The minimum cell density phenomenon is sometimes called a ‘feeder effect’ because deficiencies can often be made up by the presence of other cells growing nearby. Suspension cultures can be started from a low density of inoculum by ‘conditioning’ a freshly prepared medium - i.e. allowing products to diffuse into it from a medium in which another culture is growing actively, or adding a quantity of filter-sterilised medium which has previously supported another culture. The use of conditioned media can reduce the critical initial cell density by a factor of about 10 (Stuart and Street, 1969). It is possible to overcome the deficiencies of plant cells at low starting densities by adding small amounts of known chemicals to a medium. For example, Kao and Michayluk (1975) have shown that Vicia hajastana cells or protoplasts can be cultured from very small initial inocula or even from individual cells: a standard culture medium was supplemented with growth regulators, several organic acids, additional sugars (apart from sucrose and glucose), and in particular, casein hydrolysate (casamino acids) and coconut milk. There is often a maximum as well as a minimum plating or inoculation density for plant cells or protoplasts. In a few cases the effective range has been found to be quite narrow. Some effects of inoculation density on morphogenesis are described in Chapter 10. 2.6. PATTERNS OF GROWTH AND DIFFERENTIATION

A typical unorganised plant callus, initiated from a new explant or a piece of a previously-established culture, has three stages of development, namely: • the induction of cell division; • a period of active cell division during which differentiated cells lose any specialised features they may have acquired and become dedifferentiated; • a period when cell division slows down or ceases and when, within the callus, there is increasing cellular differentiation. These phases are similarly reproduced by cell suspensions grown in a finite volume of medium (a batch culture), where according to a variety of different parameters that can be used to measure growth (e.g. cell number, cell dry weight, total DNA


Chapter 1

content) an S-shaped growth curve is generally obtained (Fig. 1.4). The phases are: • a lag phase; • a period of exponential and then linear growth; • a period when the rate of growth declines; • a stationary phase when growth comes to a halt. Some differentiation of cells may occur in cell cultures during the period of slowed and stationary

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growth, but generally it is less marked and less complete than that which occurs in callus cultures. Cultures cannot be maintained in stationary phase for long periods. Cells begin to die and, as their contents enter the nutrient medium, death of the whole culture accelerates. Somewhat similar patterns of growth also occur in cultures of organised structures. These also cease growth and become moribund as the components of the medium become exhausted.

Fig. 1.4 Diagram showing the phases of growth in batch suspension culture. 2.7. SUBCULTURING

Once a particular kind of organised or unorganised growth has been started in vitro, it will usually continue if callus cultures, suspension cultures, or cultures of indeterminate organs (see below) are divided to provide new explants for culture initiation on fresh medium. Subculturing often becomes imperative when the density of cells, tissue or organs becomes excessive; to increase the volume of a culture; or to increase the number of organs (e.g. shoots or somatic embryos) for micropropagation. The period from the initiation of a culture or a subculture to the time of its transfer is sometimes called a passage. The first passage is that in which the original explant or inoculum is introduced.

Suspensions regularly subcultured at the end of the period of exponential growth can often be propagated over many passages. However, many cultures reach a peak of cell aggregation at this time and aggregation often becomes progressively more pronounced in subsequent passages (Street, 1977b). Subculture is therefore more conveniently carried out during the stationary phase when cell aggregation is least pronounced. Rapid rates of plant propagation depend on the ability to subculture shoots from proliferating shoot or node cultures, from cultures giving direct shoot regeneration, or callus or suspensions capable of reliable shoot or embryo regeneration.


8

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

A further reason for transfer, or subculture, is that the growth of plant material in a closed vessel eventually leads to the accumulation of toxic metabolites and the exhaustion of the medium, or to its drying out. Thus, even to maintain the culture, all or part of it must be transferred onto fresh medium. Callus subcultures are usually initiated by moving a fragment of the initial callus (an inoculum) to fresh medium in another vessel. Shoot cultures are subcultured by segmenting individual shoots or shoot clusters. The interval between subcultures depends on the rate at which a culture has grown: at 25°C, subculturing is typically required every 4-6 weeks. In the early stages of callus growth it may be convenient to transfer the whole piece of tissue to fresh medium, but a more established culture will need to be divided and only small selected portions used as inocula. Regrowth depends on the transfer of healthy tissues. Decontamination procedures are theoretically no longer necessary during subculturing, although sterile transfer procedures must still be used. However, when using shoot or node cultures for micropropagation, some laboratories do re-sterilise plant material at this stage as a precaution against the spread of contaminants (see Volume 2). Cultures which are obviously infected with micro-organisms should not be used for subculturing and should be autoclaved before disposal.

2.8. SUBCULTURING HAZARDS

There are several hazards in subculturing which are discussed more fully in other chapters of this book. Several kinds of callus may arise from the initial explant, each with different morphogenic potential. Strains of callus tissue capable of giving rise to somatic embryos and others without this capability can, for instance, arise simultaneously from the culture of grass and cereal seed embryos. Careful selection of the correct strain is therefore necessary if cultures capable of producing somatic embryos are ultimately required. Timing of the transfer may also be important, because if left alone for some while, non-embryogenic callus may grow from the original explant at the expense of the competent tissue, which will then be obscured or lost. Although subculturing can often be continued over many months without adverse effects becoming apparent, cultures of most unorganised cells and of some organised structures can accumulate cells that are genetically changed. This may cause the characteristics of the culture to be altered and may mean that some of the plants regenerated from the culture will not be the same as the parent plant. This subject is discussed further in Chapter 2. Cultures may also inexplicably decline in vigour after a number of passages, so that further subculture becomes impossible.

3. TYPES OF TISSUE CULTURE 3.1. ORGAN CULTURES

Differentiated plant organs can usually be grown in culture without loss of integrity. They can be of two types: • Determinate organs which are destined to have only a defined size and shape (e.g. leaves, flowers and fruits); • Indeterminate organs, where growth is potentially unlimited (apical meristems of roots and nonflowering shoots). In the past, it has been thought that the meristematic cells within root or shoot apices were not committed to a particular kind of development. It is now accepted that, like the primordia of determinate organs such as leaves, apical meristems also become inherently programmed (or determined) into either root or shoot pathways (see Chapter 8). The eventual pattern of development of both indeterminate and determinate organs is often established at a very early stage. For example, the meristematic protrusions in a shoot apex become

programmed to develop as either lateral buds or leaves after only a few cell divisions have taken place (see Chapter 10). 3.1.1. Culture of determinate organs

An organ arises from a group of meristematic cells. In an indeterminate organ, such cells are theoretically able to continue in the same pattern of growth indefinitely. The situation is different in the primordium of a determinate organ. Here, as meristematic cells receive instructions on how to differentiate, their capacity for further division becomes limited. If the primordium of a determinate organ is excised and transferred to culture, it will sometimes continue to grow to maturity. The organ obtained in vitro may be smaller than that which would have developed on the original plant in vivo, but otherwise is likely to be normal. The growth of determinate organs cannot be extended by subculture as growth ceases when they have reached their maximum size.


Chapter 1

Organs of limited growth potential, which have been cultured, include leaves (Caponetti and Steeves, 1963; Caponetti, 1972); fruits (Nitsch, 1951, 1963; Street, 1969); stamens (Rastogi and Sawhney, 1988); ovaries and ovules (which develop and grow into embryos) and flower buds of several dicotyledonous plant species (Table 1.1). Until recently, a completely normal development was obtained in only a few cases. This was probably due to the use of media of sub-optimum composition. By experimenting with media constituents, Berghoef and Bruinsma (1979a) obtained normal growth of Begonia franconis buds and were thus able to study the effect of plant growth substances and nutritional factors on flower development and sexual expression (Berghoef and Bruinsma, 1979b). Similarly, by culturing dormant buds of Salix, Angrish and Nanda (1982a,b) could study the effect of bud position and the progressive influence of a resting period on the determination of meristems to become catkins and fertile flowers. In several species, flowers have been pollinated in vitro and have then given rise to mature fruits (e.g. Ruddat et al., 1979) Table 1.1 Some species in which flower buds have been cultured

Cucumis sativus Viscaria spp. Nicotiana tabacum Aquilegia formosa Cleome iberidella Nicotiana offinis

Galun et al. (1962) Blake (1966, 1969) Hicks and Sussex (1970) Bilderback (1971) De Jong and Bruinsma (1974) Deaton et al. (1980)

9

Plants cannot be propagated by culturing meristems already committed to produce determinate organs, but providing development has not proceeded too far, flower meristems can often be induced to revert to vegetative meristems in vitro. In some plants the production of vegetative shoots from the flower meristems on a large inflorescence can provide a convenient method of micropropagation (see Chapter 2). 3.1.2. Culture of indeterminate organs

Meristem and shoot culture. The growing points of shoots can be cultured in such a way that they continue uninterrupted and organised growth. As these shoot initials ultimately give rise to small organised shoots which can then be rooted, their culture has great practical significance for plant propagation. Two important uses have emerged: Meristem culture. Culture of the extreme tip of the shoot, is used as a technique to free plants from virus infections. Explants are dissected from either apical or lateral buds. They comprise a very small stem apex (0.2-1.0 mm in length) consisting of just the apical meristem and one or two leaf primordia; Shoot culture or shoot tip culture. Culture of larger stem apices or lateral buds (ranging from 5 or 10 mm in length to undissected buds) is used as a very successful method of propagating plants. The size and relative positions of the two kinds of explant in a shoot apex of a typical dicotyledon is shown in Fig. 1.5. Node culture is an adaptation of shoot culture.

Fig. 1.5 A diagrammatic section through a bud showing the locations and approximate relative sizes of a meristematic dome, the meristem tip and shoot tip explants.


10

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

If successful, meristem culture, shoot culture and node culture can ultimately result in the growth of small shoots. With appropriate treatments, these original shoots can either be rooted to produce small plants or ‘plantlets’, or their axillary buds can be induced to grow to form a cluster of shoots. Plants are propagated by dividing and reculturing the shoot clusters, or by growing individual shoots for subdivision. At a chosen stage, individual shoots or shoot clusters are rooted. Tissue cultured shoots are removed from aseptic conditions at or just before the rooting stage, and rooted plantlets are hardened off and grown normally. Shoot culture, node culture and meristem tip culture are discussed in greater detail in Chapter 2. Embryo culture. Zygotic or seed embryos are often used advantageously as explants in plant tissue culture, for example, to initiate callus cultures. In embryo culture however, embryos are dissected from seeds, individually isolated and ‘germinated’ in vitro to provide one plant per explant. Isolated embryo culture can assist in the rapid production of seedlings from seeds that have a protracted dormancy period, and it enables seedlings to be produced when the genotype (e.g. that resulting from some interspecific crosses) conveys a low embryo or seed viability. During the course of evolution, natural incompatibility systems have developed which limit the types of possible sexual crosses (see De Nettancourt and Devreux, 1977). Two kinds of infertility occur: • Pre-zygotic incompatibility, preventing pollen germination and/or pollen tube growth so that a zygote is never formed; • Post-zygotic incompatibility, in which a zygote is produced but not accepted by the endosperm. The embryo, not receiving sufficient nutrition, disintegrates or aborts. Pre-zygotic incompatibility can sometimes be overcome in the laboratory using a technique developed by Kanta et al. (1962) called in vitro pollination (or in vitro fertilisation). For a description of this technique see review articles by Ranga Swamy (1977), Zenkteler (1980) and Yeung et al. (1981). Reviews of embryo culture have been provided by Torrey (1973), Norstog (1979) and Raghavan (1967, 1977a, 1980). Embryo culture has been used successfully in a large number of plant genera to overcome postzygotic incompatibility which otherwise hampers the production of desirable hybrid seedlings. For

example, in trying to transfer insect resistance from a wild Solanum species into the aubergine, Sharma et al. (1980a) obtained a few hybrid plants (Solanum melongena x S. khasianum) by embryo culture. Embryo culture in these circumstances is more aptly termed embryo rescue. Success rates are usually quite low and the new hybrids, particularly if they arise from remote crosses, are sometimes sterile. However, this does not matter if the plants can afterwards be propagated asexually. Hybrids between incompatible varieties of tree and soft fruits (Tukey, 1934; Skirm, 1942) and Iris (in Reuther, 1977) have been obtained by culturing fairly mature embryos. Fruits or seeds are surface sterilised before embryo removal. Providing aseptic techniques are strictly adhered to during excision and transfer to a culture medium, the embryo itself needs no further sterilisation. To ease the dissection of the embryo, hard seeds are soaked in water to soften them, but if softening takes more than a few hours it is advisable to re-sterilise the seed afterwards. A dissecting microscope may be necessary to excise the embryos from small seeds as it is particularly important that the embryo should not be damaged. Culture of immature embryos (pro-embryos) a few days after pollination frequently results in a greater proportion of seedlings being obtained than if more mature embryos are used as explants, because incompatibility mechanisms have less time to take effect. Unfortunately dissection of very small embryos requires much skill and cannot be done rapidly: it also frequently results in damage which prevents growth in vitro. In soybean, Hu and Sussex (1986) obtained the best in vitro growth of immature embryos if they were isolated with their suspensors intact. Excised embryos usually develop into seedlings precociously (i.e. before they have reached the size they would have attained in a normal seed). As an alternative to embryo culture, in some plants it has been possible to excise and culture pollinated ovaries and immature ovules. Ovule culture, sometimes called ‘in ovulo embryo culture’, can be more successful than the culture of young embryos. Pro-embryos generally require a complex medium for growth, but embryos contained within the ovule require less complicated media. They are also easily removed from the plant and relatively insensitive to the physical conditions of culture (Thengane et al., 1986). The difference


11

Chapter 1

between embryo and ovule culture is shown diagrammatically in Fig. 1.6. Because seedlings, which resulted from ovule culture of a Nicotiana interspecific cross all died after they had developed some true leaves, Iwai et al. (1985) used leaves of the immature seedlings as explants for the initiation of callus cultures. Most shoots regenerated from the callus also died at an early stage, but one gave rise to a plant, which was discovered later to be a sterile hybrid. Plants were also regenerated from callus of a Pelargonium hybrid by Kato and Tokumasu (1983). The callus in this case arose directly from globular or heart-shaped zygotic embryos which were not able to grow into seedlings. The seeds of orchids have neither functional storage organs, nor a true seed coat, so dissection of the embryo would not be possible. In fact, for commercial purposes, orchid seeds are now almost always germinated in vitro, and growth is often facilitated by taking immature seeds from green pods (see Volume 2). Many media have been especially developed for embryo culture and some were the forerunners of the media now used for general tissue culture. Commonly, mature embryos require only inorganic salts supplemented with sucrose, whereas immature embryos have an additional requirement for vitamins, amino acids, growth regulators and sometimes coconut milk or some other endosperm extract. Raghavan (1977b) encouraged the incorporation of mannitol to replace the high osmotic pressure exerted on proembryos by ovular sap. Seedlings obtained from embryos grown in vitro are planted out and hardened off in the same manner as other plantlets raised by tissue culture (Chapter 2 and Volume 2). Although embryo culture is especially useful for plant breeders, it does not lead to the rapid and large scale rates of propagation characteristic of other micropropagation techniques, and so it is not considered further in this book. More details can be found in papers by: Sanders and Ziebur (1958); Raghavan (1967, 1980); Torrey (1973); Zilis and Meyer (1976); Collins and Grosser (1984), Monnier (1990) and Ramming (1990). Yeung et al. (1981) have suggested a basic protocol, which with modifications, should be applicable to any species. The induction of multiple shoots from seeds is described in Chapter 2. Isolated root culture. Root cultures can be established from root tips taken from primary or lateral roots of many plants. Suitable explants are

small sections of roots bearing a primary or lateral root meristem. These explants may be obtained, for example, from surface sterilised seeds germinated in aseptic conditions. If the small root meristems continue normal growth on a suitable medium, they produce a root system consisting only of primary and lateral roots (Fig. 1.7.). No organised shoot buds will be formed.

Fig. 1.6 Ovule and embryo culture.

The discovery that roots could be grown apart from shoot tissue was one of the first significant developments of modern tissue culture science. Root culture initially attracted a great deal of attention from research workers and the roots of many different species of plants were cultured successfully (see the comprehensive reviews of Street, 1954, 1957, 1969; and Butcher and Street, 1964). Plants fall generally into three categories with regard to the ease with which their roots can be cultured. There are some species such as clover, Datura, tomato and Citrus, where isolated roots can be grown for long periods of time, some seemingly, indefinitely (Said and Murashige, 1979) providing regular subcultures are made. In many woody species, roots have not been grown at all successfully in isolated cultures. In other species such as pea, flax and wheat, roots can be cultured for long periods but ultimately growth declines or insufficient lateral roots are produced to provide explants for subculture. The inability to maintain isolated root cultures is due to an induced meristematic dormancy or ‘senescence’, related to the length of time that the


12

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

roots have been growing in vitro. Transferring dormant meristems to fresh medium does not promote regrowth, possibly due to the accumulation of naturally-occurring auxinic growth substances at the root apex. The addition of so-called anti-auxin, or cytokinin growth regulators can often prolong active

growth of root cultures, whereas placing auxins or gibberellic acid in the growth medium, causes it to cease more rapidly. Cultures, which cannot be maintained by transferring root apices, can sometimes be continued if newly-initiated lateral root meristems are used as secondary explants instead.

Fig. 1.7 Methods of root culture.

Isolated plant roots can usually be cultured on relatively simple media such as White (1954) containing 2% sucrose. Liquid media are preferable, as growth in or on a solid medium is slower. This is presumably because salts are less readily available to the roots from a solidified medium and oxygen availability may be restricted. Although roots will accept a mixed nitrate/ammonium source, they will not usually grow on ammonium nitrogen alone. Species, and even varieties or strains, of plants, are found to differ in their requirement for growth regulators, particularly for auxins, in the root culture medium. Isolated root cultures have been employed for a number of different research purposes. They have been particularly valuable in the study of nematode infections and provide a method by which these parasites can be cultured in aseptic conditions. Root cultures may also be used to grow beneficial mycorrhizal fungi, and to study the process of root nodulation with nitrogen-fixing Rhizobium bacteria in leguminous plants. For the latter purpose, various special adaptations of standard techniques have been adopted to allow roots to become established in a nitrate-free medium (Raggio et al., 1957; Torrey, 1963). Unlike some other cultured tissues, root cultures exhibit a high degree of genetic stability (see Chapter 10). It has therefore been suggested that root cultures could afford one means of storing the germplasm of certain species (see Volume 2). For suitable species,

root cultures can provide a convenient source of explant material for the micropropagation of plants, but they will only be useful in micropropagation if shoots can be regenerated from roots. There are however, several ways in which this can be done, although they are likely to be effective in only a small number of plant genera which have a natural tendency to produce suckers, or new shoots from whole or severed roots: • From direct adventitious shoots; • From shoots or embryos originating indirectly on root callus; • By conversion of the apical root meristem to a shoot meristem. Adventitious shoots form readily on the severed roots of some plant species, and root cuttings are employed by horticulturists to increase plants in vivo (see, for example, the review by Hodge, 1986). Shoot regeneration from roots has not been widely used as a method of micropropagation, even though direct shoot regeneration from roots has been observed in vitro on many plants. Sections of fleshy roots used as primary explants are especially likely to form new shoots. Adventitious shoots always develop at the proximal end of a root section while, as a rule, new roots are produced from the distal end. Isolated root cultures would be useful in micropropagation if shoots could be induced to form directly upon them. Unfortunately plants seem to have a high degree of genetic specificity in their


Chapter 1

capacity to produce shoots directly on isolated root cultures. Shoot induction often occurs after the addition of a cytokinin to the medium. Seeliger (1956) obtained shoot buds on cultured roots of Robinia pseudoacacia and Torrey (1958), shoot buds on root cultures of Convolvulus. Direct shoot formation was induced in three species of Nicotiana and on Solanum melongena by Zelcer et al. (1983) but in N. tabacum and N. petunoides shoots were only obtained after callus formed on the roots. The most optimistic report we have seen comes from Mudge et al. (1986), who thought that the shoot formation, which they could induce in raspberry root cultures would provide a convenient and labour-saving method of multiplying this plant in vitro. Plants may also be regenerated from root-derived callus of some species e.g. tomato (Norton and Boll, 1954); Isatis tinctoria (Danckwardt-Lilliestrom, 1957); Atropa belladonna (Thomas and Street, 1972). Embryogenesis, leading to the formation of protocorm-like bodies, occurs in the callus derived from the root tips of certain orchids e.g. Catasetum trulla x Catasetum (Kerbauy, 1984a); Epidendrum obrienianum (Stewart and Button, 1978); Oncidium varicosum (Kerbauy, 1984b). Changing the determined nature of a root meristem, so that it is induced to produce a shoot instead of a root, is a very rare event but has been noted to occur in vitro in the orchid Vanilla planifolia. The quiescent centre of cultured root tip meristems was changed into a shoot meristem so that cultured root tips grew to produce plantlets or multiple shoots (Philip and Nainar, 1986). Ballade (1971) maintained that newly initiated root initials, arising from single nodes of Nasturtium officinale, could be made to develop into shoot meristems by placing a crystal of kinetin on each explant which was then transferred to a medium containing 0.05% glucose. 3.2. CULTURE OF UNORGANISED CELLS

3.2.1. Callus cultures

Callus is a coherent and amorphous tissue, formed when plant cells multiply in a disorganised way. It is often induced in or upon parts of an intact plant by wounding, by the presence of insects or microorganisms, or as a result of stress. Callus can be initiated in vitro by placing small pieces of the whole plant (explants) onto a growth-supporting medium under sterile conditions. Under the stimulus of endogenous growth regulators or growth regulating chemicals added to the medium, the metabolism of

13

cells, which were in a quiescent state, is changed, and they begin active division. During this process, cell differentiation and specialisation, which may have been occurring in the intact plant, are reversed, and the explant gives rise to new tissue, which is composed of meristematic and unspecialised cell types. During dedifferentiation, storage products typically found in resting cells tend to disappear. New meristems are formed in the tissue and these give rise to undifferentiated parenchymatous cells without any of the structural order that was characteristic of the organ or tissue from which they were derived. Although callus remains unorganised, as growth proceeds, some kinds of specialised cells may again be formed. Such differentiation can appear to take place at random, but may be associated with centres of morphogenesis, which can give rise to organs such as roots, shoots and embryos. The de novo production of plants from unorganised cultures is often referred to as plant regeneration. Although most experiments have been conducted with the tissues of higher plants, callus cultures can be established from gymnosperms, ferns, mosses and thallophytes. Many parts of a whole plant may have an ultimate potential to proliferate in vitro, but it is frequently found that callus cultures are more easily established from some organs than others. Young meristematic tissues are most suitable, but meristematic areas in older parts of a plant, such as the cambium, can give rise to callus. The choice of tissues from which cultures can be started is greatest in dicotyledonous species. A difference in the capacity of tissue to give rise to callus is particularly apparent in monocotyledons. In most cereals, for example, callus growth can only be obtained from organs such as zygotic embryos, germinating seeds, seed endosperm or the seedling mesocotyl, and very young leaves or leaf sheaths, but so far never from mature leaf tissue (e.g. Green and Phillips, 1975; Dunstan et al., 1978). In sugar cane, callus cultures can only be started from young leaves or leaf bases, not from semi-mature or mature leaf blades. Even closely associated tissues within one organ may have different potentials for callus origination. Thus when embryos of Hordeum distichum at an early stage of differentiation are removed from developing seeds and placed in culture, callus proliferation originates from meristematic mesocotyl cells rather than from the closely adjacent cells of the scutellum and coleorhiza (Granatek and Cockerline, 1979).


14

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

The callus formed on an original explant is called ‘primary callus’. Secondary callus cultures are initiated from pieces of tissue dissected from primary callus (Fig. 1.8.). Subculture can then often be

continued over many years, but the longer callus is maintained, the greater is the risk that the cells thereof will suffer genetic change (see Chapter 10).

Fig. 1.8 Typical steps in the initiation of callus and suspension cultures.

Callus tissue is not of one single kind. Strains of callus differing in appearance, colour, degree of compaction and morphogenetic potential commonly arise from a single explant. Sometimes the type of callus obtained, its degree of cellular differentiation and its capacity to regenerate new plants, depend upon the origin and age of the tissue chosen as an explant. Loosely packed or ‘friable’ callus is usually selected for initiating suspension cultures (see below). Some of the differences between one strain of callus tissue and another can depend on which genetic programme is functioning within the cells (epigenetic differences). Variability is more likely when callus is derived from an explant composed of more than one kind of cell. For this reason there is often merit in selecting small explants from only morphologically uniform tissue, bearing in mind that a minimum size of explant is normally required to obtain callus formation.

The genetic make up of cells is very commonly altered in unorganised callus and suspension cultures. Therefore another reason for cell strains having different characteristics, is that they have become composed of populations of cells with slightly different genotypes. Genetic and epigenetic changes occurring in cultures are described in greater detail in Chapters 10 and Volume 2. The growth, structure, organisation and cytology of callus are discussed in various chapters of the book edited by Street (1977a), and also in the review by Yeoman and Forche (1980). 3.2.2. Cell suspension cultures

Unorganised plant cells can be grown as callus in aggregated tissue masses, or they can be freely dispersed in agitated liquid media. Techniques are similar to those used for the large-scale culture of bacteria. Cell or suspension cultures, as they are called, are usually started by placing an inoculum of friable callus in a liquid medium (Fig. 1.8). Under agitation, single cells break off and, by division, form


Chapter 1

cell chains and clumps which fracture again to give individual cells and other small cell groups. It is not always necessary to have a previous callus phase before initiating suspension cultures. For example, leaf sections of Chenopodium rubrum floated on Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium in the light, show rapid growth and cell division in the mesophyll, and after 4 days on a rotary shaker they can be disintegrated completely to release a great number of cells into suspension (Geile and Wagner, 1980). Because the walls of plant cells have a natural tendency to adhere, it is not possible to obtain suspensions that consist only of dispersed single cells. Some progress has been made in selecting cell lines with increased cell separation, but cultures of completely isolated cells have yet to be obtained. The proportion and size of small cell aggregates varies according to plant variety and the medium in which the culture is grown. As cells tend to divide more frequently in aggregates than in isolation, the size of cell clusters increases during the phase of rapid cell division. Because agitation causes single cells, and small groups of cells, to be detached, the size of cell clusters decreases in batch cultures as they approach a stationary growth phase (see below). The degree of cell dispersion in suspension cultures is particularly influenced by the concentration of growth regulators in the culture medium. Auxinic growth regulators increase the specific activity of enzymes, which bring about the dissolution of the middle lamella of plant cell walls (Torrey and Reinert, 1961). Thus by using a relatively high concentration of an auxin and a low concentration of a cytokinin growth regulator in the culture medium, it is usually possible to increase cell dispersion (Narayanaswamy, 1977). However, the use of high auxin levels to obtain maximum cell dispersion will ensure that the cultured cells remain undifferentiated. This may be a disadvantage if a suspension is being used to produce secondary metabolites. Well-dispersed suspension cultures consist of thin-walled undifferentiated cells, but these are never uniform in size and shape. Cells with more differentiated structure, possessing, for example, thicker walls and even tracheid-like elements, usually only occur in large cell aggregates. Many different methods of suspension culture have been developed. They fall into two main types: batch cultures in which cells are nurtured in a fixed volume of medium until growth ceases, and continuous cultures in which cell growth is maintained by continuous replenishment of sterile

15

nutrient media. All techniques utilise some method of agitating the culture medium to ensure necessary cell dispersion and an adequate gas exchange. Batch cultures. Batch cultures are initiated by inoculating cells into a fixed volume of nutrient medium. As growth proceeds, the amount of cell material increases until nutrients in the medium are depleted or there is the accumulation of an inhibitory metabolite. Batch cultures have a number of disadvantages that restrict their suitability for extended studies of growth and metabolism, or for the industrial production of plant cells, but they are nevertheless widely used for many laboratory investigations. Small cultures are frequently agitated on orbital shakers onto which are fixed suitable containers, which range in volume from 100 ml (Erlenmeyer conical flasks) to 1000 ml (spherical flasks); the quantity of medium being approximately the same as the flask volume. The shakers are usually operated at speeds from 30-180 rpm with an orbital motion of about 3 cm. Alternatively, stirred systems can be used. Continuous cultures. Using batch cultures, it is difficult to obtain a steady rate of production of new cells having constant size and composition. Attempts to do so necessitate frequent sub-culturing, at intervals equivalent to the doubling time of the cell population. Satisfactorily balanced growth can only be produced in continuous culture, a method, which is especially important when plant cells are to be used for the large-scale production of a primary or secondary metabolite. Continuous culture techniques require fairly complicated apparatus. Agitation of larger cultures in bio-reactors is usually achieved by stirring with a turbine and/or by passing sterile air (or a controlled gaseous mixture) into the culture from below and releasing it through plugged vents. Mechanically stirred reactors damage plant cells by shearing. This is minimised in air-lift reactors. Different bioreactor designs are illustrated in Fig. 1.9. The use of suspension cultures in plant propagation. The growth of plant cells is more rapid in suspension than in callus culture and is also more readily controlled because the culture medium can be easily amended or changed. Organs can be induced to develop in cell suspensions: root and shoot initiation usually commences in cell aggregates. Somatic embryos may arise from single cells. Cells from suspensions can also be plated onto solid media where single cells and/or cell aggregates grow into callus colonies from which plants can often be regenerated. For these reasons suspension cultures


16

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

might be expected to provide a means of very rapid plant multiplication. There are two methods: • plants may be obtained from somatic embryos formed in suspensions. Once embryos have been produced, they are normally grown into plantlets on solid media, although other methods are potentially available (Chapter 2);

• cells from suspensions are plated onto solid media where single cells and/or cell aggregates grow into callus colonies from which plants can often be regenerated. In practice neither of these techniques has been sufficiently reliable for use in plant propagation.

Fig.1.9 Four types of bioreactors used for plant cell culture.

Immobilised cell cultures. Plant cells can be captured and immobilised by being cultured in a gel which is afterwards solidified (see Chapter 4). This technique has only limited application to plant micropropagation, but is now employed quite widely when plant cells are grown for the production of their secondary products or for the bio-transformation of chemical compounds (Lindsey and Yeoman, 1983). 3.3. CULTURES OF SINGLE CELL ORIGIN

3.3.1. Single cell clones

Cultures can be initiated from single plant cells, but only when special techniques are employed. Frequently these comprise passing suspensioncultured cells through a filter which removes coarse cell aggregates and allows only single cells and very small cell clusters to pass through. Small groups of cells are then assumed to have originated from single cells. The suspension obtained is usually plated onto (or incorporated into) a solidified medium in Petri

dishes at a sufficient density to permit cell growth (see below), but with the cells sufficiently dispersed so that, when growth commences, individual callus colonies can be recognised under a binocular microscope and transferred separately to fresh medium. Cell lines originating from single cells in this way are sometimes called single cell clones or cell strains. The derivation of single cell clones was reviewed by Street (1977c). Each cell clone has a minimum effective initial cell density (or minimum inoculation density) below which it cannot be cultured. The minimum density varies according to the medium and growth regulators in which the cells are placed; it is frequently about 10–15 cells/ml on standard media. Widely dispersed cells or protoplasts will not grow because they lose essential growth factors into the surrounding medium. The minimum inoculation density can therefore be lowered by adding to a standard medium either a filtered extract of a medium in which a culture has


Chapter 1

been previously grown (the medium is then said to be conditioned), or special organic additives (when it is said to be supplemented). Cells or protoplasts (see below) plated at a density which is insufficient for spontaneous cell division may also be nurtured into initial growth by being ‘nursed’ by tissue growing nearby. One way of doing this is to place an inoculum onto a filter paper disc

17

(a raft) or some other inert porous material, which is then put in contact with an established callus culture of a similar species of plant, the cells of which are called nurse cells, and the tissue a feeder layer. An alternative technique is to divide a Petri dish into compartments (Fig. 1.10.). Nurse tissues cultured in some segments assist the growth of cells or protoplasts plated in the other areas.

Fig. 1.10 Two methods of assisting the growth of cells plated at low density.

Another method of producing cell colonies which are very likely to have had a single cell origin, has been described by Bellincampi et al. (1985). A filtered cell suspension with a high proportion of single cells, is cultured at high density in a medium which contains only 0.2% agar. At this concentration the agar does not solidify the medium, but keeps apart the cell colonies growing from individual cells, preventing them from aggregating. When clusters of approximately 10-15 cells have been formed, they can be plated at a dilution of 50 (20% plating efficiency) to 200 plating units/ml (60% plating efficiency) on a medium gelled with 1% agar where they grow as separate callus colonies. Plating efficiency is the percentage of plating units (cell aggregates in this case) which give rise to callus colonies The establishment of single cell clones is one way to separate genetically different cell lines from a mixed cell population. By artificially increasing the

genetic variation between cells in a culture, and then applying a specific selection pressure, resistant cell lines have been obtained (e.g. those resistant to certain drugs, herbicides or high levels of salt), and in some instances plants with similar resistances have then been regenerated from the resulting cells or callus (Dix, 1990). 3.3.2. Separated cells

Single cells can be separated directly from intact plants. They are often more easily isolated and less liable to damage than protoplasts, because the cell wall remains intact. Consequently, single cells can be used in robust operations, such as direct physiological studies. It has been said that, for this purpose, they are more representative of differentiated tissues than cells derived from tissue cultures (Miksch and Beiderbeck, 1976); but the disruption caused by separation may induce atypical responses.


18

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

Mechanical separation. In some plant species, disrupting the tissue mechanically can separate intact cells of certain organs. Viable mesophyll cells, for example, can be obtained easily from Asparagus cladodes (Colman et al., 1979) and from leaves of Macleaya cordata (Kohlenbach; 1966, 1967). These cells can be grown either in suspension or solid culture and induced into morphogenesis, including somatic embryo formation (Kohlenbach, 1977). Schwenk (1980, 1981) simply placed pieces of the young cotyledons of sweet potato in water inside an abrasive tube in which a vortex was created. After removing debris, a cell suspension could be obtained from which cells grew and formed callus when plated on nutrient agar. However, the capacity to isolate separated cells directly from higher plants appears to be limited (Jullien and Rossini, 1977). The type of tissue used seems to be important both to permit cell separation and to obtain subsequent growth. Cells separated from the leaves, instead of from the cotyledons, of sweet potato (above) had no capacity for growth, and it was not possible to even separate cells by mechanical means from several other plants. Enzymatic separation. Cell separation can be assisted by treating plant tissue with enzyme preparations such as crude pectinase or polygalacturonase, which loosen the attachment between individual cells in a tissue. Zaitlin first used this technique in 1959 to separate viable cells from tobacco leaves. Methods of isolation have been described by Takebe et al. (1968); Servaites and Ogren (1977) and Dow and Callow (1979). Cells isolated in this way can be suspended in culture medium and remain metabolically active. Separated cells from leaf tissue of tobacco preinfected with Tobacco Mosaic Virus have been used to study the formation of viral RNA’s in the infected cells, and for studies on the interaction between leaf tissue cells and elicitor chemicals produced by fungal pathogens (Dow and Callow, 1979). Button and Botha (1975) produced a suspension of single cells of Citrus by macerating callus with 2-3% Macerase enzyme: the degree of dispersion of cells from suspension cultures can also be improved by enzyme addition (Street, 1977c). 3.3.3. Protoplasts

A protoplast is the living part of a plant cell, consisting of the cytoplasm and nucleus with the cell wall removed. Protoplasts can be isolated from whole plant organs or tissue cultures. If they are then

placed in a suitable nutrient medium, they can be induced to re-form a cell wall and divide. A small cluster of cells eventually arises from each cell and, providing the protoplasts were originally plated at a relatively low density, can be recognised as one of many discrete ‘callus colonies’. Plants can often be regenerated from such callus. Protoplast culture therefore provides one route whereby plants can be multiplied, but it is not yet used for routine micropropagation work, although the number of species in which plant regeneration has been achieved is steadily increasing. At present isolated protoplasts are used chiefly in research into plant virus infections, and for modifying the genetic information of the cell by inserting selected DNA fragments. Protoplasts may also be fused together to create plant cell hybrids. Genetically modified cells will be only of general practical value if whole plants having the new genetic constitution can be regenerated from them. The ability to recover plants from protoplast cultures is therefore of vital importance to the success of such genetic engineering projects in plant science. Methods of protoplast preparation. There are several different methods by which protoplasts may be isolated: • by mechanically cutting or breaking open the cell wall; • by digesting away the cell wall with enzymes; • by a combination of mechanical and enzymatic separation. For successful isolation it has been found essential to cause the protoplast to contract away from the cell wall, to which, when the cell is turgid, it is tightly adpressed. Contraction is achieved by plasmolysing cells with solutions of salts such as potassium chloride and magnesium sulphate, or with sugars or sugar alcohols (particularly mannitol) (see Chapter 4). These osmotica must be of sufficient concentration to cause shrinkage of the protoplasm, but of insufficient strength to cause cellular damage. In the past, protoplasts have been mechanically isolated from pieces of sectioned plant material, but only very small numbers were obtained intact and undamaged. This method has therefore been almost completely replaced by enzymatic isolation techniques. Commercially available preparations used for protoplast isolation are often mixtures of enzymes from a fungal or bacterial source, and have pectinase, cellulase and/or hemicellulase activity: they derive part of their effectiveness from being of mixed composition (Evans and Cocking, 1977).


Chapter 1

Protoplasts are usually isolated using a combination of several different commercial products. Plasmolysis helps to protect the protoplast when the cell wall is ruptured during mechanical separation and also appears to make the cell more resistant to the toxic effects of the enzymes used for cell wall digestion. It also severs the plasmodesmata linking adjacent cells and so prevents the amalgamation of protoplasms when the cell walls are digested away. Tissue from an entire plant to be used for protoplast separation, is first surface sterilised. Some further preparation to allow the penetration of osmotic solutions and the cell wall degrading enzymes, is often advantageous. For instance, when protoplasts are to be separated from leaf mesophyll, the epidermis of the leaf is first peeled away, or the leaf is cut in strips and the tissue segments are then plasmolysed. The next step is to incubate the tissue with pectinase and cellulase enzymes for up to 18 hours in the same osmoticum, during which time the cell walls are degraded. Agitation of the incubated medium after this interval causes protoplasts to be released. They are washed and separated in solutions of suitable osmotic potential before being transferred to a culture medium. Less severe and prolonged enzymatic cell digestion is required if plant tissue is first treated to mild mechanical homogenisation before cellulase treatment. Another technique calls for the sequential use of enzymes; firstly pectinase to separate the cells, and then, when separation is complete, cellulase to digest the cell walls. The yield of viable protoplasts can sometimes be increased by pre-treatment of the chosen tissue with growth substances before separation is attempted (Kirby and Cheng, 1979). Protoplasts are also commonly isolated by enzymatic treatment of organs or tissues that have been cultured in vitro. Cells from suspension cultures, which have been subcultured frequently, and are dividing rapidly, are one suitable source. The successful isolation of viable protoplasts capable of cell division and growth, can depend on the manner in which the mother plant was grown. For example, Durand (1979) found that consistently successful protoplast isolation from haploid Nicotiana sylvestris plants depended on having reproducible batches of young plants in vitro. The composition of the medium on which these plants were cultured had a striking effect on protoplast yield and on their ability to divide. A low salt medium devoid of vitamins was particularly disadvantageous.

19

The light intensity under which the plants were grown was also critical. Protoplast culture. Isolated plant protoplasts are very fragile and particularly liable to either physical or chemical damage. Thus if they are suspended in a liquid medium, it must not be agitated, and the high osmotic potential of the medium in which isolation was carried out must be temporarily maintained. As growth depends on adequate aeration, protoplasts are usually cultured in very shallow containers of liquid or solid media; fairly high plating densities (5 x 104 to 105 protoplasts/ml) may be necessary, possibly because endogenous chemicals are liable to leak away from such unprotected cells. To promote growth, it may also be beneficial to add to the medium supplementary chemicals and growth factors not normally required for the culture of intact cells. The capability of plant protoplasts to divide appears to be closely related to their ability to form a cell wall (Meyer and Abel, 1975a,b). The type of wall that is produced initially can be controlled to some extent by the nature of the culture medium. A non-rigid wall can be produced on tobacco mesophyll protoplasts, for example, by culture in a medium containing a relatively high concentration of salts; but although such cells will divide 2–3 times, further cell division does not occur unless a rigid wall is induced to be formed by a change in the culture medium (Meyer, 1974). Under favourable circumstances formation of a cell wall seems to occur as soon as protoplasts are removed from hydrolysing enzyme preparations, and the first signs of cellulose deposition can be detected after only about 16 hours in culture medium. Once wall formation is initiated, the concentration of osmoticum is reduced to favour cell growth. This is readily accomplished in a liquid medium, but where protoplasts have been plated onto a solidified medium it will be necessary to transfer the cells on blocks of agar, to another substrate. When it has formed a cell wall, the regenerated plant cell generally increases in size and may divide in 3–5 days. If further cell divisions occur, each protoplast gives rise to a small group of intact cells and then a small callus colony. Green chloroplasts in cells derived from leaf mesophyll protoplasts, lose their integrity and disappear as callus formation proceeds. Protoplasts may originate from cells of the intact plant, which are not all of the same genetic composition. If such cells are grown in liquid medium, they may stick together and form common cell walls. Colonies of mixed callus will result which


20

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

could give rise to genetically different plants (see Chapter 3) or plant chimeras (D’Amato, 1978). To avoid cell aggregation, protoplasts should be freely dispersed and cultured at as low a density as possible. This may mean that, as in the culture of intact cells at low density (see above), nurse tissue, or a conditioned or specially supplemented medium, must be employed. A method of the latter kind was devised by Raveh et al. (1973). A fabric support has been used to suspend protoplasts in a liquid medium so that media changes can be made readily (Kirby and Cheng, 1979). For further information, readers should consult one or other of the following references: • Bajaj (1977), Evans and Cocking (1977) and Evans and Bravo (1983), who provide good basic reviews of the subject • Gamborg et al. (1981), describe methods and protocols for protoplast isolation, culture (and fusion) • Constabel (1982) and Fowke (1982a), chapters describing methods and equipment for protoplast isolation and culture An entire plant was first regenerated from callus originated from an isolated protoplast in 1971 (Takebe et al., 1971). Since then plants have been produced from the protoplasts of a wide range of species, using indirect shoot morphogenesis or indirect embryogenesis (Davey and Power, 1988). The direct formation of somatic embryos (see below) from cultured protoplasts is also possible (Zapata and Sink, 1980). Protoplast fusion. Although fusion of plant protoplasts was observed many years ago, it has become especially significant since methods have been developed for protoplast isolation and subsequent regeneration into intact plants. Isolated protoplasts do not normally fuse together because they carry a superficial negative charge causing them to repel one another. Various techniques have been discovered to induce fusion to take place. Two of the most successful techniques are the addition of polyethylene glycol (PEG) in the presence of a high concentration of calcium ions and a pH between 8-10, and the application of short pulses of direct electrical current (electro-fusion). By mixing protoplasts from plants of two different species or genera, fusions may be accomplished:

• (a) between protoplasts of the same plant where fusion of the nuclei of two cells would give rise to a homokaryon (synkaryon); • (b) between protoplasts of the same plant species (intravarietal or intraspecific fusion); • (c) between protoplasts of different plant species or genera (interspecific or intergeneric fusion). Fusions of types (b) and (c) above can result in the formation of genetic hybrids (heterokaryocytes), which formally could only be obtained rarely through sexual crossings. By separating the fused hybrid cells from the mixed protoplast population before culture, or by devising a method whereby the cells arising from fused cells may be recognised once they have commenced growth, it has been possible to regenerate new somatic hybrid (as opposed to sexually hybrid) plants. Some novel interspecific and intergeneric hybrid plants have been obtained by this means. A fusion of the cytoplasm of one kind of plant with the nucleus of another is also possible. Such cybrid plants can be useful in plant breeding programmes for the transfer of cytoplasmic genes. The following references give further details about this research topic and its implications for crop improvement: • Schieder and Vasil (1980). A well-referenced review which lists somatic hybrid cell lines or plants obtained by protoplast fusion. • Ferenczy and Farkas (1980) is a book on protoplast research in fungi, yeasts and plants. Several papers describe the results of fusions between protoplasts of different plant species or genera. • Dodds and Roberts (1982), a short chapter describing methods and techniques. • Keller et al. (1982), a useful review of the production and characterisation of somatic hybrids and the practical applications of protoplast fusion technology. • Kao (1982) and Fowke (1982a,b) describe protocols for protoplast fusions in great detail. • Mantell et al. (1985). An introduction to plant genetic engineering of various kinds. • Glimelius (1988). Uses of protoplast fusion for plant breeding objectives. • Davey and Power (1988). Progress in protoplast culture, fusion and plant regeneration

4. CYTODIFFERENTIATION In an intact plant there are many kinds of cells all having different forms and functions. Meristematic

cells, and soft thin-walled parenchymatous tissue, are said to be undifferentiated, while specialised cells are


Chapter 1

said to be differentiated. The cells of callus and suspension cultures are mainly undifferentiated, and it is not yet possible to induce them to become of just one differentiated type. This is partly because culture systems are usually designed to promote cell growth: differentiation frequently occurs as cells cease to divide actively and become quiescent. Furthermore, the formation of differentiated cells appears to be correlated with organ development, therefore the prior expression of genes governing organogenesis may often be required. The in vitro environment can also be very different to that in the whole plant where each cell is governed by the restraint and influence of other surrounding cells. In suspension cultures, for example, cells are largely deprived of directional signals, influences from neighbouring differentiated tissues, and correlative messages that may normally pass between adjacent cells by way of interconnecting strands of protoplasm (plasmodesmata). The differentiated state is also difficult to preserve when cells are isolated from a plant. Askani and Beiderbeck (1988) tried to keep mesophyll cells in a differentiated state. The character of palisade parenchyma cells with regard to size, cell form, colour and size, and distribution of chloroplasts could be preserved for 168h, but after this the chloroplasts became light green, their distribution was no longer homogeneous and some of the cells began to divide. Differentiated cells are most effectively produced in vitro within organs such as shoots and roots; even here there may not be the full range of cell types found in intact plants in vivo. 4.1. DIFFERENTIATED CELLS IN CALLUS AND CELL CULTURES

Three types of differentiated cells are commonly found in callus and cell cultures; these are vessels and tracheids (the cells from which the water-conducting vascular xylem is constructed), and cells containing chloroplasts (organelles carrying the green photosynthetic pigment, chlorophyll). Phloem sieve tubes may be present but are difficult to distinguish from undifferentiated cells. 4.1.1. Tracheid formation

Callus cultures are more likely to contain tracheids than any other kind of differentiated cell. The proportion formed depends on the species from which the culture originated and especially upon the kind of sugar and growth regulators added to the medium. This is discussed further in Chapter 10.

21

Tracheid formation may represent or be associated with an early stage in the development of shoot meristems. Nodules containing xylem elements in callus of Pelargonium have, for example, been observed to develop into shoots when moved to an auxin-free medium (Chen and Galston, 1967; Cassells, 1979). The rapid cell division initiated when tissue is transferred to a nutrient medium usually occurs in meristems formed around the periphery of the explant. Cell differentiation does not take place in callus cultures during this phase but begins when peripheral meristematic activity is replaced or supplemented by the formation of centres of cell division deeper in the tissue. These internal centres generally take the form of meristematic nodules that may produce further expanded and undifferentiated cells (so contributing to callus growth) or cells that differentiate into xylem or phloem elements. Nodules can form primitive vascular bundles, with the xylem occurring centrally and the phloem peripherally, separated from the xylem by a meristematic region. 4.1.2. Chloroplast differentiation

The formation and maintenance of green chloroplasts in cultured plant cells represents another form of cellular differentiation which is easy to monitor, and which has been studied fairly extensively. When chloroplast-containing cells from an intact plant are transferred to a nutrient medium they begin to dedifferentiate. This process continues in the event of cell division and results in a loss of structure of the membranes containing chlorophyll (thylakoids) and the stacks (grana) into which they are arranged, and the accumulation of lipidcontaining globules. The chloroplasts eventually change shape and degenerate. Callus cells frequently do not contain chloroplasts but only plastids containing starch grains in which a slightly-developed lamellar system may be apparent. All the same, many calluses have been discovered that do turn green on continued exposure to light and are composed of a majority of chloroplast-containing cells. Chloroplast formation can also be connected with the capacity of callus to undergo morphogenesis. Green spots sometimes appear on some calluses and it is from these areas that new shoots arise. By subculturing areas with green spots, a highly morphogenic tissue can sometimes be obtained. The formation of chloroplasts and their continued integrity is also favoured by cell aggregation. When


22

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

green callus tissue is used to initiate suspension cultures, the number of chloroplasts and their degree of differentiation are reduced. Nevertheless, there can be some increase in chlorophyll content during the stationary phase of batch cultures. The level of chlorophyll so far obtained in tissue cultures is well below that found in mesophyll cells of whole plants of the same species, and the rate of chlorophyll formation on exposure of cultured cells to the light is extremely slow compared to the response of etiolated organised tissues. The greening of cultures also tends to be unpredictable and even within individual cells, a range in the degree of chloroplast development is often found. In the carbon dioxide concentrations found in culture vessels, green callus tissue is normally photomixotrophic (i.e. the chloroplasts are able to fix part of the carbon that the cells require) and growth is still partly dependent on the incorporation of sucrose

into the medium (Vasil and Hildebrandt, 1966). However, green photoautotrophic callus cultures have been obtained from several different kinds of plants. When grown at high carbon dioxide concentrations (1–5%), without a carbon source in the medium, they are capable of increasing in dry weight by photosynthetic carbon assimilation alone (see Street, 1977a). Photoautotrophic cell suspensions have also been obtained. They too normally require high carbon dioxide levels, but cell lines of some species have been isolated capable of growing in ambient CO2 concentration (Xu et al., 1988). Why cultured cells do not freely develop fully functional chloroplasts is not fully known. Some hypotheses have been summarised by Dalton (1980). The cytology of chloroplast formation is described in Yeoman and Street (1977). Photoautotrophic growth of shoots is described in Chapter 2.

5. MORPHOGENESIS 5.1. NATURE AND INDUCTION

New organs such as shoots and roots can be induced to form on cultured plant tissues. Such freshly originated organs are said to be adventive or adventitious. The creation of new form and organisation, where previously it was lacking, is termed morphogenesis or organogenesis. Tissues or organs that have the capacity for morphogenesis/organogenesis are said to be morphogenic (morphogenetic) or organogenic (organogenetic). So far it has been possible to obtain the de novo (adventitious) formation of: • shoots (caulogenesis) and roots (rhizogenesis) separately. The formation of leaves adventitiously in vitro usually denotes the presence of a shoot meristem. Sometimes leaves appear without apparent shoot formation: opinions are divided on whether such leaves can have arisen de novo, or whether a shoot meristem must have been present first of all and subsequently failed to develop.

• embryos that are structurally similar to the embryos found in true seeds. Such embryos often develop a region equivalent to the suspensor of zygotic embryos and, unlike shoot or root buds, come to have both a shoot and a root pole. To distinguish them from zygotic or seed embryos, embryos produced from cells or tissues of the plant body are called somatic embryos (or embryoids) and the process leading to their inception is termed embryogenesis. The word ‘embryoid’ has been especially used when it has been unclear whether the embryo-like structures seen in cultures were truly the somatic equivalent of zygotic embryos. Somatic embryogenesis is now such a widely observed and documented event that somatic embryo has become the preferred term. • flowers, flower initials or perianth parts. The formation of flowers or floral parts is rare, occurring only under special circumstances and is not relevant to plant propagation.

6. HAPLOID PLANTS 6.1. ANTHER AND POLLEN CULTURE

In 1953 Tulecke discovered that haploid tissue (i.e. tissue composed of cells having half the chromosome number that is characteristic of a species), could be produced by the culture of Ginkgo pollen. Little notice was taken of his work until Guha

and Maheshwari (1964, 1967) managed to regenerate haploid plants from pollen of Datura innoxia by culturing intact anthers. Since then a great deal of research has been devoted to the subject. The basis of pollen and anther culture is that on an appropriate medium the pollen microspores of some


Chapter 1

plant species can be induced to give rise to vegetative cells, instead of pollen grains. This change from a normal sexual gametophytic pattern of development into a vegetative (sporophytic) pattern, appears to be initiated in an early phase of the cell cycle when transcription of genes concerned with gametophytic development is blocked and genes concerned with sporophytic development are activated (Sunderland and Dunwell, 1977). The result is that in place of pollen with the capacity to produce gametes and a pollen tube, microspores are produced capable of forming haploid pro-embryos (somatic embryos formed directly from the microspores), or callus tissue. The formation of plants from pollen microspores in this way is sometimes called androgenesis. Haploid plants are more readily regenerated by culturing microspores within anthers than by culturing isolated pollen. The presence of the anther wall provides a stimulus to sporophytic development. The nature of the stimulus is not known but it may be nutritional and/or hormonal. Embryogenesis has only been induced from isolated pollen of a very small number of plants. The number of plants species from which anther culture has resulted in haploid plants is relatively few. It comprised about 70 species in 29 genera up to 1975 (Sunderland and Dunwell, 1977) and 121 species or hybrids in 20 families by 1981-1982 (Maheshwari et al., 1982) and by now, very many more. The early stages of embryogenesis or callus formation without plant regeneration have been obtained in several other kinds of plants. Fifty- eight per cent of the reports of embryogenesis or plant regeneration in Maheshwari et al. (1982) was attributable to species within the family Solanaceae. Species in which haploid plants can be regenerated reliably and at high frequency remain a comparatively small part of the total. They again mainly comprise Solanaceous species such as Datura, Nicotiana, Hyoscyamus, Solanum and some brassicas. For further information on pollen and anther culture, which is outside the scope of the present book, the reader should consult the following books or review articles: Dunwell (1985); Foroughi-Wehr and Wenzel (1989); Giles and Prakash (1987); Heberle-Bors (1985); Hu and Yang (1986); Jain et al. (1996); Keller and Stringham (1978); Maheshwari et al. (1980, 1982); Morrison and Evans (1988); Nitsch (1977, 1981; 1983); Palmer et al. (2005);

23

Raghavan (1990); Reinert and Bajaj (1977); Sangwan and Sangwan-Norreel (1990); Vasil (1980c). 6.2. GYNOGENESIS

Another theoretical source of haploid plants in angiosperms is the female egg nucleus or ovum; this is contained within the nucellus of an ovule in a specialised cell (the megaspore or embryo sac). The ovum cannot be separated readily from other associated nuclei in the megaspore and so haploid plants can normally be produced from it, only by stimulating the development of unfertilised ovules into seedlings. In some species [e.g. Gerbera jamesonii (Sitbon, 1981; Meynet and Sibi, 1984); maize (Truong-Andre and Demarly, 1984); sugar beet (Hosemans and Bossoutrot, 1983); onion (Keller, 1990)], some haploid plants can be obtained by culturing unpollinated ovules, ovaries or flower buds. In some other plants (Pavlova, 1986), larger numbers of haploids are obtained if ovaries are pollinated by a distantly-related species (or genus) or with pollen which has been irradiated with X- or Îł-rays. Successful pollination results in stimulation of endosperm growth by fusion of one of the generative nuclei of the pollen tube with the central fusion nucleus of the megaspore, but fusion of the other generative nucleus with the egg cell does not occur and the egg cell is induced to grow into a seedling without being fertilised (gynogenesis). An alternative technique, which has resulted in haploid Petunia seedlings (Raquin, 1986) is to treat ovaries with Îłrays and then pollinate them with normal pollen. Gynogenesis has so far been employed much less frequently than androgenesis for the production of haploids. A review of progress in this area has been provided by Yang and Zhou (1990). Haploid cells and haploid plants produced by androgenesis or gynogenesis have many uses in plant breeding and genetics (Vasil and Nitsch, 1975). Most recent research on anther culture has concentrated on trying to improve the efficiency of plantlet regeneration in economically important species. Haploid plants of cereals are particularly valuable in breeding programmes, but in the Gramineae, the frequency and reliability of recovery through anther culture is still too low for routine use.


24

Plant Tissue Culture Procedure - Background

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ZAPATA F.J. & SINK K.C. 1980 Somatic embryogenesis in Lycopersicon peruvianum leaf protoplasts. HortScience 15, 415 (Abst. 313). ZELCER A., SOFERMAN O. & IZHAR S. 1983 Shoot regeneration in root cultures of Solanaceae. Plant Cell Rep. 2, 252-254.

ZENKTELER M. 1980 Intraovarian and in vitro pollination. pp. 137-156 in Vasil I.K. (ed.) 1980b (q.v.). ZILIS M.R. & MEYER M.M. 1976 Rapid in vitro germination of immature, dormant embryos. Comb. Proc. Int. Plant Prop. Soc. 26, 272-2.


Chapter 2 Micropropagation: Uses and Methods 1. SEED VERSUS SOMA Plants can be propagated through their two developmental life cycles; the sexual, or the asexual. In the sexual cycle new plants arise after fusion of the parental gametes, and develop from zygotic embryos contained within seeds or fruits. In most cases seedlings will be variable and each one will represent a new combination of genes, brought about during the formation of gametes (meiotic cell division) and their sexual fusion. By contrast, in the vegetative (asexual) cycle the unique characteristics of any individual plant selected for propagation (termed the mother plant, stock plant or ortet) are usually perpetuated because, during normal cell division (mitosis), genes are typically copied exactly at each (mitotic) division. In most cases, each new plant (or ramet) produced by this method may be considered to be an extension of the somatic cell line of one (sexually produced or mutant) individual. A group of such asexually reproduced plants (ramets) is termed a clone. In the natural environment sexual and asexual reproduction have their appropriate selective advantages according to the stage of evolution of different kinds of plants. Plants selected and exploited by man also have different propensities for propagation by seed or by vegetative means.

populations of plants can result from seeds in three ways: • from inbred (homozygous) lines which can be obtained in self-fertile (autogamous) species. Examples of autogamous crops are wheat, barley, rice and tobacco. • from F1 seeds produced by crossing two homozygous parents. Besides being uniform, F1 plants may also display hybrid vigour. F1 seeds of many flower producing ornamentals and vegetables are now available, but due to high production costs, they are expensive. • from apomictic seedlings. In a few genera, plants that are genotypically identical to their parents are produced by apomixis. Seeds are formed without fertilisation and their embryos develop by one of several asexual processes that ensure that the new plants are genetically identical to the female parent (i.e. they have been vegetatively reproduced) (reviewed by Van Dijk and Van Damme, 2000). Some plants do not produce viable seeds, or do so only after a long juvenile period. Alternatively, to grow plants from seed may not provide a practical method of making new field plantings. In such instances vegetative propagation is the only means of perpetuating and multiplying a unique individual with desirable characteristics.

1.1. PROPAGATION USING SEEDS

Seeds have several advantages as a means of propagation: • they are often produced in large numbers so that the plants regenerated from them are individually inexpensive; • many may usually be stored for long periods without loss of viability; • they are easily distributed; • most often plants grown from seed are without most of the pests and diseases which may have afflicted their parents. For many agricultural and horticultural purposes it is desirable to cultivate clones or populations of plants which are practically identical. However, the seeds of many plants typically produce plants which differ genetically, and to obtain seeds which will give uniform offspring is either very difficult, or impossible in practical terms. Genetically uniform

1.2. VEGETATIVE PROPAGATION

Many important crop plants are increased vegetatively and grown as clones. They include cassava, potato, sugar cane and many soft (small) fruits and fruit trees . A very large number of herbaceous and woody ornamental plants are also propagated by these means. Suitable methods for vegetative propagation have been developed over many centuries. These traditional ‘macropropagation’ techniques (or ‘macro-methods’) which utilise relatively large pieces of plants, have been refined and improved by modern horticultural research. For instance, methods of applying fine water mist to prevent the desiccation of cuttings, better rooting composts and the control of temperature in the rooting zone, have considerably enhanced the rate at which many plants of horticultural or agricultural interest can be multiplied. 29

E. F. George et al. (eds.), Plant Propagation by Tissue Culture 3rd Edition, 29–64. © 2008 Springer.


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Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

Research to improve macropropagation methods continues, but has lost some impetus in recent years with the continued extension of tissue culture for plant multiplication. Whether it will be most rewarding to propagate a plant by seed, by traditional vegetative techniques, or by tissue culture, will often not only depend on the plant species, but also on the development of proven techniques, relative costs and agronomic objectives. The extent to which tissue culture methods can be used for genetic manipulations and for propagation is changing continuously. Until recently, potato plants have been raised from seed during breeding programmes to select new varieties: tissue culture may have been employed to multiply certain lines and to propagate disease-tested stocks of established cultivars, while macropropagation of field-grown tubers has been used to provide normal planting

material. New research into genetic manipulations and methods of propagation using tissue culture techniques, can alter this situation: diversity can be introduced and controlled through genetic engineering while certified stock of new varieties can be produced on a large scale by micropropagation. The selection of a propagation method for any given plant is constrained by its genetic potential. For example, some plants readily produce adventitious shoot buds on their roots, while others do not; trying to propagate a plant, which does not have this capability, from root cuttings or root explants, will be more problematic both in vivo and in vitro. Plant tissue culture does overcome some genetically imposed barriers, but a clear effect of genotype is still apparent. It is not yet possible to induce an apple tree to produce tubers!

2. PROPAGATION IN VITRO 2.1. ADVANTAGES

Methods available for propagating plants in vitro are largely an extension of those already developed for conventional propagation. In vitro techniques have the following advantages over traditional methods: • Cultures are started with very small pieces of plants (explants), and thereafter small shoots or embryos are propagated (hence the term ‘micropropagation’ to describe the in vitro methods). Only a small amount of space is required to maintain plants or to greatly increase their number. Propagation is ideally carried out in aseptic conditions (avoiding contaminations). The often used term “axenic” is not correct, because it means “free from any association with other living organisms”. Once cultures have been started there should be no loss through disease, and the plantlets finally produced should be ideally free from bacteria, fungi and other micro-organisms. (Most often this is not the case, see Vol. 2). • Methods are available to free plants from specific virus diseases. Providing these techniques are employed, or virus-tested material is used for initiating cultures, certified virus-tested plants can be produced in large numbers. Terminology such as virus-free and bacteria-free should not be used, as it is impossible to prove that a plant is free of all bacteria or viruses. One can only prove that a plant has been freed from a specific contaminant provided the appropriate diagnostic tools are available.

• A more flexible adjustment of factors influencing vegetative regeneration is possible such as nutrient and growth regulator levels, light and temperature. The rate of propagation is therefore much greater than in macropropagation and many more plants can be produced in a given time. This may enable newly selected varieties to be made available quickly and widely, and numerous plants to be produced in a short while. The technique is very suitable when high volume production is essential. • It may be possible to produce clones of some kinds of plants that are otherwise slow and difficult (or even impossible) to propagate vegetatively. • Plants may acquire a new temporary characteristic through micropropagation which makes them more desirable to the grower than conventionally-raised stock. A bushy habit (in ornamental pot plants) and increased runner formation (strawberries) are two examples. • Production can be continued all the year round and is more independent of seasonal changes. • Vegetatively-reproduced material can often be stored over long periods. • Less energy and space are required for propagation purposes and for the maintenance of stock plants (ortets). • Plant material needs little attention between subcultures and there is no labour or materials requirement for watering, weeding, spraying etc.; micropropagation is most advantageous when it costs less than traditional methods of multiplication; if this


Chapter 2

is not the case there must be some other important reason to make it worthwhile. 2.2. DISADVANTAGES

The chief disadvantages of in vitro methods are that advanced skills are required for their successful operation. • A specialised and expensive production facility is needed; fairly specific methods may be necessary to obtain optimum results from each species and variety and, because present methods are labour intensive, the cost of propagules is usually relatively high (Vol. 2). Further consequences of using in vitro adaptations are although they may be produced in large numbers, the plantlets obtained are initially small and sometimes have undesirable characteristics. • In order to survive in vitro, explants and cultures have to be grown on a medium containing sucrose or some other carbon source. The plants derived from these cultures are not initially able to produce their own requirement of organic matter by photosynthesis (i.e. they are not autotrophic) and have to undergo a transitional period before they are capable of independent growth. More recently techniques have been proposed which allow the production of photoautotrophic plants in vitro (Kozai and Smith, 1995). • As they are raised within glass or plastic vessels in a high relative humidity, and are not usually photosynthetically self-sufficient, the young plantlets are more susceptible to water loss in an external environment. They may therefore have to be hardened in an atmosphere of slowly decreasing humidity and increased light. The chances of producing genetically aberrant plants may be increased. A more extended discussion of all these points will be found in other sections. 2.3. TECHNIQUES

The methods that are theoretically available for the propagation of plants in vitro are illustrated in Fig 2.1 and described in the following sections of this Chapter. They are essentially: • by the multiplication of shoots from axillary buds: • by the formation of adventitious shoots, and/or adventitious somatic embryos, either a) directly on pieces of tissue or organs (explants) removed from the mother plant; or b) indirectly from unorganised cells (in suspension cultures) or tissues (in callus cultures) established by the proliferation of cells within explants; on semi-organised callus tissues or propagation bodies (such as protocorms or pseudo-

31

bulbils) that can be obtained from explants (particularly those from certain specialised whole plant organs). The techniques that have been developed for micropropagation are described in greater detail in the following sections of this Chapter. In practice most micropropagated plants are produced at present by method (i), and those of only a few species (which will be instanced later) by method (ii). Shoots and/or plantlets do not always originate in a culture by a single method. For example, in shoot cultures, besides axillary shoots, there are sometimes adventitious shoots formed directly on existing leaves or stems, and/or shoots arising indirectly from callus at the base of the explant. The most suitable and economic method for propagating plants of a particular species could well change with time. There are still severe limitations on the extent to which some methods can be used. Improvements will come from a better understanding of the factors controlling morphogenesis and genetic stability in vitro. Rooting Somatic embryos have both a root and a shoot meristem. Under ideal conditions they can grow into normal seedlings. The shoots procured from axillary or adventitious meristems are miniature cuttings. Sometimes these small cuttings form roots spontaneously, but usually they have to be assisted to do so (Fig 2.2). The small rooted shoots produced by micropropagation are often called plantlets. 2.4. STAGES OF MICROPROPAGATION

Professor Murashige of the University of California (Riverside) defined three steps or stages (I-III) in the in vitro multiplication of plants (Murashige, 1974). These have been widely adopted by both research and commercial tissue culture laboratories because they not only describe procedural steps in the micropropagation process, but also usually represent points at which the cultural environment needs to be changed. Some workers have suggested that the treatment and preparation of stock plants should be regarded as a separately numbered stage or stages. We have adopted the proposal of Debergh and Maene (1981) that such preparative procedures should be called Stage 0. A fourth stage (IV), at which plants are transferred to the external environment, is now also commonly recognised. A general description of Stages 0-IV is therefore provided below, while the manner in which Stages I-III might be applied to different methods of micropropagation is given in Table 2.1.


32

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods Table 2.1 Stages in the available methods of micropropagation. I. Initiating a culture Methods of Micropropagation

Stage of culture II. Increasing propagules

III. Preparation for soil transfer

Inducing the cultures to produce numbers of shoots or somatic embryos.

Shoot Cultures

Growth of excited tissues/organs in vitro free from algae, bacteria, fungi and other contaminants. Transfer of disinfected shoot tips or lateral buds to solid or liquid media and the commencement of shoot growth to ca. 10mm.

Shoots from floral meristems

Aseptic isolation of pieces of compound floral meristems.

Inducing the many meristems to produce vegetative shoots, then as shoot tip culture.

As for shoot tip cultures.

Multiple shoots from seeds

Aseptic germination of seeds on a high cytokinin medium. Transfer of very small shoot tips (length 0.2-0.5mm) to culture. Longer shoot tips (1-2mm) can be used as explants if obtained from heat treated plants. As for shoot tip culture but shoots grown longer to show clear internodes.

Inducing multiple shoot proliferation. Shoot subculture Growth of shoots to ca. 10mm, then as shoot tip culture, or as shoot multiplication omitted and shoots transferred to Stage III.

As for shoot tip cultures.

Meristem culture

Node culture

Direct shoot regeneration from explants

Establishing suitable explants of mother plant tissue (e.g. leaf or stem segments) in culture without contamination.

Direct embryogenesis

Establishing suitable embryogenic tissue explants or previously-formed somatic embryos. Initiation and isolation of callus with superficial shoot meristems.

Indirect shoot regeneration from morphogenic callus

Indirect embryogenesis from embryogenetic callus or suspension cultures

Storage organ formation

Initiation and isolation of callus with the capacity to form somatic embryos, OR obtaining embryogenic suspension cultures from embryogenic callus or by de novo induction. Isolation and culture of tissue/organs capable of forming storage organs.

Induce multiple (axillary) shoot formation and growth of the shoots to a sufficient size for separation, either as new Stage II explants or for passage to III.

Propagation by inducing the axillary bud at each node to grow into a single shoot. Subculturing can be repeated indefinitely. The induction of shoots directly on the explant with no prior formation of callus. Shoots so formed can usually be divided and used as explants for new Stage II subcultures or shoot tip culture. The direct induction of somatic embryos on the explants without prior formation of callus. Repeated subculture of small callus pieces followed by transfer to a shoot-inducing medium. The growth of shoots ca. 10mm in length. Subculture of the embryogenic callus or suspension culture followed by transfer to a medium favouring embryo development. Inducing the formation of storage organs and sometimes dividing them to start new Stage II cultures.

Separating and preparing propagules to have a high rate of survival as individual plants in the external environment. Elongation of buds formed at Stage II to uniform shoots. Rooting the shoots in vitro or outside the culture vessel.

As for shoot tip cultures.

As for shoot tip cultures.

As for shoot tip cultures.

Growth of the embryos into plantlets which can be transferred to the outside environment. Individual shoots are grown and rooted.

Growth of the somatic embryos into “Seedlings�.

Growing shoots/plantlets obtained from storage organs for transfer to soil: OR growing the storage organs themselves to a size suitable for soil planting.


Chapter 2

Requirements for the completion of each stage of micropropagation vary according to the method being utilised; the progress of cultures will not always fit readily into neat compartments. Furthermore, it is not always necessary to follow each of the prescribed steps. The stages are therefore described here for

33

general guidance but should not be applied too rigidly. Practices adopted at the various stages of micropropagation are discussed throughout the book, but are particularly mentioned in Volume 2.

Fig. 2.1 The principal methods of micropropagation.

Stage 0: Mother plant selection and preparation Before micropropagation commences, careful attention should be given to the selection of stock plants. They must be typical of the variety or species, and free from any symptoms of disease. It may be advantageous to treat the chosen plant (or parts of it) in some way to make in vitro culture successful. Steps to reduce the contamination level of explants (Vol. 2) were considered sufficiently important by Debergh and Maene (1981) to constitute a separate essential stage in a commercial micropropagation programme. Growth, morphogenesis and rates of propagation in vitro can be improved by appropriate environmental and chemical pre-treatment of stock plants: this subject is discussed in Chapter 11. Procedures to detect and reduce or eliminate systemic bacterial and virus diseases (see Vol. 2) may also be

required. Disease indexing and disease elimination should be a definite part of all micropropagation work; but these precautions are unfortunately often omitted, sometimes with adverse consequences. The difficulties which may be encountered in trying to propagate chimeras by tissue culture methods are discussed in Chapter 10. It seems appropriate to include all procedures adopted in plant selection and pre-treatment within ‘Stage 0’. The recognised numbering of Murashige's stages is then unaltered. Stage I: Establishing an aseptic culture The customary second step in the micropropagation process is to obtain an aseptic culture of the selected plant material. Success at this stage firstly requires that explants should be


34

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

transferred to the cultural environment, free from obvious microbial contaminants; and that this should be followed by some kind of growth (e.g. growth of a shoot tip, or formation of callus ). Usually a batch of explants is transferred to culture at the same time. After a short period of incubation, any container found to have contaminated explants or medium is discarded. Stage I would be regarded as satisfactorily completed if an adequate number of explants had survived without contamination, and was growing on. The objective is reproducibility, not 100% success. Stage II: The production of suitable propagules The object of Stage II is to bring about the production of new plant outgrowths or propagules, which, when separated from the culture are capable of giving rise to complete plants. According to the in vitro procedure that is being followed (Fig 2.1), multiplication can be brought about from newlyderived axillary or adventitious shoots, somatic embryos, or miniature storage or propagative organs. In some micropropagation methods, Stage II will include the prior induction of meristematic centres from which adventitious organs may develop. Some of the propagules produced at Stage II (especially shoots) can also be used as the basis for further cycles of multiplication in that they can usually be cultured again (subcultured) to increase their number. Stage III: Preparation for growth in the natural environment Shoots or plantlets derived from Stage II are small, and not yet capable of self-supporting growth in soil or compost. At Stage III, steps are taken to grow individual or clusters of plantlets, capable of carrying out photosynthesis, and survival without an artificial supply of carbohydrate. Some plantlets need to be specially treated at this stage so that they do not become stunted or dormant when taken out of the cultural environment. As originally proposed by Murashige, Stage III includes the in vitro rooting of shoots prior to their transfer to soil. Rooting shoots is a very important part of any in vitro propagation scheme. A few species form adventitious roots on shoots during the course of Stage III culture, but usually it is necessary to adopt a separate rooting procedure using special media, or methods, to induce roots to form. Sometimes shoots may need to be specially elongated before rooting is attempted. To reduce the costs of micropropagation, many laboratories now remove unrooted shoots from the in vitro environment and root them outside the culture vessel (Fig 2.2). Therefore, in cultures where

micropropagation relies on adventitious or axillary shoots, Stage III is often conveniently divided, as Debergh and Maene (1981) suggested, into: • Stage IIIa, the elongation of buds or shoots formed during Stage II, to provide shoots of a suitable size for Stage IIIb; • Stage IIIb, the rooting of Stage IIIa shoots in vitro or extra vitrum. Procedures used to induce rooting are discussed in later chapters. Stage IV: Transfer to the natural environment Although not given a special numerical stage by Murashige, the methods whereby plantlets are transferred from the in vitro to the ex vitro external environment are extremely important. If not carried out carefully, transfer can result in significant loss of propagated material. There are two main reasons: —Shoots developed in culture have often been produced in high humidity and a low light ‘intensity’. This results in there being less leaf epicuticular wax or wax with an altered chemical composition, than on plants raised in growth chambers or greenhouses. In some plants, the stomata of leaves produced in vitro may also be atypical and incapable of complete closure under conditions of low relative humidity. Tissue cultured plants therefore lose water rapidly when moved to external conditions (Sutter and Langhans, 1979, 1980). —When supplied with sucrose (or some other carbohydrate) and kept in low light conditions, micropropagated plantlets are not fully dependent on their own photosynthesis (they are mixotrophic Chapter 12). A stimulus which is not provided in the closed in vitro environment seems to be needed for them to change to being fully capable of producing their own requirements of carbon and reduced nitrogen (i.e. before they become capable of feeding themselves - autotrophic) (Marin and Gella, 1987). The change only occurs after the plants have spent a period of several days ex vitro. In practice, plantlets are removed from their Stage III containers, and if they have been grown on agar medium, the gel is carefully washed from the roots. The application of an anti-transpirant film to the leaves has been recommended at this stage, but in practice, seems to be seldom used. Plantlets are then transplanted into an adequate rooting medium (such as a peat:sand compost) and kept for several days in high humidity and reduced light intensity. A fog of water vapour is very effective for maintaining humidity. Alternatively, intermittent water misting may be applied automatically, or the plants placed


Chapter 2

inside a clear plastic enclosure and misted by hand. With some plants, an in vitro Stage III can be omitted; shoots from Stage II are rooted directly in

35

high humidity, and, at the same time, gradually hardened to the exterior environment. The rooting of shoots using these methods is discussed fully in Volume 2.

Fig. 2.2 Alternative methods of rooting micropropagated shoots.

3. MICROPROPAGATION METHODS 3.1. THE PROPAGATION OF PLANTS FROM AXILLARY BUDS OR SHOOTS

The production of plants from axillary buds or shoots has proved to be the most generally applicable and reliable method of true-to-type in vitro propagation. Two methods are commonly used: • Shoot culture • Single, or multiple, node culture. Both depend on stimulating precocious axillary shoot growth by overcoming the dominance of shoot apical meristems. 3.1.1. Shoot (or shoot tip) culture

The term shoot culture is now preferred for cultures started from explants bearing an intact shoot meristem, whose purpose is shoot multiplication by the repeated formation of axillary branches. In this technique, newly formed shoots or shoot bases serve as explants for repeated proliferation; severed shoots

(or shoot clumps) are finally rooted to form plantlets which can be grown in vivo. This is the most widely used method of micropropagation. Explant size. Shoot cultures are conventionally started from the apices of lateral or main shoots, up to 20 mm in length, dissected from actively-growing shoots or dormant buds. Larger explants are also sometimes used with advantage: they may consist of a larger part of the shoot apex or be stem segments bearing one or more lateral buds; sometimes shoots from other in vitro cultures are employed. When apical or lateral buds were used almost exclusively as explants, the name ‘shoot tip culture’ came to be widely used for cultures of this kind. As the use of larger explants has become more common, the term shoot culture has become more appropriate. Large explants have advantages over smaller ones for initiating shoot cultures in that they:


36

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

• better survive the transfer to in vitro conditions • more rapidly commence growth • contain more axillary buds However, the greater the size of the explant, the more difficult it may be to decontaminate from micro-organisms; in practice the size used will be the largest that can be gained in aseptic conditions. Shoot cultures are also frequently started directly from the shoots obtained from meristem tip cultures. Virus eradication then proceeds the shoot multiplication phase. Occasionally fragmented or macerated shoot tips are used (see elsewhere in this Chapter). Meristem tip or meristem cultures are used for virus and bacteria elimination. Meristem cultures are initiated from much smaller explants and a single plantlet is usually produced from each. This terminology is very often abused.

Placing explants horizontally. In pear, pinching out the tips of shoots resulted in the growth of larger axillary shoots than in the controls, but the number of shoots was less. The most effective physical check to apical dominance was achieved by pinching the tips, and/or placing shoot explants horizontally on the medium (Lane, 1979; MacKay and Kitto, 1988). The treatment can be effective with many other woody plants: horizontal placement of shoot sections, consisting of 2-3 nodes, resulted in more axillary shoots being produced in cultures of Acer rubrum, Amelanchier spicata, Betula nigra, Forsythia intermedia and Malus domestica, than when explants were upright (McClelland and Smith, 1990). Favourable results have also been reported with lilac (Hildebrandt and Harney, 1983) and some apple cultivars (Yae et al., 1987).

Regulating shoot proliferation The growth and proliferation of axillary shoots in shoot cultures is usually promoted by incorporating growth regulators (usually cytokinins) into the growth medium. Most often such a treatment effectively removes the dominance of apical meristems so that axillary shoots are produced, often in large numbers. These shoots are used as miniature cuttings for plant multiplication. Removing the apex. In some plants, pinching out the main shoot axis is used as an alternative, or an adjunct, to the use of growth regulators for decreasing apical dominance. Pinching was found to be effective for some kinds of rose (Bressan et al., 1982) and for some apple cultivars (Yae et al., 1987). Pinching or ‘tipping’ is usually done when plant material is removed for subculturing, for example removing the apical bud at the first subculture increased the branching of Pistacia shoot cultures (Barghchi, 1986). An effective kind of shoot tipping occurs when shoots are cropped as microcuttings. Standardi (1982) and Shen and Mullins (1984) obtained effective shoot proliferation of kiwi and pear varieties by transferring the basal shoot clump that is left at this stage, to fresh medium for further proliferation. (Note however that this practice can increase the likelihood of obtaining deviant plants - see below). In just a few plants neither cytokinins nor pinching effectively remove apical dominance. Geneve et al. (1990) reported that seedling shoots of Gymnocladus dioicus produced 1–5 shoots, but only one grew to any appreciable length. If this shoot was removed, another took over.

The origin of shoots Unfortunately not all the shoots arising in shoot cultures may originate from axillary buds. Frequently, adventitious shoots also arise, either directly from cultured shoot material, or indirectly from callus at the base of the subcultured shoot mass. For example, Nasir and Miles (1981) observed that in subcultures of an apple rootstock, some new shoots arose from callus at the base of the shoot clump; both adventitious and axillary shoots were produced in Hosta cultures (Papachatzi et al., 1981); and shoot proliferation from some kinds of potato shoot tips was exclusively from organogenic callus (Roca et al., 1978). The precise origin of shoots can sometimes only be determined from a careful anatomical examination. Hussey (1983) has termed cultures providing both adventitious and axillary shoots, ‘mixed cultures’. Adventitious shoots, particularly those arising indirectly from callus, are not desirable. For reasons described in Volume 2, shoots of axillary origin will normally be genetically identical to the parent plant, whereas there is a probability that those regenerated from callus may differ in one or more characters. Genetically deviant plants may not occur with high frequency from newly initiated callus, but could begin to appear in significant number if shoot masses incorporating basal callus are simply chopped up to provide explants for subculture. The use of a strict protocol, using only axillary shoots, may present problems with some plants where the rate of shoot multiplication is comparatively slow. This has led to attempts by some workers to use a more relaxed regime and accept a proportion of


Chapter 2

adventitious shoots (e.g. with Kalanchoe blossfeldiana - Schwaiger and Horn, 1988). The usual consequence is a degree of variation amongst ramets which may, or may not, be acceptable. The formation of callus and the subsequent development of adventitious shoots can often be controlled by modifying the growth regulators in the medium. Fragmentation of a meristem tip, or its culture in a certain way, can lead to the formation of multiple adventitious shoots which can be used for plant propagation. These modifications of conventional shoot culture are described on in Chapter 10. History Although shoot culture has proved to be a widely applicable method of micropropagation, the appreciation of its potential value developed only slowly, and utilisation largely depended on improvements in tissue culture technology. Robbins (1922) seems to have been the first person to have successfully cultured excised shoot tips on a medium containing sugar. Tip explants of between 1.75 and 3.75 mm were taken from pea, corn and cotton, and placed in a liquid medium. For some reason the cultures were maintained in the dark where they only produced shoots with small chlorotic leaves and numerous roots. Although it is tempting to suppose that the potential of shoot culture for plant propagation might have been appreciated at a much earlier date had the cultures been transferred to the light, the rapid rate of shoot multiplication achieved in modern use of this technique depends on later developments in plant science. Only very slow progress in shoot culture was made during the next 20 years. As part of his pioneering work on plant tissue culture, White (1933) experimented with small meristem tips (0.1 mm or less) of chickweed (Stellaria media), but they were only maintained in hanging drops of nutrient solution. Leaf or flower primordia were observed to develop over a six-week period. Shoot culture of a kind was also carried out by La Rue (1936). His explants largely consisted of the basal and upper halves of seed embryos. Nevertheless, the apical plumular meristems of several plants were grown to produce entire plants. Whole plants were also obtained from axillary buds of the aquatic plant Radicula aquatica. Significant shoot growth from vegetative shoot tip explants was first achieved by Loo, and reported in 1945 and 1946 a, b. Asparagus shoot tips 5-10 mm in length were supported on glass wool over a liquid medium and later grown on a solidified substrate.

37

Loo (1945, 1946a, 1946b) made several significant observations showing that: • growth depended on sucrose concentration, higher levels being necessary in the dark than in the light; • explants, instead of being supported, could be grown satisfactorily on 0.5% agar; • in vitro shoot growth could apparently be continued indefinitely (35 transfers were made over 22 months); • shoot tip culture afforded a way to propagate plant material (clones were established from several excised shoot apices). This work failed to progress further because no roots were formed on the Asparagus shoots in culture. Honours for establishing the principles of modern shoot culture must therefore be shared between Loo and Ball. Ball (1946) was the first person to produce rooted shoots from cultured shoot apices. His explants consisted of an apical meristem and 2–3 leaf primordia. There was no shoot multiplication but plantlets of nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus) and white lupine (Lupinus alba) were transferred to soil and grown successfully. During several subsequent years, shoot apex (or meristem tip) culture was of interest only to plant pathologists who recognised its value for producing virus-tested plants. It was during studies of this kind that Morel made the significant discovery of protocorm formation from Cymbidium orchid shoot tips. Although they may be started from the same explants, cultures giving rise to protocorms are not typical shoot cultures (see later in this chapter). The two major developments which made shoot culture feasible were the development of improved media for plant tissue culture (Murashige and Skoog, 1962) and the discovery of the cytokinins as a class of plant growth regulators (Miller, 1961b; Skoog et al., 1965), with an ability to release lateral buds from dormancy (Wickson and Thimann, 1958; Sachs and Thimann, 1964). These developments were not immediately applied to shoot culture, and some years elapsed before it was appreciated that multiple shoots could be induced to form by appropriate growth regulator treatments. Hackett and Anderson (1967) got either single shoots from carnation shoot apices, or else a proliferative tissue from which shoots were later regenerated. Walkey and Woolfitt (1968) reported a similar kind of direct or indirect shoot proliferation from Nicotiana rustica shoot tips. Vine and Jones (1969) were able to transfer large shoot tips of hop (Humulus) to culture, but shoots only rooted, and


38

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

showed a high propensity for callus formation. Reports of plant multiplication using conventional shoot culture methods began to appear in the next decade. Haramaki (1971) described the rapid multiplication of Gloxinia by shoot culture and by 1972 several reports of successful micropropagation by this method had appeared (Adams, 1972; Haramaki and Murashige, 1972). Since then the number of papers on shoot culture published annually has increased dramatically and the method has been utilised increasingly for commercial plant propagation. Factors which have influenced the choice of shoot culture for practical micropropagation have been: • the way in which the method can be applied to a wide range of different plant species, using the same principles and basic methods; • the possibility of obtaining simultaneous virus control;

• a general uniformity and ‘trueness to type’ of the regenerated plants; • the relatively high rates of propagation which is possible in many species. Methods Primary explants In most herbaceous plants, shoot tip explants may be derived from either apical or lateral buds of an intact plant, and consist of a meristematic stem apex with a subtended rudimentary stem bearing several leaf initials (Fig 2.3). In the axils of the more developed leaf primordia there will be axillary bud meristems. In some species (e.g. Eucalyptus) it is an advantage to commence shoot cultures with a piece of the stem of the mother plant bearing one or more buds (stem nodes). Shoot growth from the bud, and treatment of the culture, is thereafter the same as in conventional shoot tip culture. The use of nodal explants should not be confused with node culture in which a method of shoot multiplication is used that is different to that in shoot culture (see later).

Fig. 2.3 Shoot tip culture. Separation of axillary shoots for rooting (or subculture) is easier in species which naturally produce long shoots.

Shoot tips from trees, or other woody perennials, can be difficult to decontaminate. Because of this,

Standardi and Catalano (1985) preferred to initiate shoot cultures of Actinidia chinensis from meristem


Chapter 2

tips which could be sterilised more easily. Shoot tips of woody plants are more liable than those of herbaceous species to release undesirable phenolic substances when first placed onto a growth medium. Buds taken from mature parts of the shrub or tree can also be reluctant to grow in vitro and seasonal factors may reinforce natural dormancy in buds from any source, so that cultures can only be readily initiated at certain times of the year (see Chapter 11). Shoot tip or lateral bud explants are usually most readily induced into growth if taken from juvenile shoots (see Chapter 11) such as those of seedlings or young plants. The juvenile shoots which sometimes emerge from the base of mature plants or which arise form heavily pruned or coppiced bushes and trees, are alternative sources. However, developing techniques have made it possible to propagate some woody ornamentals, forest trees and fruit trees, using explants derived from mature shoots (see Chapter 11). De Fossard et al. (1977) could initiate cultures of Eucalyptus ficifolia with shoot tips from 36 year-old trees, but forest-gathered material was very difficult to decontaminate unless covered and protected for some period before excision (stage 0). Secondary explants. Stage II subcultures are initiated from axillary shoots separated from primary shoot clusters. The place of the secondary explant within the primary shoot (cluster) can have a remarkable influence on the subsequent performance of the subcultures. A higher rate of shoot proliferation is often obtained from nodal explants or by subdivision of the basal shoot mass. Shoot tips were the best secondary explant for Rosa ‘Fraser McClay’, but with cherry (‘F12/1’) nodal explants gave more than twice as many shoots, and basal masses, three times as many as shoot tips (Hutchinson, 1985). In Sitka spruce, cultures that had been apices in the previous subculture were able to proliferate buds at higher rates than those that had been axillary buds (John and Murray, 1981). The origin of an explant can also have a tremendous influence on the subsequent behaviour of the plant when established under field conditions. This was illustrated by Marks and Meyers (1994) for Daphne odorata. To minimise the risk of genetic change in ramets, explants for subculture and shoots to be transferred to Stage III, should, as far as possible, be chosen from new shoots of axillary origin. It may be advisable to adjust the growth regulator content of the medium so that adventitious shoots are not formed, even though the rate of overall shoot multiplication is thereby reduced. In some circumstances callus arising at the

39

base of an explant may be semi-organised and therefore capable of producing genetically-stable plants (Vol. 2). Stage II cultures are typically without roots, and shoots need to be detached and treated as miniature cuttings which, when rooted, will provide the new plants that are required. An alternative is to allow shoot clusters to elongate and to root singulated shoots under ex vitro conditions (Fig 2.2). Media and growth regulators Advice on the selection of appropriate media for shoot cultures is given in Volume 2. A notable feature of shoot cultures of most plant species is the need for high cytokinin levels at Stage II to promote the growth of multiple axillary shoots. A description of the compounds which can be employed and effective rates of treatment are given in Chapters 3–7. Cytokinin growth regulators are usually extremely effective in removing the apical dominance of shoots. Their use can be combined with pinching the apex of shoots, or placing explants in an horizontal position (Chapter 6). A cytokinin treatment can not only promote the formation of multiple shoots (axillary and/or adventitious), but also (if the compound used is unsuitable, or the concentration used is too high), cause the shoots formed to be too short for rooting and transfer. Because or their nature, or the absence of an adequate method of culture, plants of some kinds fail to produce multiple shoots at Stage II and retain their apical dominance. In shoot cultures of Gymnocladus dioicus, for example, despite the formation of several axillary shoots in the presence of BA cytokinin, one shoot nearly always became dominant over the others (Geneve et al., 1990). Most plants of this kind are best propagated by node culture (see below). Elongation The length of the axillary shoots produced in shoot cultures varies considerably from one kind of plant to another. Species which have an elongated shoot system in vivo will produce axillary shoots which can be easily separated as microcuttings and then individually rooted. Apically dominant shoots which have not branched can be treated in the same way. At the other extreme are plants with a natural rosette habit of growth, which tend to produce shoot clusters in culture (Fig 2.3). When these are micropropagated, it is difficult to separate individual shoots for use as secondary explants. It may then only be practical to divide the shoot mass into pieces and re-culture the fragments. Such shoot clusters can be


40

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

induced to form roots when plants with a bushy habit are required (e.g. many species sold in pots for their attractive foliage). Otherwise it is necessary to specially elongate shoots before they are rooted (Stage IIIa). Shoot clusters are treated in such a way that axillary shoot formation is reduced, and shoot growth promoted. Individual shoots are then more readily handled and can be rooted as microcuttings. Methods for elongating shoots are discussed in Volume 2. Rooting and transfer The cytokinin growth regulators added to shoot culture media at Stage II to promote axillary shoot growth, usually inhibit root formation. Single shoots or shoot clusters must therefore be moved to a different medium for rooting in vitro before being transferred as plantlets to the external environment. An alternative strategy for some plants is to root the plant material ex vitro. The methods employed are described in Volume 2. Treatments need to be varied according to the type of growth; the nature of the shoot proliferation produced during Stage II culture; and the plant habit required by the customer. Current applications Conventional shoot culture continues to be the most important method of micropropagation, although node culture is gaining in importance. It is very widely used by commercial tissue culture laboratories for the propagation of many herbaceous ornamentals and woody plants (see Volume 2 for further details). The large numbers of manipulations required do, however, make the cost of each plantlet produced by this method comparatively expensive. Some success has been achieved in automating some stages of the process, in applying techniques for large-scale multiplication and in the use of robotics for plant separation and planting (Vol. 2). 3.1.2. Shoot proliferation from meristem tips

Barlass and Skene (1978; 1980a,b; 1982a,b) have shown that new shoots can be formed adventitiously when shoot tips of grapevine or Citrus are cut into several pieces before culture. Tideman and Hawker (1982) also had success using fragmented apices with Asclepias rotundifolia but not with Euphorbia peplus. Usually leaf-like structures first develop from the individual fragments; these enlarge and shoots form from basal swellings. Axillary shoots often arise from the initial adventitious shoots. Shoot cultures transferred to agitated liquid culture may form a proliferating mass of shoots. Although high rates of multiplication are possible, leafy shoots usually become hyperhydric (see

Volume 2). However, in some species at least, shoots can be reduced in size to little more than proliferating shoot initials (by adding plant growth retardants, Ziv et al,, 1994) which are then suitable for large-scale multiplication (Volume 2). A somewhat similar kind of culture consisting of superficial shoot meristems on a basal callus can sometimes be initiated from shoot tip explants or from the base of shoot cultures (see later in this chapter). 3.1.3. Single and multiple node culture (in vitro layering)

Single node culture is another in vitro technique which can be used for propagating some species of plants from axillary buds. As with shoot culture, the primary explant for single node culture is a shoot apex, a lateral bud or a piece of shoot bearing one or more buds (i.e. having one or more nodes). When shoot apices are used, it can be advantageous to initiate cultures with large explants (up to 20 mm), unless virus-tested cultures are required, and small meristem-tips will be employed. Unbranched shoots are grown at Stage I until they are 5–10 cm in length and have several discrete and separated nodes. An environment that promotes etiolated shoot growth may be an advantage. Then at Stage II, instead of inducing axillary shoot growth with growth regulators (as in shoot culture), one of two manipulative methods is used to overcome apical dominance and promote lateral bud break (Fig 2.2): • intact individual shoots may be placed on a fresh medium in an horizontal position. This method has been used by Wang (1977) to propagate potatoes, and has been termed ‘in vitro layering’; • each shoot may be cut into single-, or severalnode pieces which are sub-cultured. Leaves are usually trimmed so that each second stage explant consists of a piece of stem bearing one or more lateral buds. • each approach can be reiterated to propagate during stage II. Unfortunately, in vitro layering seldom results in several axillary shoots of equal length, as shown in Fig 2.4; apical dominance usually causes the leading shoot, or shoots, to grow more rapidly than the rest. El Hasan and Debergh (1987) found that, even in potato, node culture was preferable. Node culture is therefore the simplest method of in vitro propagation, as it requires only that shoot growth should occur. Methods of rooting are the same as those employed for the microcuttings derived from shoot culture, except that prior elongation of shoots is unnecessary.


Chapter 2

Note that “node culture” is distinct from shoot cultures started from the nodes of seedlings or mature plants. Media and growth regulators. Media for single node culture are intrinsically the same as those suitable for shoot culture. As in shoot culture, optimum growth rate may depend on the selection of a medium particularly suited to the species being propagated, but adequate results can usually be produced from well-known formulations.

41

It is often unnecessary to add growth regulators to the medium; for example, the shoots of some plants (e.g. Chrysanthemum morifolium) elongate satisfactorily without any being provided. If they are required, regulants at both Stages I and II will usually comprise an auxin and a cytokinin at rates sufficient to support active shoot growth, but not tissue proliferation or lateral bud growth. Sometimes gibberellic acid is advantageously added to the medium to make shoots longer and thus facilitate single node separation.

Fig. 2.4 Single and multiple node culture Stage one cultures can be initiated also from meristem or shoot tips.

Current applications Node culture is of value for propagating species that produce elongated shoots in culture (e.g. potato and Alstroemeria), especially if stimulation of lateral bud break is difficult to bring about with available cytokinins. Nowadays the technique becomes more and more popular in commercial micropropagation. The main reason is that it gives more guarantee for clonal stability. Indeed, although the rate of multiplication is generally less than that which can be brought about through shoot culture, there is less likelihood of associated callus development and the formation of adventitious shoots, so that Stage II subculture carries very little risk of induced genetic irregularity. For this reason, node culture has been increasingly recommended by research workers as the micropropagation method least likely to induces

somaclonal variation.. Some of the plants for which node culture has been described are listed in Table 2.2. 3.1.4. Multiple shoots from seeds (MSS)

During the early 1980's it was discovered that it was possible to initiate multiple shoot cultures directly from seeds. Seeds are sterilised and then placed onto a basal medium containing a cytokinin. As germination occurs, clusters of axillary and/or adventitious shoots (‘multiple shoots’) grow out, and may be split up and serially subcultured on the same medium. High rates of shoot multiplication are possible. For instance, Hisajima (1982a) estimated that 10 million shoots of almond could be derived theoretically from one seed in a year.


42

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

It is likely that multiple shoots can be initiated from the seeds of many species, particularly dicotyledons. The technique is effective in both herbaceous and woody species: soybean (Cheng et al., 1980; Hisajima, 1981; Hisajima and Church, 1981): sugar beet (Powling and Hussey, 1981): almond (Hisajima, 1981; 1982a,b,c): walnut

(Rodriguez, 1982): pumpkin and melon (Hisajima, 1981): cucumber and pumpkin (Hisajima, 1981, 1982c): pea, peanut, mung bean, radish, Zea mays and rice (Hisajima, 1982c). This technique does only make sense when elite seed is used or to gain preliminary information on the behaviour of a plant species under in vitro conditions.

Table 2.2 Examples of the use of node culture in micropropagation Monocotyledons

Solanum spp.

Alstroemeria

Hussey et al. (1980)

Cymbopogon spp.

Jagadish Chandra and Sreenath (1982)

Poa pratensis

Pieper and Smith (1988)

Asparagus officinalis

Yang and Clore (1973, 1974a)

Dioscorea spp. Zea mays

Haberlach et al. (1985), Levy (1988), Sihachakr et al. (1988)

Woody dicotyledons Carpinus betulus

Chalupa (1981a)

Castanea sativa Castanea mollissima

Vieitez and Vieitez (1980b) Yang et al. (1986)

Ammirato (1976, 1982), Chaturvedi and sinha (1979b)

Eucalyptus grandis

Cresswell and Nitsch (1975)

Forsythia ovata

Einset and Alexander (1985)

King and Shimamoto (1984)

Fraxinus pennsylvanica

Einset and Alexander (1985)

Jugans regia

Dandekar et al. (1988)

Orchid monocots Dendrobium spp.

Ball and Arditti (1976)

Hevea brasiliensis

Chen Z. (1984)

Phalaenopsis spp.

Tanaka and Sakanishi (1978)

Leucaena obtusifoliun

Einset and Alexander (1985)

Thunia alba

Singh and Prakash (1984)

Lonicera periclymemum

Boonnour et al. (1988)

Vanilla planifolia

Kononowicz and Janick (1984a)

Olea europea

Rugini and Fontenazza (1981)

Paulownia tomentosa

Burger et al. (1985)

Poncirus trifoliate

Barlass and Skene (1982b)

Prosopis julflora

Wainwright and England (1987)

Prunus armeniaca

Snir (1984)

Herbaceous dicotyledons Angelonia salicariaefolia

Datta and Datta (1984)

Cucumis sativus

Handley and Chambliss (1979)

Glycyrrhiza glabra

Shah and Dalal (1980, 1982)

Rosmarinus officinalis

Misra and Chaturvedi (1984)

Rorippa nasturtium

Wainwright and Marsh (1986)

Solanum tuberosum

Hussey and Stacey (1981a) Kristensen (1984)

3.1.5. Shoots from floral meristems

Meristems that would normally produce flowers or floral parts can sometimes be induced to give vegetative shoots in vitro. Success depends on the use of young inflorescences where the determination of individual flower meristems is not canalized. Meristems in older inflorescences are likely to give rise to floral structures. Culture of immature inflorescence segments has, for example, resulted in shoot formation in: • Bamboo - Gielis & Debergh (1998) • Broccoli - Anderson and Carstens (1977) • Cauliflower - Pow (1969), Margara (1969a,b,c; 1977a), Crisp and Walkey (1974), Grout and Crisp (1977), Trimboli et al. (1977) • Coconut - Eeuwens and Blake (1977)

Quercus robur

Chalupa (1984a,b)

Salix spp.

Chalupa (1981a, 1983)

Syringa spp.

Einset and Alexander (1985)

Syringa x chinensis

Welander N.T. (1987)

• Dendranthema - Shu O Wang and Su Shien Ma (1978) • Date palm - Drira and Benbadis (1985) • Gerbera - Topoonyanont and Dillen (1988) • Limonium - Topoonyannt et al. (1999) • Onion - Dunstan and Short (1977b; 1979a) • Sugar beet - Coumans-Gilles et al. (1981) The exact origin of the shoots produced has not always been determined. In cauliflower and coconut they were thought to originate from actual flower meristems, but in sugar beet, from floral axillary buds. Some shoots formed from onion flower heads arose from various parts of the flower buds, but they were accompanied by other shoots which arose adventitiously over the entire receptacle surface. Shoots formed from young flower buds may therefore


Chapter 2

not always result from the reversion of floral meristems. In fact the direct formation of adventitious shoots is more widely reported. 3.2. PROPAGATION BY DIRECT ORGANOGENESIS

3.2.1. Direct adventitious shoot initiation

In certain species, adventitious shoots which arise directly from the tissues of the explant (and not within previously-formed callus) can provide a reliable method for micropropagation. However, the induction of direct shoot regeneration depends on the nature of the plant organ from which the explant was derived, and is highly dependent on plant genotype. In responsive plants, adventitious shoots can be formed in vitro on pieces of tissue derived from various organs (e.g. leaves, stems, flower petals or roots); in others species, they occur on only a limited range of tissues such as bulb scales, seed embryos or seedling tissues. Direct morphogenesis is observed rarely, or is unknown, in many plant genera. Direct shoot formation is sometimes accompanied by proliferation of unorganised cells, and a regenerative tissue that could be classed as callus, may ultimately appear. Its formation can usually be reduced by adjustment of the growth regulators in the medium. Because there is a risk of regenerating plants with a different genetic identity (see Vol. 2), use of the callus for further propagation is not recommended unless it has a highly organised nature (see later). In some instances, the growth regulators used to initiate shoot buds directly on explants may not be conducive to continued bud growth. A closely packed mass of shoot primordia may then be mistaken for organised callus. In those species where adult tissues have a high regenerative capacity, the main advantages of micropropagation by direct adventitious shoot regeneration are that: • Initiation of Stage I cultures and Stage II shoot multiplication, are more easily achieved than by shoot culture. It is, for example, simpler to transfer aseptically several pieces of Saintpaulia leaf petiole to culture medium, than to isolate an equivalent number of shoot meristems. • Rates of propagation can be high, particularly if numerous small shoots arise rapidly from each explant. Stage I Stage I consists of the establishment in vitro of suitable pieces of tissue, free from obvious contamination. As adventitious shoots are usually

43

initiated on the tissue without transfer, Stages I and II are not generally discrete. Stage II Initially Stage II of this micropropagation method is recognised by the formation, growth and proliferation of adventitious shoots from the primary explant. Subsequently Stage II subcultures might, theoretically, be established from individual shoots by the techniques familiar in shoot culture. In practice, in plants such as Saintpaulia, both further adventitious and axillary shoots may develop in later stages of propagation. The result is a highly proliferative shoot mass and a very rapid rate of propagation. Subcultures are made by transferring shoot clumps (avoiding basal callus) to fresh media. In most commercial laboratories the micropropagation of Anthurium species is initiated by adventitious shoot formation on leaf explants, followed by only axillary shoot development during the succeeding subcultures (Debergh et al,, 1990). Adventitious shoots sometimes arise directly from the leaves of plants during shoot culture. This often happens when leaves bend down to touch the semisolid medium. Adventitious shoot formation of certain plants will take place in large vessels of aerated liquid medium, allowing the scale of propagation to be much increased (see the discussion on liquid media in Chapter 12). Stage III This is similar to the Stage III of most propagation systems. Individual shoots or shoot clumps are transferred to a nutrient medium with added growth regulators and ingredients that do not encourage further shoot proliferation and which promote rooting; alternatively shoots may be removed from culture and rooted ex vitro. Some current applications Several ornamental plants are at present propagated in vitro by direct shoot regeneration. Chief among these are plants of the family Gesneriaceae, (including Achimenes, Saintpaulia, Sinningia and Streptocarpus), where shoot buds can be freely regenerated directly on leaf explants without the formation of any intervening callus phase. Many other ornamentals and crop plants either are (or could be) propagated efficiently by this means, for example, begonias, Epiphyllum, cacti, Gerbera, Hosta and Lilium. Further examples are quoted in the tables of Volume 2. Remember that this technique is more prone to yield off-types than shoot and node cultures,


44

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

and that the technology is not applicable for the propagation of chimeras.

shoot material or tissue fragments in fermentors (Vol. 2), are somewhat comparable.

Regeneration from root pieces In vitro shoot regeneration from root pieces is mainly reported from plants that possess thick fleshy roots such as those of the genera Cichorium, Armoracia, Convolvulus, and Taraxacum. It is, however, a method of propagation that is potentially applicable to a wide range of species (Browse, 1980; Hodge, 1986). Shoots have, for instance, been induced to form directly on segments and apices of the roots of Citrus and Poncirus seedlings (Sauton et al., 1982). Shoot regeneration from root pieces does not offer a continuous method of micropropagation unless there is a ready supply of aseptic root material (e.g. from isolated root cultures). Roots grown in soil in vivo are usually heavily contaminated and can be difficult to sterilize to provide an adequate number of uncontaminated cultures. They can however be used as an initial source of shoots which can be multiplied afterwards by shoot culture [e.g. Robinia (Chalupa, 1992)].

3.2.2. Organised calluses

Tissue maceration or fragmentation The capacity of young fern tissue to regenerate adventitious shoots can be very high. Fern prothallus tissue (the gametophyte generation produced from germinating spores) has a high capacity for regeneration; a new prothallus can usually be grown from small isolated pieces of tissue (Whittier and Steeves, 1962), or even from single cells produced by maceration (Miller J.H., 1968; De Fossard, 1976; Knauss, 1976). Plants can also be regenerated from homogenised sporophyte tissue of some fern genera, and homogenisation has been incorporated into tissue culture, or partial tissue culture techniques for the propagation of plants of this class (see Volume 2). Because a high proportion of the direct cost of micropropagation is attributable to the manual separation and transfer of explants and cultured material between media, the ability to regenerate plants from macerated or fragmented tissue would be extremely advantageous. Unfortunately there seem to be only a limited number of publications describing the formation of shoots directly from machinemacerated tissue of higher plants. One of them is the patent of Lindemann (1984), the claims of which may have been somewhat optimistic. Also Levin et al. (1997) reported on the regeneration of different plant species using a homogenisation technology. However, shoot regeneration from fragmented shoot tips, or micropropagation of some plants by culturing

In most callus cultures, shoots are produced from meristems which arise irregularly and may therefore be genetically altered. By contrast, so-called ‘organised’ or ‘semi-organised’ calluses are occasionally isolated in which there is a superficial layer of proliferating shoot meristems, overlaying an inner core of vacuolated cells acting as a mechanical and nutritional support. Calluses of this kind were termed organoid colonies by Hunault (1979): the names meristemoids and nodules have also been proposed. A meristemoid is defined as a cluster of isodiametric cells within a meristem or cultured tissue, with the potential for developmental (totipotential) growth. Meristemoids may give rise to plant organs (shoots, roots) or entire plants in culture (Donnelly and Vidaver, 1988). Nodules also comprise meristematic cells, but they are distinct from meristemoids because they are independent spherical, dense cell clusters which form cohesive units, with analogy to both mineral nodules in geology and root nodules of legumes (McCown et al., 1988). Nodule culture has been extensively used for the propagation of Cichorium intybus (Pieron et al., 1993). The presence, in meristemoids, of an outer layer of shoot meristems seems to inhibit the unbridled proliferation of the unorganised central tissue (Hussey, 1983). Geier (1988) has suggested that the control mechanisms which ensure the genetic stability of shoot meristems are still fully, or partly, active. Maintenance of a semi-organised tissue system depends on a suitable method of subculture and upon the use of growth regulator levels which do not promote excessive unorganised cell growth. Repeated selective transfer of unorganised portions of an organised Anthurium scherzerianum callus eventually resulted in the loss of caulogenesis (Geier, 1986). Conversely, by consistently removing the unorganised tissue when subculturing took place, shoot formation from the callus was increased. Cultures consisting of superficial shoot meristems above a basal callus, seem to occur with high frequency amongst those initiated from meristem tip, or shoot tip, explants. Hackett and Anderson (1967) induced the formation of tissue of this type from carnation shoot tips by mutilating them with a razor blade before culture. Similar cultures were also obtained from seedling plumular tip explants of two (out of five tested) varieties of Pisum sativum placed


Chapter 2

on an agar medium (Hussey and Gunn, 1983; 1984). The calli were highly regenerative for 2-3 years by regular subculture to agar or shaken liquid medium. Maintenance was best achieved with an inoculum prepared by removing larger shoots and chopping the remainder of the callus and small shoots into a slurry. A callus, formed at the base of Solanum curtilobum meristem tips on filter paper bridges, gave rise to multiple adventitious shoots from its surface when transferred to shake culture in a liquid medium (Grout et al., 1977). Callus with superficial proliferative meristems has also been induced by culture of shoot or meristem tips on a rotated liquid medium, in: • Nicotiana rustica (Walkey and Woolfitt, 1968); • Chrysanthemum morifolium (Earle and Langhans 1974c); • Stevia rebaudiana (Miyagawa et al., 1986). In Stevia rebaudiana (above), a slow rotation speed (2 rpm) was essential for initiation of an organised callus. A small callus formed upon the explant and in 2-3 weeks came to possess primary superficial shoot primordia which were globular and light green. Dark green aggregates of shoot primordia (termed ‘secondary shoot primordia’' by Miyagawa et al., 1986) were developed within 6 weeks. If divided, the aggregations of shoot initials in both Nicotiana and Stevia could be increased by subculture or, if treated to a different cultural regime, could be made to develop into shoots with roots. Shoots were produced from Chrysanthemum callus upon subculture to an agar medium. A spherical green dome-like structure was produced from meristem tips dissected from germinated Eleusine coracana (Gramineae) caryopses. When cut into four and subcultured, a green nodular structure was formed which grew to 5-10 mm in diameter. It was similar in appearance to a shoot dome, but much larger (a natural shoot dome is only 70-80 µm wide). The nodular structures were termed ‘supradomes’ by Wazizuka and Yamaguchi (1987) because, unlike normal callus, superficial cells were arranged in an anticlinal plane and those beneath had a periclinal arrangement. Numerous multiple buds could be induced to form when the organised tissue was subcultured to a less complex medium. Although proliferative meristematic tissue formed from shoot tips always appears to be accompanied by a basal callus, the superficial meristematic cells may well be derived directly from the cells of the apical shoot meristem of the explant, for they preserve the same commitment to immediate shoot formation. The

45

presence of the apical meristem in the explant seems to be essential and culture of tissue immediately beneath it does not produce a callus with the same characteristics (Hussey and Gunn, 1984). Similar semi-organised callus can appear at the base of conventional shoot cultures. In the green granular callus mass which formed at the base of Rhododendron shoot tips, each granule represented a potential shoot (Kyte and Briggs, 1979). Organised caulogenic callus is thus closely comparable to embryogenic callus formed from pre-embryogenically determined cells. Organised callus can be produced from explants other than shoot tips; in Anthurium, it has been derived from young leaf tissue (above, Geier, 1986) and from spadix pieces (Geier, 1987).Organised callus has two characteristics which distinguish it from normal unorganised callus: the plants produced from it show very little genetic variation, and it can be subcultured for a very long period without losing its regenerative capacity. The callus of Nicotiana (above) was able to produce plantlets over a ten-year period, while that of Chrysanthemum gave rise to plants continuously during four years. The use of cultures with superficial proliferative meristems has not yet been widely used for micropropagation. There are three possible reasons: • the genetic variation which is almost invariably induced by shoot regeneration from normal callus, has cautioned against the use of any sort of callus culture for this purpose; • organised callus may not always be readily distinguished from its unorganised counterpart; • methods of initiating organised callus in a predictable fashion have not yet been fully elucidated. There are examples of the initiation of organised callus from a sufficiently wide range of plant species (particularly from meristem tip explants) to suggest that it could be a method of general applicability. Multiplication may well be amenable to large-scale culture in fermentors (Vol. 2). 3.2.3 Direct embryogenesis

Somatic embryos are often initiated directly upon explanted tissues. Of the occurrences mentioned in Chapter 1, one of the most common is during the in vitro culture of explants associated with, or immediately derived from, the female gametophyte. The tendency for these tissues to give rise to adventitious somatic embryos is especially high in plants where sporophytic polyembryony occurs


46

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

naturally, for example, some varieties of Citrus and other closely related genera. Ovules, nucellar embryos, nucellus tissues and other somatic embryos are particularly liable to display direct embryogenesis. In Carica somatic embryos originated from the inner integument of ovules (Litz and Conover, 1981a,b) and in carrot tissue of the mericarp seed coat can give rise to somatic embryos directly (Smith and Krikorian, 1988). The nucellus tissue of many plants has the capacity for direct embryogenesis in vitro (Haccius and Hausner, 1976; Eichholtz et al., 1979; Rangaswamy, 1982; Litz, 1987). As explained in Chapter 1, explants may also give rise to a proliferative tissue capable of embryogenesis. The high embryogenic competence of the nucellus is usually retained during subsequent cell generations in vitro, should the tissue be induced to form ‘callus’ (or cell suspensions). It is not clear whether all cells of the nucellus are embryogenically committed. In Citrus, somatic embryos are formed from the nucellus even in cultivars that are normally monoembryonic (i.e. the seeds contain just one embryo derived from the zygote), whether the ovules have been fertilised or not. It has been suggested that only those cells destined to become zygotic proembryos can become somatic proembryos or give rise to embryogenic callus (Sabharwal, 1963); somatic embryos have been shown to arise particularly from the micropylar end of Citrus nucellus. Adventitious (adventive) embryos are commonly formed in vitro directly upon the zygotic embryos of monocotyledons, dicotyledons and gymnosperms, upon parts of young seedlings (especially hypocotyls and cotyledons) and upon somatic embryos at various stages of development (especially if their growth has been arrested). The stage of growth at which zygotic embryos may undergo adventive embryogenesis is species-dependent: in many plants it is only immature zygotic embryos which have this capacity. Unfortunately, as the phenotypic potential of seedlings is rarely known, using them as a source of clonal material is of limited value. Embryogenic determination can be retained through a phase of protoplast culture. Protoplasts isolated from embryogenic suspensions, may give rise to somatic embryos directly, without any intervening callus phase (Miura and Tabata, 1986; Sim et al., 1988). Treating protoplasts derived from leaf tissue of Medicago sativa with an electric field,

induced them to produce somatic embryos directly upon culture (Dijak et al., 1986). Adventitious embryos arising on seedlings are sometimes produced from single epidermal cells (Konar et al., 1972a; Thomas et al., 1976 - see Chapter 1). Zee and Wu (1979) described the formation of proembryoids within petiole tissue of Chinese celery seedlings, and Zee et al. (1979) showed that they arose from cortical cells adjacent to the vascular bundles which first became meristematic. Hypocotyl explants from seedlings of the leguminous tree Albizia lebbek showed signs of cracking after two weeks of culture and frequently young embryoids emerged (Gharyal and Maheshwari, 1981). Stamp and Henshaw (1982) found that primary and secondary embryogenesis occurred in morphogenically active ridges produced on the surface of cotyledon pieces taken from mature cassava seeds. Somatic embryos have been observed on the roots and shoots of Hosta cultures (Zilis and Zwagerman, 1980) and on the needles and cultured shoots of various gymnosperm trees (Bonga, 1976; McCown and Amos, 1982). Protocorm formation in orchids The seeds of orchids (like those of some other saprophytic or semi-parasitic plants) contain a small embryo of only about 0.1 mm diameter, without any associated endosperm storage tissue. Upon germination, the embryo enlarges to form a small, corm-like structure, called a protocorm, which possesses a quiescent shoot and root meristem at opposite poles. In nature, a protocorm becomes green and accumulates carbohydrate reserves through photosynthesis. Only when it has grown and has sufficient stored organic matter does it give rise to a shoot and a root. Normal seedling growth then continues utilising the stored protocorm food reserves. Bodies which, in their structure and growth into plantlets, appear to be identical with seedling protocorms (except that on synthetic media they may not be green), are formed during in vitro culture of different types of orchid organs and tissues. These somatic protocorms can appear to be dissimilar to seedling protocorms, and many workers on orchid propagation, have used terms such as ‘protocorm-like bodies’ (PLBs) to describe them. When a shoot tip of an orchid is transferred to culture on a suitable medium, it ceases to grow and to develop as a mature shoot apex; instead it behaves as though it were the apex of an embryo, i.e. it gives rise


Chapter 2

to a protocorm (Vol. 2). Protocorm-like bodies also arise directly on some other orchid explants and proliferate from other PLBs in a fashion which is exactly comparable to the direct formation of somatic embryos. Champagnat and Morel (1972) and Norstog (1979) considered the appearance of protocorms to be a manifestation of embryogenesis because they represent a specialised stage in embryo development and are normally derived directly from zygotic embryos. We think that this is the correct interpretation: in a previous edition of this book, protocorms were described under ‘storage organs’. Other protocorm-like structures. In vitro culture of small immature proembryos from developing barley seeds (Norstog, 1961, 1965a, 1970) or from the fern Todea barbara (De Maggio and Wetmore, 1961) has been noted to result in the formation of protocorm-like tissue masses from which root and shoots are regenerated after a period of irregular growth. Mapes (1973) recorded the appearance of such protocorm-like structures on shoot tips of pineapple, and Abo El-Nil and Zettler (1976) describe their direct formation on shoot tip explants of the yam Colocasia esculenta, or indirectly in subsequent callus cultures. Embryogenesis from microspores or anther culture Somatic embryos can be initiated directly from microspores. Usually it is necessary to culture the microspores within anthers, but occasionally it has been possible to induce embryogenesis from isolated microspores. Anther and microspore culture are described in Chapter 1, but because the plants produced by anther culture are likely to be dissimilar to their parents, we shall not consider the method in any detail in this book, and reports of anther culture have been largely omitted from the tables in Volume 2. Good references to this topic are available in the series of books published by Jain et al. (1996 and 1997). Anther culture can result in callus formation; the callus may then give rise to plants through indirect embryogenesis or adventitious shoot formation. Embryo proliferation Accessory embryos on zygotic embryos. Occasionally new somatic embryos are formed directly on zygotic embryos that have been transferred to in vitro culture. Such adventitious embryos have been reported, for example, in:

47

Cuscuta reflexa (Maheshwari and Baldev, 1961); barley (Norstog, 1970); Ilex aquifolium (Hu and Sussex, 1972; Hu, 1977; Hu et al., 1978); Thuja orientalis (Konar and Oberoi, 1965); Trifolium repens (Maheswaran and Williams, 1985); Zamia integrifolia (Norstog, 1965b; Norstog and Rhamstine, 1967); Theobroma cacao (Pence et al., 1980a,b); Linum usitatissimum (Pretova and Williams, 1986); Vitis vinifera (Stamp and Meredith (1988). When direct embryogenesis occurs on pre-formed embryonic tissue, the newly formed embryos are sometimes termed direct secondary embryos or accessory embryos. Accessory embryos on somatic embryos The in vitro induction of somatic embryogenesis starts a highly repetitive process, lacking some of the controls which must exist in nature during the formation of zygotic embryos. This results in the frequent development of small additional embryos on somatic embryos which have arisen directly on explants, or indirectly in callus and suspension cultures. Accessory embryos can occur along the whole axis of the original embryo, or grow preferentially from certain sites (e.g. the hypocotyl region or the scutellum of monocot. embryoids). In walnut, accessory embryos appear to arise from single cells of the epidermis of somatic embryos (McGranahan et al., 1988). Sometimes the term polyembryony is used to describe the formation of accessory, or secondary, embryos (Radojevic, 1988) (c.f. the term polyembryogenesis in Chapter 1). The process has also been called repetitive embryogenesis (Tulecke and McGranahan, 1985) or recurrent somatic embryogenesis (Lupotto, 1986). Such additional embryos are liable to be developed during all kinds of in vitro embryogenesis. They have been noted for example, on the somatic embryos formed in: • Anther cultures: Atropa belladonna (Rashid and Street, 1973); Brassica napus (Thomas et al., 1976); Carica papaya (Tsay and Su, 1985); Citrus aurantifolia (Chaturvedi and Sharma, 1985); Datura innoxia (Geier and Kohlenbach, 1973); Vitis hybrids (Rajasekaran and Mullins, 1979); • Suspension cultures: Daucus carota (Ammirato and Steward, 1971; McWilliam et al., 1974); Ranunculus scleratus (Konar and Nataraja, 1965b; Konar et al., 1972a); • Callus cultures: Aesculus hippocastanum (Radojevic, 1988); alfalfa (when individual embryoids were transferred to a fresh medium) (Saunders and Bingham, 1972); carrot (Petrù, 1970); Citrus (Button and Kochba, 1977); parsley (Vasil and


48

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

Hildebrandt, 1966b); Pennisetum purpureum (Wang and Vasil, 1982); Ranunculus sceleratus (Konar and Nataraja, 1965a,b), Theobroma cacao (Li et al., 1998). Protocorms arising directly on explanted shoot tips or leaf pieces of orchids, frequently produce other adventive ‘daughter’ protocorms in culture, in a fashion that is similar to the adventive formation of somatic embryos. Somatic embryos formed in callus of oil palm have been reported to give rise to protocorm-like bodies, which regenerated shoots repeatedly as subculture was continued (Paranjothy and Rohani, 1982). Practical uses in propagation From a quantitative point of view, indirect embryogenesis does provide an efficient method of micropropagation; the same is not true of direct embryogenesis when it is unaccompanied by the proliferation of embryogenic tissue. Although plants can be regenerated from embryos directly initiated in vitro, and may be present in sufficient numbers for limited plant production in breeding programmes, the numbers of primary embryos per explant will usually be inadequate for large scale cloning. To increase the number of somatic embryos formed directly on immature zygotic embryos of sunflower, Freyssinet and Freyssinet (1988) cut larger zygotic embryos into four equal pieces. Additional embryos are generally unwanted: they are frequently joined one to another as twins or larger groups so that abnormal seedlings with multiple shoots develop from them. The presence of accessory embryos can also impede the growth of the primary somatic embryo. Growth then becomes asynchronous and normal seedlings may not be obtained unless the adventive embryos are removed. However it has been suggested that accessory embryos might be used for micropropagating some species. Perhaps this is a method of micropropagation which will be developed more in the future? Examples of where it has been successful are: • Helianthus annuus (Plissier et al.. 1990); • Juglans regia. (McGranahan et al.1988b); • Medicago sativa (Lupotto 1986). As mentioned earlier embryogenesis has a great potential for mass propagation, however, all adventitious techniques do still have the associated problem of the lack of clonal stability. Therefore the commercial application of this technology remains limited except, perhaps, where embryos arise directly from parental tissue.

The propagation of orchids Morel (1960) noticed that when protocorms of Cymbidium were divided new protocorms were formed from the pieces, whereas if they were not divided, original and regenerated protocorms developed into new plantlets. Morel (1960, 1964) suggested that meristem or shoot tip explants could be used to establish cultures for the clonal propagation of orchids, providing thereby the basis of the method which is now used for many orchid genera. Rates of propagation are improved through the use of slightly more complex media than used by Morel, and by including growth regulators. However, many commercial micropropagation laboratories do not favour the use of protocorms for micropropagation because of the lack of clonal fidelity. Some orchids not only form protocorms on apical meristems, but also directly on explants such as leaves (Churchill et al., 1971; 1973; Tanaka et al., 1975), or flower stalks (Flamée and Boesman, 1977; Arditti et al., 1977), or they may be formed from callus or callus via suspension cultures (see the section on orchids in Volume 2). 3.3. PROPAGATION BY INDIRECT ORGANOGENESIS

Propagation by all methods of indirect organogenesis carries a risk that the regenerated plants will differ genetically from each other and from the stock plant. Propagation by indirect organogenesis is described here for the sake of completeness; because of its potential as a propagation method, if the occurrence of genetic variation can be controlled; and because it is necessary for the regeneration and propagation of plants, which have been genetically transformed. 3.3.1. Indirect adventitious shoots from callus

Because they are not formed on tissues of the original mother plant, shoots (or other organs) are said to be regenerated indirectly when they are formed on previously unorganised callus, or in cell cultures. Separate root and shoot initials are characteristically formed in callus cultures and are only observed occasionally in suspensions where they are typically produced in large cell aggregates. Somatic embryogenesis occurs in both callus and suspension cultures. Adjustment of the growth regulators in the culture medium can bring about shoot or root formation in callus from a very large number of species. Inception of roots and shoots is most frequent in tissues that have been recently


Chapter 2

isolated, and morphogenic capacity generally declines with time as the tissues are subcultured. Nevertheless, some callus cultures maintain their regenerative ability over long periods. As explained in Chapter 10, callus cultures vary in their morphogenic potential or competence. Because of this, the callus which originates from some plants, or from some kinds of explant, may not be responsive to techniques and media which frequently result in morphogenesis. The tissue may be non-morphogenic, or may only produce roots, from which plants cannot be regenerated. In some cases callus lines with different appearances (texture, colour, etc) and/or morphogenic capacities can be isolated from the same explant (Fig 2.5). These differences may reflect the epigenetic potential of the cells, or be caused by the appearance of genetic variability amongst the cells of the culture (Volume 2) and support Street's (1979) suggestion that primary explants may be composed of cells or tissues capable of morphogenesis (competent cells) and others that are incapable (non-competent cells). Another possibility is that the operator is not able to create the appropriate conditions to express the full potential of the plant material he is working with. Morphogenic and non-morphogenic callus lines, selected from primary callus, can retain their characteristics over many years (Reuther, 1990). Special treatments, such as, a change of medium, an altered cultural environment, or an adjustment of the growth regulators added to the medium, may induce shoots or roots to form in some apparently nonmorphogenic calluses; but generally, treatments to reverse a non-regenerative condition are unsuccessful. In practice, the speed and efficiency with which plantlets can be regenerated from callus depends upon: • the interval between culture initiation and the onset of morphogenesis; • the choice of the appropriate type of callus; • the frequency and rate of shoot bud initiation; • whether shoot regeneration can be readily reinduced when the callus is subcultured; • the number of subcultures that are possible without loss of morphogenesis; • whether newly-initiated buds can be grown into shoots capable of being isolated and subsequently rooted. Normal callus cultures produce shoots relatively slowly, but from some plants, and certain explants, under conditions that are not yet fully understood,

49

callus can be initiated which has an especially high ability to regenerate shoots or somatic embryos. Stage I. In most herbaceous broad leafed plants, it is possible to initiate morphogenically competent callus cultures from explants derived from many different tissues. Leaf, stem or root segments, pieces of storage tissue (e.g. tubers), seed embryos, shoot tips and seedling tissues have been used at various times. In monocotyledons there is a narrower range of suitable organs; embryos, very young leaf tissue, stem nodes and immature inflorescences being the most common sources. Initiation of callus cultures of many tree species, including gymnosperms, is frequently limited to explants derived from tissues near the vascular bundles or the cambium of stem or root sections. Explants containing actively dividing cells may be necessary if callus possessing a high level of morphogenic competence is to be isolated. Callus growth is usually initiated by placing the chosen explant on a semi-solid medium into which auxin has been incorporated at a relatively high level, with or without a cytokinin. Details of the compounds used are given in Chapter 5. One or more transfers on the same medium may be necessary before the callus is separated from the parental tissue for subculture. Because more than one kind of callus may arise from a single explant, successful propagation can depend on being able to recognise and subculture only the type (or types) which will eventually be able to give rise to shoots or somatic embryos. In the absence of previous experience, samples of each type of callus may have to be carried forward for testing on inductive media. Translucent, watery callus is seldom morphogenic, whereas nodular callus frequently is. Organised adventitious shoots are usually induced to form in callus or suspension cultures by reducing the auxin level in the medium and/or increasing the concentration of cytokinin. To grow callus-derived shoots into plantlets capable of survival in the soil, they must be rooted as micro-cuttings. Root production by callus is of little consequence for micropropagation purposes; even if roots are formed concurrently with adventitious shoots, the vascular connections between roots and shoots, through the callus tissue, are almost invariably insufficient for the development of a functional plantlet. Stage II. Once a morphogenic callus has been isolated, propagation is carried out either by callus subdivision, or by the preparation of cell suspensions.


50

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

The success of each technique depends on the subcultured tissues or cells continuing to regenerate shoots. Callus subdivision. Callus is cut into smaller pieces which increase in size when subcultured in a liquid or an agar-solidified medium. The callus can either be subdivided further, or shoot regeneration allowed to occur. This may take place on the same medium, or

the callus may need to be transferred to another shoot-inducing medium. The organogenic capacity of callus is easily lost on repeated subculture. Use of high growth regulator levels can encourage the proliferation of non-regenerative callus which will displace tissues having the competence to form new shoots (e.g. in Pelargonium; Holdgate, 1977).

Fig. 2.5 Callus with different morphogenic potential is often isolated from a single explant.

The preparation of cell suspensions. Compared to the relatively rapid rates of propagation that are possible with shoot culture of some kinds of plants, propagation from morphogenically competent callus can be slow initially. Krikorian and Kann (1979) quoted a minimum of 135 days from the excision of daylily explants to the potting of plantlets. The rate at which propagation can proceed after that depends on the rate at which callus can be grown and subdivided. Providing a shoot-forming capacity is retained, a much faster rate of multiplication can be achieved by initiating a suspension culture from competent callus. After being increased by culture, the cells or cell aggregates can then be plated to produce new regenerative callus colonies. This is not an easy operation, as growth regulators favouring the

formation of a dispersed cell suspension can cause the cells to lose their morphogenic capacity (see Chapter 10). There is also the problem that, by prolonging the period before shoot regeneration, genetic variability within the cell line will be increased. Genetic stability In some crop plants, the genetic differences between plants derived from callus and suspension cultures (discussed in Volume 2) are considerable, and are sufficient to have attracted the interest of plant breeders as a new source of selectable variability. However, plants obtained from callus lines with a high degree of morphogenic competence, appear to be much more uniform genetically. Care must be taken though to see that primary explants are


Chapter 2

not taken from plant tissue likely to be endopolyploid. Subsequent exposure to high levels of growth substances such as 2,4-D should also be avoided as far as possible. Genetic stability of plants from highly competent callus cultures may be assisted by the continual presence of superficial meristems. As mentioned previously in Section 3.2.2, these probably repress shoot formation from cells within the callus mass (Hussey, 1983). Morphogenic cereal cultures The shoot forming capacity of some callus cultures has been attributed to the proliferation of meristematic centres derived from the tissues of the explant. King et al. (1978) have suggested that the small number of shoots produced by certain cereal tissue cultures arises in this way (e.g. in wheat, rice, oat and maize). Cure and Mott (1978) noticed that aberrant root-like structures existed within cereal cultures from which shoots arose. Such primordia, whether of root or shoot origin, are thought to proliferate adventitiously in vitro, surrounded by less organised tissues. Regenerative capacity is usually lost rapidly when the shoot primordia are diluted during subculture. Cereal callus of this kind does not have the same kind of inherent morphogenic capacity found in other types of callus cultures. Despite these observations, experience shows that morphogenesis can occur from previously unorganised cereal callus. Current applications In the past, several ornamental plants [e.g. Freesia (Hussey and Hargreaves, 1974) and Pelargonium (Holdgate, 1977)] have been micropropagated from adventitious shoots produced indirectly from callus. It had been hoped to extend the technique to other species possessing a strong natural tendency towards diploidy (e.g. some forest trees) where plantlets produced in vitro might have a normal karyotype (Mott, 1981), but it is now realised that the genetic changes which are almost universally induced in the genotype of cells during callus and cell culture make cloning by this technique inadvisable except where new genotypes are required for selection or further plant breeding. Another possibility is that mutated somatic cells, already present in the mother plant, are given the opportunity to develop into a plantlet. 3.3.2 Indirectly-initiated somatic embryos

Indirect formation of somatic embryos (or adventitious somatic embryogenesis) from callus or suspension cultures is observed more frequently than direct embryogenesis. Frequently callus which is

51

wholly or partly embryogenic can be induced during the initial culture of explants derived from young meristematic tissues (see below), but induction is less common in cultures which have been kept and transferred for some period without organogenesis. There are important requirements for the successful induction of embryogenic callus and suspension cultures: • The plant genotype must be capable of embryogenesis on the chosen system of induction (medium plus added growth regulators). In some genera most genotypes are competent, but in others there may be a wide variation in competence even between different varieties or cultivars within a species. • In most practical situations, cultures should be grown in the presence of an auxin for the induction (and initiation) of embryogenesis (Stage I). • The level of sugar (e.g. sucrose or glucose) in the medium may need to be within critical concentrations, and no embryos may be formed at all if the sugar concentration is too high (Lippman and Lippmann, 1984). • After the beginning of embryogenesis, it is usually (but not invariably) necessary for Stage I tissues or cells to be subcultured to a medium containing a reduced auxin concentration, or containing no auxin at all (Stage II) (Chapter 9). • There may be an optimum length of time during which the Stage I routine should be maintained. An extended period before subculture can result in the failure to obtain embryogenesis at Stage II (e.g. Dos Santos et al.1980). Maintenance of the cultures on high auxin usually causes embryo development to be arrested or a loss of embryogenic capability. • A supply of reduced nitrogen is required. This may be supplied in the form of NH4+ ion and/or as an amino acid such as glutamine or alanine (see Chapter 3). Embryogenesis in primary callus cultures Callus capable of producing somatic embryos (embryogenic callus) is most reliably obtained from an explant during the initial phase of culture, and is frequently produced in conjunction with nonmorphogenic tissue. Embryogenic callus can usually be distinguished by its nodular appearance, and is frequently produced preferentially from one part of an explant (e.g. the scutellum of a monocotyledon embryo), probably because only the cells of that part of the explant were embryogenically pre-determined. These may be the same tissues, which in another


52

Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

cultural environment are capable of producing embryos directly (Sharp et al., 1980). According to this hypothesis, although competent and noncompetent cells may produce callus, only that which grows from competent cells will give rise to somatic embryos. The expression of competence depends on the use of a suitable medium for the culture, containing requisite growth regulators at the correct concentration. The formation of somatic embryos in Lolium multiflorum, for example, was medium dependent (Dale et al., 1981). On the most suitable medium, immature inflorescence explants produced three types of callus, only one of which spontaneously formed embryo-like structures. Unless such different callus types are separated, cells of different regenerative capabilities may become mixed. Morphogenically competent cells could then be lost by competition in the combined callus tissue that results. Stage I. Selection of an appropriate explant is most important. Embryogenic callus has been commonly gained from seed embryos, nucelli or other highly meristematic tissues such as parts of seedlings, the youngest parts of newly initiated leaves and inflorescence primordia. Within an inflorescence, staminoids [Theobroma cacao (Li et al., 1998)] and filaments [Aesculus hippocastanum (Radojevic, 1995)] have been reported to be adequate sources of explants. The initiation of embryogenic callus from root tissue is rare but has been reported in some monocotyledons e.g. rice (Inoue and Maeda, 1982; Toshinari and Futsuhara, 1985); oil palm (Paranjothy and Rohani, 1982), Italian ryegrass (Jackson and Dale, 1988) and Allium carinatum (Havel and Novak, 1988). Callus is usually commenced on a semi-solid medium incorporating a relatively high level of an auxin; compounds commonly used for this purpose are described in Chapters 11 and 12. Only a few tissues with a high natural embryogenic capacity do not require the addition of endogenous auxin for the development of embryogenic callus. Occasionally, primary callus arising from an explant may show no morphogenic capacity, but can be induced to give rise to new embryogenic tissue during later (secondary) subcultures by transfer to an inductive medium. Ahee et al. (1981) have used this method to propagate oil palms. On the medium used, calluses arising on the veins of young leaf fragments had no morphogenic capability. However, when primary calluses were subcultured onto appropriate media (unspecified), some of them gave rise to tissue that was different in

structure and form, and grew at a much faster rate. These ‘fast-growing calluses’ could be induced to produce structures resembling embryoids, and afterwards plantlets, upon further subculture to other media. One highly embryogenic tissue that has been extensively studied is that of the nucellus of the polyembryonic ‘Shamouti’ orange (Spiegel-Roy and Kochba, 1980). Here it seems that cells at just one end of the embryo sac (the micropylar end) are embryogenically predetermined and retain this capacity in subsequent cell generations. On subculture, proliferation of the nucellus cells proceeds without the addition of growth regulators to the medium, and results in the formation of an habituated callus. A tissue is said to have become habituated when it will grow without a growth regulator, or some other organic substance which is normally necessary, being added to the medium (see Chapter 7). Addition of auxins to the growth medium is inhibitory to the growth of auxin-habituated ‘Shamouti’ orange tissue, which has been thought to be composed (at least initially) of numerous proembryos and not of undifferentiated cells (Button et al., 1974). Embryogenic callus has also been obtained from the nucellus tissue of other plants, mainly tropical fruit species (Litz and Jaiswal, 1991). Stage II. As a general rule, somatic embryos formed on a medium containing a relatively high concentration of an auxin, will only develop further if the callus culture is transferred to a second medium from which auxin has been omitted, another ‘less active’' auxin has been substituted, or the level of the original auxin much reduced. This treatment is occasionally ineffective (Handley and Sink, 1985) and sometimes adding a cytokinin helps to ensure embryo growth. A further essential requirement is the need for a supply of reduced nitrogen in the form of an ammonium salt or amino acid. No change of nitrogen source is required if MS medium was used for Stage I, but if, for example, White's medium were used for Stage I, it would need to be supplemented with reduced nitrogen, or the culture transferred to MS. Callus subculture. Once obtained, embryogenic callus can continue to give rise to somatic embryos during many subcultures over long periods. The continued production of somatic embryos in these circumstances depends either on the continued proliferation of pro-embryogenic nodules, and/or the de novo formation of embryogenic tissue from young somatic embryos during each subculture. Inocula for


Chapter 2

subcultures must be carefully selected. In wheat, callus with continued embryogenesis was only reinitiated from inocula taken close to somatic embryos; tissue from the same culture which did not contain embryos was not embryogenic in the next passage (Chu et al., 1987). Sometimes the number of embryos produced per unit weight of callus rises during a few passages and then slowly falls, the capacity to form somatic embryos eventually being irrevocably lost. Callus derived from the nucellus of ‘Shamouti’ oranges increased in its capacity to form somatic embryos when subcultured at 10-15 week intervals, while transfer at 4-5 week intervals, reduced embryogenesis (Kochba and Button, 1974). Somatic embryos can be formed relatively freely in callus tissue, but where they are to be used for large scale propagation, their numbers can often be increased more rapidly and conveniently by initiating an embryogenic suspension culture from the primary callus (see below). Embryogenesis in suspension cultures Cultures from embryogenic callus (Stage I). Suspension cultures can sometimes be initiated from embryogenic callus tissue, and the cells still retain the capacity to regenerate somatic embryos freely. Obtaining such cultures is not always a simple matter, for the auxin levels that are often used to promote cell dispersion may result in the loss of morphogenic capability. Embryogenic cell suspensions are most commonly initiated from embryogenic callus that is placed in liquid medium on a shaker. Vasil and Vasil (1981a,b) and Lu and Vasil (1981a,b) have reported producing cultures of this type from pearl millet and guinea grass respectively. Suspensions were initiated and subcultured in MS medium containing 1-2.5 mg/l 2.4-D and 2.5-5% coconut milk, and came to be composed of a mixture of embryogenic cells (small, highly cytoplasmic and often containing starch) and non-embryogenic cells (large and vacuolated). Embryoids were induced to develop into somatic seedlings when plated onto an agar medium without growth regulators, or with lower levels of auxin than used at the previous stage. Cultures from non-embryogenic sources. Embryogenesis can be induced in cell suspensions of some plants when the cultures are produced from non-morphogenic callus and have been maintained without morphogenesis for one or more transfers. Induction occurs most readily in recently isolated suspensions and usually becomes much less probable with increasing culture age. Loss of regenerative

53

ability is often associated with the appearance of some cells with abnormal chromosome numbers, but it can also be due to culture on an inappropriate medium. Embryogenesis in suspension cultures seems to require media at Stage I and Stage II with similar compositions to those necessary for somatic embryo formation in callus cultures. Somatic embryos can be formed in suspension cultures in very large numbers. Reinert et al. (1971) demonstrated that the continued capacity of carrot cell suspensions to form embryos depended on an adequate supply of nitrogen. Embryogenesis ceased on a medium containing little nitrogen, but it was re-induced for several transfers after the culture was returned to a high-nitrogen medium. In a few kinds of plants it is possible to induce embryogenesis in previously unorganised suspension cultures. Success is so far recorded only in members of the families Apiaceae (Umbelliferae), Cruciferae and Scrophulariaceae. This is not therefore a method of propagation which can be readily utilised. There is a greater chance of obtaining an embryogenic suspension culture from embryogenic callus. Abnormal embryos and plantlets Unfortunately embryogenesis in both callus and suspension cultures is seldom synchronous so that embryoids at different stages of development are usually present in a Stage II culture from the onset. This presents a major drawback for plant propagation which could otherwise be very rapid, especially from suspensions. A proportion of the seedlings developing from somatic embryos can also be atypical: abnormalities include the possession of multiple or malformed cotyledons, more than one shoot or root axis, and the presence of secondary adventive embryos. Embryos with three cotyledons have been observed to give rise to well-formed plantlets (Smith and Krikorian, 1990). Abnormal somatic embryos do however produce secondary embryos, which are usually of normal morphology. Pretova and Williams (1986) suggested that embryo proliferation, or ‘cleavage’ (see earlier in chapter), and the formation of accessory cotyledons and root poles, to be homologous with the production of discrete complete embryoids. They suggested that production of accessory cotyledons and somatic embryos on the hypocotyl, and additional root poles near the base of existing embryos, may represent either a gradient along these organs in the early stages of determination, or, be caused by a factor affecting cell to cell co-ordination.


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Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

Differential filtering and sedimentation to separate embryos at different stages of development (Giuliano et al., 1983) can improve the uniformity of embryo populations in suspension cultures. More recently image analysis has been used to select embryos in specific developmental stages (Kurata, 1995). In addition cultures can be maintained on media containing high levels of sucrose (Ammirato and Steward, 1971), and/or low levels of abscisic acid (Ammirato, 1973; 1974). Both approaches, as well as the addition of imazalil to the culture medium (Werbrouck et al., 2000), limit the number of abnormalities and give a higher degree of synchronisation. High levels of sucrose and abscisic acid induce reversible dormancy in somatic embryos and thus might be used to temporarily suspend growth should this be advantageous in a planned micropropagation programme. Dormancy is however not always reversible. Indeed somatic embryos can remain dormant, and conversion to plantlets can be problematic. Different types of approaches can be used to overcome this problem, i.e. desiccation, supplementing the medium with osmotic agents [e.g. polyethylene glycol (PEG), mannitol] (Capuana and Debergh, 1997). Genetic stability Plants regenerated through somatic embryogenesis are usually morphologically and cytologically normal, but sometimes a proportion of aberrant plants is obtained. Genetically abnormal plants are more likely to occur where embryogenesis is initiated in callus or suspension cultures after a period of unorganised growth or when embryogenic cultures are maintained for several months (Orton, 1985).

A proportion of albino plants lacking chlorophyll is characteristically produced in anther culture of cereals and grasses (Sunderland and Dunwell, 1977) and during embryogenesis from other monocot explants. Dale et al. (1980) found that plants produced from embryogenic callus cultures of Italian ryegrass were more likely to be devoid of chlorophyll the longer the cultures were maintained. After one year, some cultures produced only albinos. Embryolike structures (although still present on the surface of the callus) tended to be distorted. Current applications Few plant species are at present propagated on a large scale via embryogenesis in vitro. This method of morphogenesis does however offer advantages which suggest that it will be used increasingly for plant cloning in the future: • In some monocotyledons (e.g. cereals, date palm and oil palm) it provides a method of micropropagation where shoot culture has not been successful (but note however that in some attempts to clone oil palms through embryogenesis, the resulting plants have been very variable); • Providing embryogenic cell suspensions can be established, plantlets can theoretically be produced in large numbers and at much lower cost because plantlets do not have to be handled and subcultured individually; • Somatic embryos probably provide the only way for tissue culture methods of plant propagation to be economically deployed on extensively planted field crops and forest trees. Techniques for the conversion (germination) and field planting of somatic embryos are discussed in Volume 2.

4. STORAGE ORGAN FORMATION Many ornamental and crop species are normally propagated, stored and planted in the form of vegetative storage organs. It is therefore not surprising that, where such organs are produced in vitro, they often provide a convenient means of micropropagation and/or genotype storage. Characteristic, though small, storage structures can be induced to form in cultures of several plant species, for example: Bulbils Cormlets Miniature tubers

Amaryllis, hyacinth, lily, onion Narcissus Gladiolus Potato, yams.

Protocorm formation as a method of propagation has been considered under Direct Embryogenesis. Methods of obtaining storage organs vary according to the kind of tissue being cultured. Some storage organs formed in vitro can be planted ex vitro directly into the soil. 4.1. THE PRODUCTION OF BULBILS AND CORMLETS

Species that naturally produce bulbs can be induced to form small bulbs (bulbils or bulblets) in culture. Bulbils can be produced from axillary buds, but frequently they are formed from adventitious buds developed on pieces of leaf, on inflorescence


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Chapter 2

stalks, or on ovaries, and particularly on detached pieces of bulb scale. Both axillary and adventitious shoots and bulbils are formed on bulb scale pieces in vitro. Strong dominance of the main shoot apex often prevents the formation of axillary buds at the bases of bulb scales in vivo, but buds capable of giving rise to bulblets (or to shoots upon which bulbs will be formed later) are freely produced when bulb scales or bulb sections are cultured. In some species it is important to include part of the basal plate in the explant. Depending on the kind of bulb being cultured, explants for continued Stage II propagation may consist of scales taken from bulblets, swollen shoot bases, or bulblets which have been trimmed and split. Propagules for transfer from Stage III to the external environment can be plantlets, plantlets with a bulblet at the base, or dormant bulblets. Instead of producing storage organs composed of swollen leaf bases (bulbs), some monocotyledons store food reserves in swollen stem bases (corms). Small corms (cormlets) of Gladiolus may be formed directly on explanted tissue or on callus in culture (Ziv et al., 1970; Ziv and Halevy, 1972), or they are produced on rooted plantlets grown in culture jars until the leaves senesce. Cormlets formed in vitro can be planted in soil or used to start new in vitro cultures (Hussey, 1978a,b). The production of plantlets from genera producing bulbs and corms is discussed more fully in Volume 2. Miniature tubers Under appropriate environmental conditions, plants that naturally produce tubers can be induced to produce miniature versions of these storage organs, in a medium containing high cytokinin levels. Tubers normally formed on underground stolons are produced in vitro in axillary positions along in vitro shoots (Fig 2.6). Two crops where miniature tubers have been utilised for propagation are potato and yams. Methods for inducing the in vitro tuberization of potatoes were first described by Lin et al. (1978, in Wang and Hu, 1980) and Hussey and Stacey

(1981a,b), and since by several other workers. Potato tubers form best in darkness, but those of Dioscorea mainly appear at the base of stem node cuttings in the light (Ng, 1988). Miniature tubers have the great advantage that they can be readily removed from culture flasks in a dormant condition and stored ex vitro without precautions against sepsis. When planted in soil they behave as normal tubers and produce plants from axillary shoots. If they are produced in vitro from virus-tested shoots, miniature tubers provide an ideal method of propagating and distributing virus-tested stock to growers.

Fig. 2.6 Miniature tubers formed on an in vitro shoot of potato.

5. MICROGRAFTING The transfer of small shoot apices onto rootstocks (termed micrografting), can be carried out in vivo or in vitro. Navarro (1988) lists four uses which have been found for the technique: • Obtaining plants free from specific virus and virus-like diseases;

• A method for separating virus and virus-like organisms in mixed infections; • For studying graft incompatibility between scions and rootstocks, and the histological and physiological aspects of grafting;


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Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

• A minimum risk method for importing plant material through quarantine. Micrografting is thus indirectly useful in micropropagation: the necessary techniques are usually too time consuming and the proportion of successful takes is generally too low, for it to be of direct application. The rootstocks used for micrografting are commonly newly-germinated seedlings, but it is also possible to use rooted cuttings or micropropagated shoots. Before micrografting can be carried out, it is necessary to prepare suitable rootstock material. When seedling rootstocks are used, and all stages of grafting are conducted in vitro, seeds are surface sterilised and germinated aseptically in vessels containing nutrient salts (e.g. those of MS medium). The seedlings may be supported on agar medium or on a porous substrate, such as sterile vermiculite, which allows the growth of a branched root system. Micrografting is then effected by cutting off the tops of the seedling rootstocks and placing small shoot apices onto the exposed surface. When grafts are successful, rootstock and scion grow together to produce a plant. It is usually necessary to examine freshly grafted seedlings on a regular basis and remove any adventitious shoot arising on or below the graft union. Shoot tips to be grafted onto seedling rootstocks (i.e. the scions) are carefully excised from preferred plant material. In Citrus there has been most success when scions have been placed directly in one of two positions: • into inverted T-shaped incisions immediately below the cut surface of a decapitated rootstock, or, • onto the cambium layer or vascular ring of the cut surface (Fig 2.7). Shoot or meristem tips intended for grafting can be taken from apical or axillary buds of actively growing shoots in the greenhouse or field, or may be removed from shoots growing in vitro. Once transferred, the survival of micrografted apices is partly dependent on their size. Very small apices must be used for virus elimination, making the technique difficult and unreliable. Tips 0.1-0.2 mm in length have been grafted for virus elimination from vines; with peach, slightly larger apices (0.5-1 mm) have been employed. The excision and transfer of very small shoot apices requires precise micromanipulation under a binocular microscope. If large shoot apices are to be grafted, their bases are often

cut into a wedge which is then inserted into a vertical cut on the rootstock (Fig 2.8). Several techniques have been found to increase the proportion of successful graft unions: • Tissue blackening, which commonly results in the death of very small scions, can be reduced by soaking explants in an anti-oxidant solution, and/or placing a drop of solution onto the severed rootstock immediately before inserting the scion. A solution of 2 g/l sodium diethyldithiocarbamate (DIECA) has been used for this purpose. Navarro (1988) advocates rapid manipulations to prevent phenolic oxidation and says that it is more effective than anti-oxidants. • Apices to be grafted may be placed either directly onto a decapitated rootstock, or cultured for a short period before being transferred. There is often a better ‘take’ and more rapid growth if they are precultured for a short while supported on paper above an MS mineral salt medium containing growth regulators. Jonard et al. (1983) found that adding a cytokinin to the medium (e.g. 0.1 mg/l zeatin if the apex is cultured for 48 h; 0.01 mg/l zeatin if the culture is continued for 48-240 h) was particularly effective in encouraging the rapid formation of leafy shoots once the graft has been made. An alternative is to place scion shoot tips into a growth regulator solution for a short period before grafting: a 5-10 minute immersion in either 10 mg/l 2, 4-D or 1 mg/l BA, doubled the number of successful micrografts of Citrus (Edriss and Burger, 1984). Starrantino and Caruso (1988) got a greater percentage of viable grafts when they dipped both shoot tips and the cut apex of young rootstocks in 0.5 mg/l BA for 20 min before the two were united. Yet another method is to place cytokinin (e.g. 2mg/l BA or, for peach, 10 mg/l zeatin) in a drop of water or agar gel between the scion and the rootstock. • A greater proportion of graft unions may result from growing isolated meristem tips to a larger size before they are implanted. Isolated scion tips of peach have been cultured in vitro by the initial stages of meristem tip culture for a period of about two weeks until they have grown from 0.5-1 mm to ca. 10 mm. • Desiccation is a major cause of the failure of graft unions. To prevent drying, Pliego-Alfaro and Murashige (1987) applied a layer of moist nutrient agar gel to connect the graft area with the medium. The gel had to be progressively removed from the top downwards during weeks 1-3 after grafting, or poor unions resulted.


Chapter 2

57

Fig. 2.7 Preferred positions for placing a shoot tip scion in the micrografting of Citrus [after Navarro et al., 1975].

Fig. 2.8 Two alternative methods of micrografting with large scions [after Pliego-Alfaro and Murashige, 1987; Navarro, 1988].

When, as has been most common, micrografting has been carried out in vitro, considerable care needs to be taken over transferring grafted plants to the external environment. However, several authors have found that sterility is not necessary and that shoot

apices can be united onto rootstocks grown in vivo. The proportion of completed grafts may be less than under aseptic conditions, but problems with eventual transfer are eliminated. A variety of scion material has been utilised for in vivo grafting, including


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Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

directly-excised 0.1-0.2 mm tips of Citrus limon, and meristem-cultured scion tips of peach. Once again, graft unions may be improved if cut surfaces are anointed with a DIECA (1g/l) plus cytokinin (10 g/l) solution (Jonard et al., 1983). Plants are probably best kept in a growth room for a period after grafting, and desiccation of the graft union prevented by enclosing each plant in a plastic bag or by placing an elastic strip around the graft. Grafting mature shoots of woody perennials onto juvenile rootstocks is known to induce juvenile characteristics in the resulting shoots, particularly if it is repeated successively (Chapter 11). Half of the plants resulting from micrografting adult lateral buds of avocado onto seedling rootstock were found to have some juvenile symptoms (Pliego-Alfaro and Murashige, 1987). But in Citrus, micrografting does not seem to induce juvenile characteristics, providing shoot tips are taken from an adult source: plants are thornless and come into flower rapidly (Navarro, 1988).

From having been developed as a method of producing virus-tested Citrus, micrografting is now widely used for the improvement of plants of this and related genera. It has also been practised on a wide range of other plants, primarily for virus-elimination (see reviews by Jonard et al., 1983; Burger, 1985 and Navarro, 1988) General reviews on micropropagation have been written by: Cassells (2005), Harney (1982), Holdgate (1977), Hussey (1978a, 1983), Jain et al. (2006), Lane (1982), Murashige (1974), and Rout and Jain (2004) Books devoted completely or in great part to in vitro propagation are: Ahuja (1993), Conger (1981), Debergh and Zimmerman (1991), de Fossard (1981), Hall (1999), Hermann (1991-2006), Hvoslef-Eide and Preil (2005), Pierik (1997), Karata and Kozai (1992), Kyte (1983), Lumsden et al. (1994), Pennell (1987), Wetherell (1982), and Razdan (2003). A number of volumes of Acta Horticulturae deals specifically with micropropagation (Volumes 212, 225, 319, 530 and 616).

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Micropropagation: Uses and Methods

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Chapter 3 The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients 1. INORGANIC MEDIUM COMPONENTS formulation. These media result often in a much improved growth (Rugini, 1984; El Badaoui et al., 1996; Pullman et al., 2003; Bouman and Tiekstra, 2005; Nas and Read, 2004; Gonçalves et al., 2005). A major problem in changing the mineral composition of a medium is precipitation, which may often occur only after autoclaving because of the endothermic nature of the process. Plant tissue culture media provide not only these inorganic nutrients, but usually a carbohydrate (sucrose is most common) to replace the carbon which the plant normally fixes from the atmosphere by photosynthesis. To improve growth, many media also include trace amounts of certain organic compounds, notably vitamins, and plant growth regulators. In early media, ‘undefined’ components such as fruit juices, yeast extracts and protein hydrolysates, were frequently used in place of defined vitamins or amino acids, or even as further supplements. As it is important that a medium should be the same each time it is prepared, materials, which can vary in their composition are best avoided if at all possible, although improved results are sometimes obtained by their addition. Coconut milk, for instance, is still frequently used, and banana homogenate has been a popular addition to media for orchid culture. Plant tissue culture media are therefore made up from solutions of the following components: • macronutrients (always employed); • micronutrients (nearly always employed but occasionally just one element, iron, has been used); • sugar (nearly always added, but omitted for some specialised purposes); • plant growth substances (nearly always added) • vitamins (generally incorporated, although the actual number of compounds added, varies greatly); • a solidifying agent (used when a semi-solid medium is required. Agar or a gellan gum are the most common choices). • amino acids and other nitrogen supplements (usually omitted, but sometimes used with advantage);

Plant tissues and organs are grown in vitro on artificial media, which supply the nutrients necessary for growth. The success of plant tissue culture as a means of plant propagation is greatly influenced by the nature of the culture medium used. For healthy and vigorous growth, intact plants need to take up from the soil: • relatively large amounts of some inorganic elements (the so-called major plant nutrients): ions of nitrogen (N), potassium (K), calcium (Ca), phosphorus (P), magnesium (Mg) and sulphur (S); and, • small quantities of other elements (minor plant nutrients or trace elements): iron (Fe), nickel (Ni), chlorine (Cl), manganese (Mn), zinc (Zn), boron (B), copper (Cu), and molybdenum (Mo). According to Epstein (1971), an element can be considered to be essential for plant growth if: 1. a plant fails to complete its life cycle without it; 2. its action is specific and cannot be replaced completely by any other element; 3. its effect on the organism is direct, not indirect on the environment; 4. it is a constituent of a molecule that is known to be essential. The elements listed above are - together with carbon (C), oxygen (O) and hydrogen (H) - the 17 essential elements. Certain others, such as cobalt (Co), aluminium (Al), sodium (Na) and iodine (I), are essential or beneficial for some species but their widespread essentiality has still to be established. The most commonly used medium is the formulation of Murashige and Skoog (1962). This medium was developed for optimal growth of tobacco callus and the development involved a large number of dose-response curves for the various essential minerals. Table 3.1 shows the composition of MS compared to the elementary composition of normal, well-growing plants. From this table, the relatively low levels of Ca, P and Mg in MS are evident. The most striking differences are the high levels of Cl and Mo and the low level of Cu. Each plant species has its own characteristic elementary composition which can be used to adapt the medium 65

E. F. George et al. (eds.), Plant Propagation by Tissue Culture 3rd Edition, 65–113. © 2008 Springer.


66

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients Table 3.1 A comparison between the average concentrations of elements in plant shoots (dry weight basis) considered sufficient for adequate growth [from Epstein (1972), content of Ni is according to Brown et al. (1987)] and in MS. The elements that show striking differences between MS and ‘plants’ are indicated. For Na, no data were found, but in glycophytes grown in 1 mM Na, the endogenous level is 10 – 1000 mmol.kg-1 (Subbarao et al., 2003)

N K Ca Mg P S Cl Fe Mn B Zn Cu Mo Ni Na

In tissue mmol kg-1

In MS mmol l-1

In tissue mol%

In MS mol%

1000 250 125 80 60 30 3 2 1 2 0.3 0.1 0.001 0.001

60 20 3 1.5 1.25 1.5 6 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.03 0.0001 0.001 0 0.1

64.4 16.1 8.0 5.1 3.9 1.9 0.19 0.13 0.06 0.13 0.02 0.0060 0.0001 0.0001 0.0000

64.0 21.3 3.2 1.6 1.3 1.6 6.4 0.11 0.11 0.11 0.03 0.0001 0.0011 0.0000 0.1067

• undefined supplements such as coconut milk etc. (which, when used, contribute some of the five components above and also plant growth substances or regulants); • buffers (have seldom been used, but the addition of organic acids or buffers could be beneficial in some circumstances). Finally, it should be noted that minerals may also have a signalling role altering developmental patterns. This is most obvious in root architecture (Lopez-Bucio et al., 2003) which is logical as roots have a principal function in ion uptake and the root system should be such that uptake is optimal. So growth and branching of roots should be affected by mineral concentrations in the soil. Ramage and Williams (2002) also argue that minerals appear to have an important role in the regulation of plant morphogenesis as opposed to just growth. Some reviews of whole plant mineral nutrition will be found in Grusak (2001), Leiffert et al., (1995), Mengel and Kirkby (1982), Hewitt and Smith (1975) and Epstein (1971).

1.1. UPTAKE OF INORGANIC NUTRIENTS

Plants absorb the inorganic nutrients they require from soils almost entirely as ions. An ion is an atom, or a group of atoms, which has gained either a positive charge (a cation) or a negative charge (an anion). Inorganic nutrients are added to plant culture media as salts. In weak aqueous solutions, such as plant media, salts dissociate into cations and anions. Thus calcium, magnesium and potassium are absorbed by plant cells (normally those of the root) as the respective cations Ca2+, Mg2+ and K+; nitrogen is mainly absorbed in the form nitrate (the anion, NO3-) although uptake of ammonium (the cation, NH4+) may also occur, phosphorus as the phosphate ions HPO42- and H2PO4-; and sulphur as the sulphate ion In tissue culture, uptake is generally SO42-. proportional to the medium concentration up to a concentration of twice MS (Williams, 1993). For specific elements this may be different. For example, Leiffert et al, (1995) found only a small increase in Zn uptake with increasing medium concentration indicating that the concentration of Zn in the cultured tissues was adequate, not requiring further uptake. Selective uptake also suggests active uptake.


67

Chapter 3 Table 3.2 Content (mmol/kg) of elements in various agar brands. [agar 1-7: Scholten and Pierik (1998); agar 8 and gelrite: Scherer et al.(1988)]. Na = not analysed, nd = not detected. It should be noted that some elements present in agar are not present in MS. This is particularly relevant for Ni which is an essential element

Agar 1 53 2 68 28 202 1 184 47 0.015 0.073 0.510 0.352 0.040 0.013 0.092 1.896 0.037 na na

N K Ca Mg Na P S Cl Cu Mn Fe Al Cr Cd Zn Sn Ni B Co

Agar 2 1 1 41 24 56 18 78 33 0.034 1.093 5.376 12.444 0.098 0.069 0.107 1.542 0.045 na na

Agar 3 178 16 34 31 552 1 232 220 0.018 0.036 0.564 1.333 0.029 0.008 0.054 nd nd na na

Agar 4 100 9 137 29 330 5 296 113 0.024 0.173 2.987 4.944 0.026 0.025 0.933 3.572 0.037 na na

Agar 5 74 6 66 48 427 1 204 197 0.004 0.036 0.859 0.352 0.054 0.015 0.046 1.862 0.025 na na

Agar 6 54 13 1 3 634 40 262 95 0.016 0.027 0.599 0.963 0.025 nd 0.038 nd nd na na

Agar 7 2 2 5 3 114 1 66 12 nd 0.055 0.528 0.685 0.009 nd 0.015 nd 0.007 na na

Agar 8 na 51 2.8 2.6 52 42 184 na 0.005 0.01 0.6 0.3 0.002 0.0002 0.02 0.003 0.005 2 0.0005

gelrite na 718 123 64 296 68 6 na 0.05 0.1 5 6.8 0.01 0.002 0.3 0.003 0.004 0.13 1.0

Table 3.3 Increase of the content of Na, S and Cu relative to MS caused by adding agar (0.6%) or gelrite (0.2%) to the medium. Increases are shown as percentages. The proportional increase in other elements is maximally 20%

Agar 1 Agar 2 Agar 3 Agar 4 Agar 5 Agar 6 Agar 7 Agar 8 gelrite Na

1212

336

3312

1980

2562

3804

684

313

591

S

69

29

87

111

77

98

25

69

0.8

Cu

90

204

108

144

24

96

nd

28

91

In the whole plant, nutrients are either taken up passively, or through active mechanisms involving the expenditure of energy. Active uptake is generally less dependent on ionic concentration than passive uptake. Both systems are however influenced by the concentration of other elements, pH, temperature, and the biochemical or physiological status of the plant tissues. These factors can in turn be controlled by the solution presented to the roots, or they may dictate the ionic balance of an ideal solution. For example, Mg2+ competes with other cations for uptake. Under conditions of high K+ or Ca2+ concentrations, Mg deficiency can result, and vice versa. Active uptake of phosphate falls off if the pH of the solution should become slightly alkaline when the (H2PO4)- ion becomes changed to (HPO4)2-. There is some evidence that ammonium is utilised more readily than

nitrate at low temperatures and that uptake may be enhanced by high carbohydrate levels within plant cells. Calcium is not absorbed efficiently and concentrations within plant tissues tend to be proportional to those in the soil. Plants are comparatively insensitive to sulphate ions, but high concentrations of dissolved phosphate can depress growth, probably through competitively reducing the uptake of the minor elements Zn, Fe and Cu. Although the biochemistry and physiology of nutrient uptake in tissue cultures may be similar, it is unlikely to be identical. In vivo, plants take up mineral ions with their roots. No studies have been made on how uptake of nutrients occurs in shoot cultures. For IAA, it has been shown that most uptake is via the cut surface and that only a small fraction is taken up via the


68

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

epidermis (Guan and De Klerk, 2000). The same likely holds for minerals. It should be noted, though, that in tissue culture the stomata are always open in the portion of the explant exposed to the gaseous phase (De Klerk and Wijnhoven, 2005) and the same may apply for tissues that are exposed to semi-solid or liquid medium. Uptake via the stomata is well possible. Once taken up, transport within the plant occurs in the mass flow via the xylem. In in vivo plants there are two mechanisms for driving the water flow, root pressure and water potential gradient between at one end the soil and at the other end the atmosphere. Under normal conditions, the latter is the far more important, but water flow resulting from root pressure is in itself sufficient for long-distance mineral supply (Tanner and Beevers, 2001). Plants without roots are often cultured in vitro where the atmosphere is very humid, and the flow driven by a difference in water potential consequently reduced. In spite of this, in tissue culture there still seems to be sufficient water flow (Beruto et al., 1999) which may be favoured by the stomata being continuously open (De Klerk and Wijnhoven, 2005). There are no indications that the structure of the xylem is altered in such a way as to reduce transport of ions. When explants are first placed onto a nutrient medium, there may be an initial leakage of ions from damaged cells, especially metallic cations (Na+, Ca2+, K+, Mg2+) for the first 1-2 days, so that the concentration in the plant tissues actually decreases (Chaillou and Chaussat, 1986). Cells then commence active absorption and the internal concentration slowly rises. Phosphate and nitrogen (particularly ammonium) are absorbed more rapidly than other ions. In liquid medium, almost all phosphorus and ammonium are taken up in the first two weeks of culture (e.g. by 5 microshoots of Dahlia in 50 ml stationary liquid medium; G. de Klerk, unpublished

results). After uptake, phophorus is massively redistributed to tissues that are formed after the initial two weeks. Nitrate in a medium very similar to that of Wood and Braun (1961) B medium, was reduced by Catharanthus roseus suspensions from 24 mM to 5 mM in 15 days, while Na+, K+, and SO42-, fell to only just over half the original concentrations in the same time (MacCarthy et al., 1980). Carnation shoot cultures were found to use 31-75% Mg2+, and 2941% Ca2+ in MS medium during a 4 week period (Dencso, 1987). 1.2. UNINTENDED ALTERATIONS

Nutrients, and especially micronutrients, may also be added via impurities, and especially via agar. Such impurities may well be beneficial. This is particularly true of Ni, which has recently been shown to be an essential element (Gerendรกs et al., 1999) but was not known to be when most medium formulations were established. This element is usually not included in the inorganic constituents but can be provided by impurities. Tables 3.2 and 3.3 show impurities of various agar brands and their relative contribution to MS. Agar provides a large addition of sodium but levels of sulphur and copper are also significantly increased. Increases in the other elements in MS, are less than 20 %. Gelrite contains fewer organic impurities but inorganic ones occur at high concentrations (Table 3.2). It should be noted that the data in Table 3.2 are from determinations done more than 15 years ago and that the production process of gelrite has been improved ever since. Gelrite is being used in medicines as an ophthalmic vehicle. Furthermore, minerals are absorbed to a significant percentage by agar (Scholten and Pierik, 1998 Leiffert et al., 1995) and by activated charcoal (Van Winkle et al., 2003) but whether this has a significant effect has not been examined.

2. MACRONUTRIENTS 2.1. NITROGEN

2.1.1. Forms of nitrogen

Nitrogen is essential to plant life. It is a constituent of both proteins and nucleic acids and also occurs in chlorophyll. Most animals cannot assimilate inorganic nitrogen or synthesize many of the amino acids unless assisted by bacteria (e.g. in the rumen of cattle). Nitrogen is available in the atmosphere as N2 but only legumes have the capacity to utilize this nitrogen using Rhizobium bacteria in the root nodules. In most plants, nitrate (NO3-) is the

sole source of nitrogen. After uptake, NO3- is reduced to NH4+ prior to incorporation into organic molecules. (The removal of oxygen from a chemical compound and its replacement by hydrogen, is termed reduction.) The relevance of nitrogen is illustrated by the vast amounts of nitrogen reserves in seeds (as storage proteins). Both growth and morphogenesis in tissue cultures are markedly influenced by the availability of nitrogen and the form in which it is presented. Compared to the nitrate ion, NO3- (which is a highly


Chapter 3

oxidized form of nitrogen), the ammonium ion, NH4+, is the most highly ‘reduced’ form. Plants utilise reduced nitrogen for their metabolism and internally, nitrogen exists almost entirely in the reduced form. As a source of reduced nitrogen, plant cultures are especially able to use primary amines: R-NH2 and amides: R-CO-NH-R- (where R and R- are functional groups) The primary amines which are most commonly employed in culture media are ammonia (NH4+) and, occasionally, amino acids. Amides are less commonly added to culture media: those which can be used by plants are particularly NH2-CO-NH2 (urea) and ureides, which include allantoin and allantoic acid (Kirby, 1982) (Fig. 3.1). Allantoin or allantoic acid are sometimes more efficient nitrogen sources than urea (Lea et al., 1979).

an active (energy-dependent) process (Heimer and Filner, 1971) and is dependent on a supply of oxygen (Buwalda and Greenway, 1989). Plant culture media are usually started at pH 5.45.8. However, in one containing both nitrate and ammonium ions, a rapid uptake of ammonium into plant tissue causes the pH to fall to ca. 4.2-4.6. As this happens, further ammonium uptake is inhibited, but uptake of nitrate ion is stimulated, causing the pH to rise again. In unbuffered media, efficient nitrogen uptake can therefore depend on the presence of both ions. Unless otherwise stated, comments in this section on the roles of nitrate and ammonium refer to observations on unbuffered media. There is generally a close correlation in tissue cultures between uptake of nitrogen, cell growth and the conversion of nitrogen to organic materials. A readily available supply of nitrogen seems to be important to maintain cultured cells in an undifferentiated state. The depletion of nitrogen in batch cultures, triggers an increase in the metabolism of some nitrogen-free compounds based on phenylpropanes (such as lignin), which are associated with the differentiation of secondarily-thickened cells (Hahlbrock, 1974). However, the growth in culture of differentiated cotton fibres composed largely of cellulose, is nitrate-dependent; the presence of some reduced nitrogen in the culture medium decreased the proportion of cultured embryos which produced fibres, and particularly in the absence of boron, promoted the cells of the embryos to revert to callus formation (Birnbaum et al., 1974). 2.1.2. Nitrate ions (NO3-)

Fig. 3.1 The structures of allantoin and allantoic acid.

Most media contain more nitrate than ammonium ions, but as plant tissue culture media are usually not deliberately buffered, the adopted concentrations of ammonium and nitrate ions have probably been more due to practical pH control, than to the requirement of the plant tissues for one form of nitrogen or another (see chapter 4). Uptake of nitrate only takes place effectively in an acid pH, but is accompanied by extrusion of anions from the plant, leading to the medium gradually becoming less acid. By contrast, uptake of ammonium results in the cells excreting protons (H+) into the medium, making it more acid. The exchange of ions preserves the charge balance of the tissues and may also assist in the disposal of an excess of protons or hydroxyl (OH–) ions generated during metabolism (Raven, 1986). Uptake of nitrogen by cell suspension cultures of Nicotiana tabacum is

69

Nitrate ions are an important source of nitrogen for most plant cultures, and nearly all published media provide the majority of their available nitrogen in this form. However, once within the cell, nitrate has to be reduced to ammonium before being utilised biosynthetically. Why not simply supply nitrogen as NH4+ and avoid the use of NO3- altogether? The reason lies in the latent toxicity of the ammonium ion in high concentration, and in the need to control the pH of the medium. Conversion of nitrate to ammonium is brought about firstly by one, or possibly two, nitrate reductase enzymes, which reduce NO3- to nitrite (NO2-). One nitrate reductase enzyme is thought to be located in the cytoplasm, while the second may be bound to membranes (Nato et al., 1990). The NO2- produced by the action of nitrate reductase is reduced to NH4+ by a nitrite reductase enzyme located in plastids (Fig. 3.2). Reduction of nitrate to ammonia requires the


70

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

cell to expend energy. The ammonium ions produced are incorporated into amino acids and other nitrogencontaining compounds. Nitrate and nitrite reductase enzymes are substrate induced, and their activity is regulated directly by the level of nitrate-nitrite ions

within cultured cells (Chroboczek-Kelker and Filner, 1971; Hahlbrock, 1974), but also apparently by the products of the assimilation of reduced nitrogen (see below).

Fig. 3.2 The metabolism of nitrate and ammonium ions.

Unlike the ammonium ion, nitrate is not toxic and, in many plants, much is transported to the shoots for assimilation. On the other hand, the nitrite ion can become toxic should it accumulate within plant tissues or in the medium, for example when growth conditions are not favourable to high nitrite reductase activity and when nitrate is the only nitrogen source (Jordan and Fletcher, 1979; Grimes and Hodges, 1990). In Pinus pinaster, nitrate reductase is induced by the presence of KNO3, and plants regenerated in vitro exhibit an ability to reduce nitrate similar to that of seedlings (Faye et al., 1986). For most types of culture, the nitrate ion needs to be presented together with a reduced form of nitrogen (usually the NH4+ ion), and tissues may fail to grow

on a medium with NO3- as the only nitrogen source (Hunault, 1985). 2.1.3. Reduced nitrogen

In the natural environment and under most cropping conditions, plant roots usually encounter little reduced nitrogen, because bacteria rapidly oxidize available sources (Hiatt, 1978). An exception is forest soils in mountainous regions of the northern hemisphere, where nitrates are not usually available (Durzan, 1976). If NH4+, and other reduced nitrogen compounds are available, (and this is particularly the case in the aseptic in vitro environment), they can be taken up and effectively utilized by plants. In fact the uptake of reduced nitrogen gives a plant an


Chapter 3

ergonomic advantage because the conversion of nitrate to ammonium ions (an energy-requiring process) is not necessary. The free ammonium ion can cause toxicity, which, at least in whole plants, can lead to an increase in ethylene evolution (Barker and Corey, 1987; Corey and Barker, 1987). Shoots grown on an unbuffered medium containing a high proportion of ammonium ions may become stunted or hyperhydric. These effects can sometimes be reversed by transfer to a medium containing a high proportion of NO3⎯ or to one where NO3⎯ is the only N source (Mott et al., 1985). Hyperhydricity is the in vitro formation of abnormal organs, which are brittle and have a water-soaked appearance. Growth of plant cultures may also be impaired in media containing high concentrations of NH4+ even when high concentrations of NO3⎯ are present at the same time. Growth inhibition may not only be due to depressed pH (Mott et al., 1985), but may reflect a toxicity induced by the accumulation of excess ammonium ions. In normal circumstances the toxic effect of ammonium is avoided by conversion of the ion into amino acids. There are two routes by which this takes place (Fig. 3.2), the most important of which, under normal circumstances, is that by which L-glutamic acid is produced from glutamine through the action of glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate synthetase (GOGAT) enzymes. Compounds, which block the action of GS can be used as herbicides (De Greef et al., 1989). The reaction of α-ketoglutaric acid with NH4+ is usually less important, but seems to have increased significance when there is an excess of ammonium ions (Furuhashi and Takahashi, 1982). Detoxification and ammonium assimilation may then be limited by the availabilty of α-ketoglutaric acid, but this may be increased in vitro by adding to the medium one or more acids which are Krebs’ (tricarboxylic acid) cycle intermediates. Their addition can stimulate growth of some cultures on media containing high levels of NH4+ (Gamborg, 1970). In comparison with media having only nitrate as the nitrogen source, the presence of the ammonium ion in media usually leads to rapid amino acid and protein synthesis, and this takes place at the expense of the synthesis of carbohydrate compounds. This diversion of cellular metabolism can be disadvantageous in some shoot cultures, and can contribute towards the formation of hyperhydric shoots. Hyperhydricity no longer occurs when NH4+ is eliminated from the medium or greatly reduced. It

71

is possible that adding an organic acid to the medium might also alleviate the symptoms on some plants. A supply of reduced nitrogen in addition to nitrate, appears to be beneficial for at least two processes involved with cell division: • the formation of a cell wall. Without a complete cell wall, protoplasts require a factor capable of inducing wall formation. Freshly-isolated protoplasts may contain sufficient of this substance to promote wall formation for just a few divisions. The wallforming factor is only effective when NH4+ is present in the medium (Meyer and Abel, 1975a,b): glutamine does not substitute for NH4+: • the activity of growth regulators. (see below) There are several reports in the literature that, with constant amounts of NO3-, ammonium sulphate has not provided such a good source of NH4+ as ammonium nitrate or ammonium chloride (De Jong et al., 1974; Steward and Hsu, 1977; Singh, 1978; Kamada and Harada, 1979). Possibly the reason is that a medium containing ammonium sulphate has a greater tendency to become acid (Harris, 1956), than one containing less sulphate ions. This would result if the presence of sulphate ions accelerated the uptake of NH4+, or slowed the uptake of NO3-. Ammonium sulphate has been used as the only source of the ammonium ion in some media used for the culture of legumes, including B5 (Gamborg et al., 1968). 2.1.4. Ammonium as the sole nitrogen source

pH adjustment. If plant tissues are presented with a medium containing only NH4+ nitrogen, the pH falls steadily as the ion is taken up (for example, a decrease of 0.9 pH units in 15 days in Asparagus callus – Hunault (1985) or 0.7 pH units with potato shoots – Avila et al., (1998). Growth and morphogenesis is possible in suspension cultures containing only NH4+ ions, providing the pH of the medium is frequently adjusted by the addition of a base (Martin et al., 1977), or the medium is buffered (see below). In wild carrot, the induction of embryogenesis required the medium to be adjusted to pH 5.4 at 8 hourly intervals (Dougall and Verma, 1978). Without adjustment, the pH of media containing only NH4+ falls rapidly to a point where cells cannot grow (Dougall, 1981). Buffering. Ammonium can also serve as the only nitrogen source when the medium is buffered (see the section on pH, below). Tobacco cells could be grown on a medium containing NH4+ nitrogen if the organic acid ion, succinate, was added to the medium. Gamborg and Shyluk (1970) found that cultured cells


72

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

could be grown without frequent pH adjustment on a medium containing only NH4+ nitrogen, when a carboxylic acid was present. The organic acids appeared to minimize the acidification of the medium through NH4+ uptake. Similarly Asparagus internode callus grew just as well on NH4+ as the only nitrogen source as on a medium containing both NH4+ and NO3-, but only when organic acids (such as citrate, or malate) or MES buffer were added to the medium. When media were buffered with MES, the best callus growth occurred when the pH was 5.5 (Hunault, 1985). The additional effect of organic acids. Although Krebs’ cycle organic acids can act as buffers, they may also act as substrates for amino acid synthesis from NH4+. To be assimilated into amino acids via the GDH enzyme, the ammonium ion must react with α-ketoglutaric acid, which is produced by the Krebs’ cycle (Fig 3.2). Its availability may govern the rate at which ammonium can be metabolised by this route. The rate of assimilation might be expected to be improved by supplying the plant with α-ketoglutarate directly, or by supplying acids which are intermediates in the Krebs’ cycle (citrate, iso-citrate, succinate, fumarate or malate), for then the natural production of α-ketoglutarate should increase (Gamborg, 1970). This hypothesis was confirmed by Behrend and Mateles (1976) who concluded that succinate, or other Krebs’ cycle acids, acted mainly as a nutrient, replacing α-ketoglutarate as it was withdrawn from the cycle during NH4+ metabolism and amino acid synthesis. Depletion of α-ketoglutarate causes the cycle to cease unless it, or another intermediate, is replaced. The optimum molar ratio of NH4+ to succinate, was 1.5 (e.g. 10 mM NH4+: 15 mM succinate). Chaleff (1983) thought that the growth of rice callus on Chaleff (loc. cit.) R3 (NH4) medium, containing 34 mM of only ammonium nitrogen, [Chaleff (1983) R3 NH4 medium] was enabled by the presence of 20 mM succinate or a-ketoglutarate, partly by the buffering capacity of the acids, and partly by their metabolism within the plant, where they may serve as substrate for amino acid synthesis. Similar conclusions have been reached by other workers (e.g. Fukunaga et al., (1978); Dougall and Weyrauch (1980); Hunault (1985); Molnar (1988b), who have found that compounds such as ammonium malate and ammonium citrate are effective nitrogen sources. Orange juice promotes the growth of Citrus callus. Einset (1978) thought that this was not due to

the effect of citric acid, but Erner and Reuveni (1981) showed that citric acid, particularly at concentrations above the 5.2 mM found in the juice used by Einset, does indeed promote the growth of Citrus callus; it had a more pronounced effect than other Krebs’ cycle acids, perhaps due to the distinctive biochemistry of the genus. Organic acids not only enhance ammonium assimilation when NH4+ provides the only source of nitrogen, but may sometimes also do so when nitrate ions are in attendance. The weight of rice anther callus was increased on Chaleff (1983) R3 medium, if 20 mM succinate [Chaleff (1983) R3 Succ. medium] or α-ketoglutarate was added (Chaleff, 1983). Similarly the rate of growth of Brassica nigra suspensions on MS medium, was improved either by adding amino acids, or 15 mM succinate. An equivalent improvement (apparently due entirely to buffering) only occurred through adding 300 mM MES buffer (Molnar, 1988b). However, the presence of organic acids may be detrimental to morphogenesis. In Chaleff’s experiment, the presence of succinate in R3 medium markedly decreased the frequency of anther callus formation. Photosynthesis. Although plants grown on nutrient solutions containing only NH4+ nitrogen have been found to possess abnormally high levels of PEP enzyme (Arnozis et al., 1988) (the enzyme facilitating CO2 fixation in photosynthesis), media containing high levels of NH 4+ tend to inhibit chlorophyll synthesis (Yoshida and Kohno, 1982) and photosynthesis. 2.1.5. Urea

Plants are able to absorb urea, but like the ammonium ion, it is not a substance that is normally available in soils in the natural environment. It is however produced as a by-product of nitrogen metabolism; small quantities are found in many higher plants, which are able to utilise urea as a source of nitrogen, providing it is first converted to ammonium ions by the enzyme urease. In legumes and potato, urease requires the microelement nickel for activity (see below). In conifers, the epidermal cells of cotyledons and cotyledons are capable of urease induction and ammonium ion formation (Durzan, 1987). Urea can be used as the sole nitrogen source for cultures, but growth is less rapid than when ammonium and nitrate ions are supplied (Kirkby et al., 1987); urease enzyme increases after cultures have been maintained for several passages on a ureabased medium (King, 1977; Skokut and Filner,


Chapter 3

1980). Although the metabolism of urea, like that of other reduced nitrogen compounds, causes the production of excess hydrogen ions, less are predicted to be secreted into the medium than during the utilisation of NH4+ (Raven, 1986), so that urea is less suitable than ammonium to balance the pH of media containing NO3-. Nitrate ions are utilized in preference to urea when both nitrogen sources are available (King, 1977). Urea is able to serve as a reduced nitrogen source during embryogenesis (Durzan, 1987), but has been used in relatively few culture media, and of these, none has been widely adopted (George et al., 1987). 2.1.6. Media with nitrate and ammonium ions

Most intact plants, tissues and organs take up nitrogen more effectively, and grow more rapidly, on nutrient solutions containing both nitrate and ammonium ions, than they do on solutions containing just one of these sources. Although in most media, reduced nitrogen is present in lower concentration than nitrate, some morphogenic events depend on its presence, and it can be used in plant cultures in a regulatory role. Adventitious organs may also develop abnormally if NH4+ is missing (Drew, 1987). Possible explanations, which have been put forward for the regulatory effect of NH4+ are: • that the reduction and assimilation of NO3⎯ is assisted by the presence of of NH4+ or the products of its assimilation (Bayley et al., 1972a,b; Mohanty and Fletcher, 1978; 1980). When grown on a medium containing a small amount of NH4+ nitrogen in addition to nitrate, suspension cultured cells of ‘Paul’s Scarlet’ rose accumulated twice as much protein as when grown on a medium containing only nitrate, even though ammonium finally accounted for only 10% of the total protein nitrogen (Mohanty and Fletcher, 1980). Dougall (1977) considered this to be an oversimplified interpretation, moreover nitrate reductase activity is effectively increased by the presence of NO3⎯ (Müller and Mendel, 1982) and in some plants, a high concentration of NH4+ inhibits nitrate reductase activity (see below). • that ammonium ions effectively buffer plant nutrient media in the presence of nitrate and so enhance nitrate uptake (see the section on pH). Cultures of some plants are capable of growing with only NO3⎯ nitrogen (e.g. cell cultures of Reseda luteoli, soybean, wheat, flax and horse radish – Gamborg (1970); callus of Medicago sativa - Walker and Sato (1981), although yields are generally better when the medium is supplemented with NH4+.

73

Craven et al., (1972) with carrot, and Mohanty and Fletcher (1978) with Rosa ‘Paul’s Scarlet’, found that the presence of NH4+ was particularly important during the first few days of a suspension culture. After that cells increase in cell number and dry weight more rapidly on NO3- nitrogen alone. The response of plant cultures to nitrate and ammonium ions depends to a large extent on the enzymes shown in Fig 3.2, and the manner in which their activities are increased or inhibited in different tissues by the presence of the ions. These factors vary according to the degree of differentiation of the tissue (Suzuki and Nato, 1982), its physiological age, and its genotype. For example, the high level of NH4+ in MS medium inhibited the activity of glutamate synthetase enzyme in soybean suspension cultures (Gamborg and Shyluk, 1970), while in N. tabacum, a peak of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) appeared to exist at 10 mM NH4+ (Lazar and Collins, 1981). The activity of GDH and NADH-dependent GOGAT developed rapidly in cultured tobacco cells, while nitrate reductase and ferridoxin-dependent GOGAT activity increased more slowly during growth. By contrast, in sunflower cultures, the specific activity of GDH and ferridoxin-dependent GOGAT only reached a maximum at the end of growth, and the presence of 15 mM NH4+ inhibited the activity of nitrate reductase, indicating that the cells were entirely dependent on the reduced nitrogen in the medium (Lenee and Chupeau, 1989). In consequence of such variation, the relative concentrations of ammonium and nitrate in media may need to be altered for different cultures. 2.1.7. The correct balance of ions

When trying to find media formulations suitable for different plant species and different kinds of cultures, two important factors to be considered are: • the total concentration of nitrogen in the medium; • the ratio of nitrate to ammomium ions. There is a high proportion of NH4+ nitrogen in MS medium [ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+, 66:34] and the quantity of total nitrogen is much higher than that in the majority of other media. For some cultures, the total amount of nitrogen is too high and the balance between the two forms in the medium is not optimal. It is noticeable that in several media used for legume culture, there is a greater proportion of NO3⎯ to NH4+ ions than in MS medium. Evans et al., (1976) found that soybean leaf callus grew more rapidly and formed more adventitious roots when the ammonium nitrate in MS medium was replaced with


74

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

500 mg/l ammonium sulphate. A reduction in the ammonium level of their medium for the callus culture of red clover, was also found to be necessary by Phillips and Collins (1979, 1980) to obtain optimum growth rates of suspension cultured cells. A similar adjustment can be beneficial in other genera. Eriksson (1965) was able to enhance the growth rate of cell cultures of Haplopappus gracilis when he reduced the ammonium nitrate concentration to 75% of that in MS medium, and doubled the potassium dihydrogen phosphate level. Table 3.4 lists examples of where changes to the nitrogen content of MS medium resulted in improved in vitro growth or morphogenesis. It will be seen that the balance between NO3⎯ and NH4+ in these different experiments has varied widely. This implies that the ratio between the two ions either needs to be specifically adjusted for each plant species, or that the total nitrogen content of the medium is the most important determinant of growth or morphogenesis. Only occasionally is an even higher concentration of nitrate than that in MS medium beneficial. Trolinder and Goodin (1988) found that the best growth of globular somatic embryos of Gossypium was on MS medium with an extra 1.9 g/l KNO3. There are reports that adjustments to the nitrogen content and ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+, can be advantageous in media containing low concentrations of salts (Table 3.5). Biedermann (1987) found that even quite small adjustments could be made advantageously to the NO3⎯ content of a low salt medium [that of Biedermann (1987)] for the shoot culture of different Magnolia species and hybrids, but too great a proportion of NO3⎯ was toxic. 2.1.8. The nitrate-ammonium ratio for various purposes

Root growth. Root growth is often depressed by NH4+ and promoted by NO3⎯. Media for isolated root culture contain no NH4+, or very little. Although roots are able to take up nitrate ions from solutions, which become progressively more alkaline as assimilation proceeds, the same may not be true of cells, tissues and organs in vitro. Shoot cultures. Media containing only nitrate nitrogen are used for the shoot culture of some plants, for example strawberry (Boxus, 1974), which can be cultured with 10.9 mM NO3⎯ alone; supplementing the medium with 6 mM NH4+ causes phytotoxicity (Damiano, 1980). However, shoot cultures of strawberry grown without NH4+ can become chlorotic: adding a small amount of NH4NO3 (or another source of reduced nitrogen) to the medium at

the last proliferation stage, or to the rooting medium, may then give more fully developed plants with green leaves (Zimmerman, 1981; Piagnani and Eccher, 1988). On some occasions it is necessary to eliminate or reduce NH4+ from the medium for shoot cultures to prevent hyperhydricity. 2.1.9. Nitrogen supply and morphogenesis

Morphogenesis is influenced by the total amount of nitrogen provided in the medium and, for most purposes, a supply of both reduced nitrogen and nitrate seems to be necessary. The requirement for both forms of nitrogen in a particular plant species can only be determined by a carefully controlled experiment: simply leaving out one component of a normal medium gives an incomplete picture. For example, cotyledons of lettuce failed to initiate buds when NH4NO3 was omitted from Miller (1961) salts and instead formed masses of callus (Doerschug and Miller, 1967): was this result due to the elimination of NH4+, or to reducing the total nitrogen content of the medium to one third of its original value? Importance of the nitrate/ammonium balance. The importance of the relative proportions of NO3⎯ and NH4+ has been demonstrated during indirect morphogenesis and the growth of regenerated plants. Grimes and Hodges (1990) found that although the initial cellular events which led to plant regeneration from embryo callus of indica rice, were supported in media in which total nitrogen ranged from 25 to 45 mM and the NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio varied from 50:50 to 85:15 (Table 3.5), differentiation and growth were affected by very small alterations to the NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio. Changing it from 80:20 (N6) medium, to 75:20, brought about a 3-fold increase in plant height and root growth, whereas lowering it below 75:25, resulted in short shoots with thick roots. Atypical growth, resulting from an unsuitable balance of nitrate and ammonium, has also been noted in other plants. It gave rise to abnormal leaves in Adiantum capillus-veneris (Pais and Casal, 1987); the absence of ammonium in the medium caused newly initiated roots of Carica papaya to be abnormally thickened, and to have few lateral branches (Drew, 1987). Shoot cultures may survive low temperature storage more effectively when maintained on a medium containing less NH4NO3 than in MS medium (Moriguchi and Yamaki, 1989). By comparing different strengths of Heller (1953; 1955) and MS media, and varying the NH4NO3 and NaNO3 levels in both, David (1972) was led to the conclusion that the principal ingredient in MS favouring differentiation in Maritime pine explants is


75

Chapter 3

NH4NO3. However, in embryonic explants of Pinus strobus, adventitious shoot formation was better on Schenk and Hildebrandt (1972) medium than on MS

(which induced more callus formation). The difference in the ammonium level of the two media was mainly responsible (Flinn and Webb, 1986).

Table 3.4 Examples of adjustments of the nitrogen content of MS medium, which resulted in improved growth or morphogenesis. In each case, only NO3⎯ and NH4+ were changed, the rest of the medium being the same except for K+ and Cl⎯

Plant species

Type of culture

Nicotiana tabacum Nicotiana tabacum

Callus

Nicotiana tabacum Dioscorea spp. Diospyros kaki Rubus ideaus Prunus avium Castanea sativa and Castanea hybrids Peltophorum pterocarpum

Results

Optimum callus growth Callus Equal callus growth and shoot formation Callus Callus growth and root formation Shoot Optimal number regeneration of shoots from leaf disks Callus Callus growth and adventitious plantlets Shoot Shoot proliferation Shoot Shoot proliferation Shoot Shoot proliferation Shoot Shoot proliferation Anther

Euphorbia esula Haplopappus gracillis Oryza sativa

Suspension

Allium sativum

Shoot

Solanum tuberosum

Shoot

Suspension Protoplast

Callus formation and shoot regeneration Plant regeneration Improved growth rate Cell division Shoot proliferation Shoot proliferation

NO3⎯ (mM)

NH4+ (mM)

39.4

Total N (mM)

Reference

20.61

Ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+ 1.91

60.01

40.0 48.0 52.0 24.0

20.0 12.0 8.0 12.0

2.00 4.00 6.50 2.00

60.0 60.0 60.0 36.0

Murashige and Skoog (1962) Behki and Lesley (1980)

40

20

2.3

60

Ramage and Williams (2002)

6.25

6.25

1.00

15.0

Asokan et al., (1983)

19.7

20.61

0.96

40.31

19.7

10.30

1.91

30.0

Sugiura et al., (1986) Welander (1987)

29.09

10.3

2.82

39.40

18.00

3.00

6.00

21.0

34.7

9.99

3.47

44.6

Lakshmana Rao and De (1987)

18.00

8.00

2.25

27

33.78

14.99

2.25

8.77

Davis et al., (1988) Eriksson (1965)

18.79

1.01

18.53

19.80

35.0

8.0

4.4

43.0

41.3

17.7

2.3

59.0

Righetti et al., (1988) Piagnani and Eccher (1988)

Yamada et al., (1986) Luciani et al., (2001) Avila et al., (1998)


76

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients Table 3.5 Examples of beneficial and harmful adjustments to the total nitrogen and the NO3⎯ and NH4+ in low salt media

Plant Type of culture and Basic results Medium species or in which variety N modified Biederman (1987) Magnolia stellata Shoot culture: maximum proliferation Magnolia Shoot culture: ‘Elizabeth’ maximum proliferation Magnolia ‘Yellow Shoot culture: Bird’ and ‘#149’ maximum proliferation Magnolia (all vars.) Shoot culture: death of all cultures Chu et al., (1975) N6 Oryza sativa Callus induction from immature embryos Plant regneration after callus induction with 2,4-D Optimum number of plants per zygotic embryo Poor regeneration Optimum plantlet growth

NO3⎯ (mM)

NH4+ (mM)

Ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+

Total N (mM)

8.62 10.99

6.25 6.25

58:42(1.38) 1.76

14.87 17.24

8.6210.99

6.25

1.38 – 1.76

14.87 – 17.24

7.43

6.25

1.19

13.68

25.04

6.25

4.01

31.29

28.00 28.00

7.00 7.00

80:20(4.00) 4.00

35.00 35.00

12.5– 38.25

22.5-3.75

1.0 - 5.66

25.0045.00

18.75

6.25

3.00

25.00

100 <17.5 26.25

0 >17.5 8.75

∞ <1.0 8.75

35.00

Morphogenesis influenced by total available nitrogen. Others have found that the total nitrogen content of culture media influences morphogenesis more than the relative ammonium concentration. Results of Margara and Leydecker (1978) indicated that adventitious shoot formation from rapeseed callus was optimal in media containing 30-45mM total nitrogen. The percentage of explants forming shoots was reduced on media containing smaller or greater amounts (e.g. on MS medium). Increasing the ratio of NH4+ to total N in media, from 0.20 to 0.33 was also detrimental. Similarly, Gertsson (1988) found that a small number of adventitious shoots was obtained on petiole segments of Senecio hybridus when the total nitrogen in MS medium was increased to 75 mM, but that an increased number of shoots was produced when the total nitrogen was reduced to

Reference

Biederman (1987)

Grimes and Hodges (1990)

35.00

30 mM (while keeping the same ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+). Shoot production was more than doubled if, at the same time as the total N was reduced, the potassium ion concentration was fixed at 15 mM, instead of 20 mM. The total amount of nitrogen in a medium was shown by Roest and Bokelmann (1975) to affect the number of adventitious shoots formed directly on Chrysanthemum pedicels. The combined amount of KNO3 + NH4NO3 in MS medium (60 mM), was adjusted as is shown in Fig. 3.3 while the ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+ (66:34) was unchanged. From 30-120 mM total nitrogen was optimal. However there was clearly a strong effect of genotype, because the cultivar `Bravo’ was much more sensitive to increased nitrogen than ‘Super Yellow’.


Chapter 3

Nitrogen x sugar interaction. The enhancement of morphogenesis caused by high nitrogen levels may not be apparent unless there is an adequate sucrose concentration in the medium (Margara and Rancillac, 1966; Gamborg et al., 1974). In Dendrobium, the uptake of NO3⎯ is slower than that of NH4+. Uptake is dependent on the nature and concentration of the sugar in the medium, being slower in the presence of

77

fructose than when sucrose or glucose are supplied (Hew et al., 1988). The rate of growth of Rosa ‘Paul’s Scarlet’ suspensions was influenced by the ratio of NO3⎯ to sucrose in the medium. A high ratio favoured the accumulation of reduced nitrogen, but not the most rapid rate of cell growth (Fletcher, 1980).

Fig. 3.3 The number of adventitious shoots formed directly on Chrysanthemum explants with increasing total nitrogen concentration in an otherwise normal MS medium [from data of Roest and Bokelmann, 1975]

Embryogenesis and embryo growth. It is accepted that the presence of some reduced nitrogen is necessary for somatic embryogenesis in cell and callus cultures (Halperin and Wetherell, 1965; Reinert et al., 1967); but although reduced nitrogen compounds are beneficial to somatic embryo induction, apparently they are not essential until the stage of embryo development (Kamada and Harada, 1979). A relatively high level of both nitrate and ammonium ions then seems to be required. Some workers have also noted enhanced embryogenesis and/or improved embryo growth when media have been supplemented with amino acids in addition to NO3⎯ and NH4+. Street (1979) thought that an optimum level of NH4+ for embryogenesis was about

10 mM (from NH4Cl) in the presence of 12-40 mM NO3 (from KNO3): that is: [NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, from 55:45 to 80:20; Total N 22-50 mM]

Walker and Sato (1981) obtained no embryogenesis in alfalfa callus in the absence of either ammonium or nitrate ions. Miller’s medium [Miller (1961; 1963)] (12.5 mM NH4+) supported a high rate of embryogenesis: [NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, 68:32; Total N 39.1 mM], but only a small number of embryos were produced on Schenk and Hildebrandt (1972) medium (SH): [NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, 90:10, Total N 27.32 mM], unless it was supplemented with NH4+ from either ammonium carbamate, ammonium chloride or ammonium sulphate. An optimal level of ammonium in SH medium was 12.5 mM:


78

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

[NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, then 66:34, total N, 37.22],

although embryogenesis was still at a high level with 100 mM ammonium ion: [NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, then, 20:80; total N, 124.72 mM]. By contrast, Coffea arabica leaf callus (Sondahl and Sharp, 1977), which was formed on a medium containing MS salts, was induced to become embryogenic by first being cultured on a medium with MS salts (and high auxin): [NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, 66:34; total N, 30.0 mM], and then moved to another medium containing MS salts with an extra 2850 mg/l KNO3: [NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, 82:18; total N, 58.2 mM] (and low auxin) Zygotic embryos. The presence of some reduced nitrogen in the growth medium is also required for the continued growth of zygotic embryos in culture. Nitrate alone is insufficient (Mauney et al., 1967; Norstog, 1967, 1973). An optimum concentration of NH4+ for the development of barley embryos in culture was 6.4 mM (Umbeck and Norstog, 1979). A similar provision seems to be necessary in most plants for the in vitro growth of somatic embryos. Flower bud formation and growth. Nitrate was essential for the formation of adventitious buds on leaf segments of Begonia franconis. The greatest proportion of flower buds was obtained with 5 mM NO3⎯ and 1.5 mM NH4+. Above this level, NH4+ promoted vegetative sprouts (Berghoef and Bruinsma, 1979b). The best in vitro growth of Begonia franconis flower buds detached from young inflorescences, occurred on a medium with 10-15 mM total nitrogen (NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, 50:50 to 67:33) (Berghoef and Bruinsma, 1979a). Detached flower buds of Cleome iberidella were found to grow best in vitro with 25 mM total nitrogen (NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, 80:20) (De Jong and Bruinsma, 1974; De Jong et al., 1974), but the complete omission of NH4NO3 from MS medium, where the salts had been diluted to their original concentration, promoted the development (but not the initiation) of adventitious floral buds of Torenia fournieri (Tanimoto and Harada, 1979, 1981, 1982). Effect on the action of growth regulants. The ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+ present in the culture medium has been found to affect the activity of plant growth substances and plant growth regulators. The mechanisms by which this occurs are not fully elucidated. It has been noted, for example, that cells will divide with less added cytokinin when the proportion of reduced nitrogen is reasonably high. To induce tobacco protoplasts to divide, it was

necessary to add 0.5-2 mg/l BAP to a medium containing only NO3⎯ nitrogen. The presence of glutamine or NH4+ in the medium together with NO3⎯, reduced the cytokinin requirement, and division proceeded without any added cytokinin when urea, NH4+, or glutamine were the sole N-sources of the medium (Meyer and Abel, 1975b). Sargent and King (1974) found that soybean cells were dependent on cytokinin when cultured in a medium containing NO3⎯ nitrogen, but independent of cytokinin when NH4+ was present as well. The relative proportion of nitrate and ammonium ions also affects the response of cells to auxin growth regulators in terms of both cell division and morphogenesis. It is possible that this is through the control of intracellular pH (see below). Carrot cultures that produce somatic embryos when transferred from a high- to a low-auxin medium, can also be induced into embryogenesis in a high-auxin medium, if it contains adequate reduced nitrogen. Only root initials are formed in high-auxin media which do not contain reduced nitrogen (Halperin, 1967). The number of plants regenerated from rice callus grown on Chu et al., (1975) medium containing 0.5 mg/l 2,4-D, depended on the ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+. It was high in the unaltered medium (ratio 4:1), but considerably less if, with the same total N, the ratio of the two ions was changed to 1:1 (Grimes and Hodges, 1990). Cells of Antirrhinum majus regenerated from isolated protoplasts were stimulated to divide with a reduced quantity of auxin in a medium containing 39.77 mM total nitrogen [NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, 39:77 (2.98)]

by adding further ammonium ion to give a total nitrogen content of 54.72 mM [NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio, 54:46 (1.19)]. or, alternatively, 400 mg/l of casein hydrolysate (Poirier-Hamon et al., 1974). In experiments of Koetje et al., (1989) and Grimes and Hodges (1990) (Table 3.5), when the NO3⎯ to NH4+ ratio in N6 medium was 80:20, there was a strong dose response curve to the auxin 2,4-D with 0.5 mg/l being the best concentration to induce embryogenesis in Oryza sativa callus; if the medium was modified, so that the NO3- to NH4+ ratio was 66:34 or 50:50, 2,4-D was less effective, and there was little difference in the number of plants regenerated between 0.5 and 3 mg/l 2,4-D. The ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+ therefore seemed either to to alter the sensitivity of cells to the auxin, or to affect its uptake or rate of metabolism.


79

Chapter 3

Walker and Sato (1981) also found that the proportion of ammonium ion in the medium can influence the way in which growth regulants control morphogenesis. Having been placed for 3 days on a medium which would normally induce root formation [Schenk and Hildebrandt (1972) medium containing 5 mM 2,4-D and 50 mM kinetin], suspension cultured cells were subsequently plated on a modification of the same medium (which contains 24.8 mM NO3⎯) without regulants, in which the concentration of NH4+ had been adjusted to various levels. Table 3.6 shows that the morphogenesis experienced, depended on the concentration of ammonia in the regeneration medium. Media containing high levels of ammonium ion would have tended to become acid, especially as the extra ammonium was added as ammonium sulphate. Possibly this affected the uptake or action of the regulants? 2.1.10. Addition of amino acids

Amino acids can be added to plant media to satisfy the requirement of cultures for reduced nitrogen, but as they are expensive to purchase, they will only be used in media for mass propagation where this results in improved results. For most tissue culture purposes, the addition of amino acids may be unnecessary, providing media contain adequate amounts, and correct proportions, of nitrate and ammonium ions. For example, Murashige and Skoog (1962) found that when cultures were grown on media such as Heller (1953; 1955), Nitsch and Nitsch (1956) N1, and Hildebrandt et al., (1946) Tobacco, containing sub-optimal amounts of inorganic chemicals, a casein hydrolysate (consisting mainly of a mixture of amino acids, see later) substantially increased the yield of tobacco callus, whereas it gave only marginal increases in yield when added to their revised MS medium. Arginine (0.287 mM) increased the growth of sugar cane callus and suspension cultures grown on Nickell and Maretzski (1969) medium (Nickell and Maretzski, 1969) but was without effect on cultures of this plant

grown on a medium based on Scowcroft and Adamson (1976) CS5 macronutrients (Larkin, 1982). It is noticeable from the literature that organic supplements (particularly amino acids) have been especially beneficial for growth or morphogenesis when cells or tissues were cultured on media such as White (1943a), which do not contain ammonium ions. White (1937) and Bonner and Addicott (1937), for example, used known amino acids to replace the variable mixture provided by yeast extract. For the culture of Picea glauca callus, Reinert and White (1956) supplemented Risser and White (1964) medium with 17 supplementary amino acids, and similar, or greater numbers, were used by Torrey and Reinert (1961) and Filner (1965) in White (1943) medium for the culture of carrot, Convolvulus arvensis, Haplopappus gracilis and tobacco tissues. Dependence on the nitrate to ammonium ratio. Grimes and Hodges (1990) found that when both NO3⎯ and NH4+ are present in the medium, the response to organic nitrogen depends on the ratio of these two ions. Twice as many plants were regenerated from embryogenic rice callus when 1g/l CH was added to Chu et al., (1975) N6 medium, providing the proportion of NO3⎯ to NH4+ was also changed to 1 (50:50). There was little response to CH with the same amount of total N in the medium, if the NO3⎯/NH4+ ratio was 4 (i.e. 80%:20%, as in the original medium), or more. 2.1.11. Amino acids as the sole N source

As most of the inorganic nitrogen supplied in culture media is converted by plant tissues to amino acids, which are then assimilated into proteins, it should be possible to culture plants on media in which amino acids are the only nitrogen source. This has been demonstrated: for example, Nicotiana tabacum callus can be cultured on MS salts lacking NO3⎯ and NH4+ (but with an extra 20.6 mM K+), if 0.1 mM glycine, 1mM arginine, 2 mM aspartic acid and 6 mM glutamine are added (Muller and Grafe, 1978); wild carrot suspensions can be grown on a medium

Table 3.6 The effect of total nitrogen, and the ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+ on the type of organ produced by alfalfa cells which have been subcultured on a root-inducing medium (Walker and Sato, 1981)

Type of organ produced Roots Roots and somatic embryos Somatic embryos

NH4+ (mM) <2.5 12.5-37.5

NO3⎯ (mM) 27.2 37.3-62.3

Ratio of NO3⎯ to NH4+ 100:0 to 91:9 66:34 to 40:60

50-100

74.7-124.7

33:67 to 20:80


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

containing glutamine or casein hydrolysate as the sole nitrogen source (Anderson, 1976). Amino acids provide plant cells with an immediately available source of nitrogen, and uptake can be much more rapid than that of inorganic nitrogen in the same medium (Thom et al., 1981). Only the L- form of amino acids is biologically active. Amino acids can also provide reduced nitrogen in culture media in place of NH4+ and as a supplement to NO3⎯. However they are usually employed as minor additions to media containing both NH4+ and NO3⎯. Uptake of amino acids into cultured tissues causes a decrease in the pH of the medium, similar to that which occurs when NH4+ ions are absorbed. Sugar-based amines such as glucosamine and galactosamine can also serve as a source of reduced nitrogen in morphogenesis (Margara, 1969a; Margara and Leydecker, 1978). 2.1.12. Biologically-active amino acids

Amino acids are classified according to their stereoisomers and according to the relative positions of the amino group and the acidic radical. Only the L- isomers of the α-amino acids are important for plant tissue culture media. They have the general structure: NH2 | R-CH- COOH β-Amino acids are present in plants but tend to result from secondary metabolism. They have the general structure: NH2 | R-CHCH2- COOH (where R = functional groups)

Unfortunately the particular amino acid, or mixture of amino acids, which promotes growth or morphogenesis in one species, may not do so in another. For instance, L-α-alanine, glutamine, asparagine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, arginine and proline could serve as a source of reduced nitrogen in a medium containing 20 mM NO3⎯, and were effective in promoting embryogenesis in Daucus carota callus and suspensions, but lysine, valine, histidine, leucine and methionine were ineffective (Kamada and Harada, 1982).

Competitive inhibition. Some amino acids are growth inhibitory at fairly low concentrations and this is particularly observed when mixtures of two or more amino acids are added to media. Inhibition is thought to be due to the competitive interaction of one compound with another. In oat embryo cultures, phenylalanine and L-tyrosine antagonise each other, as do L-leucine and DL-valine; DL-isoleucine and DL-valine, and L-arginine and L-lysine (Harris, 1956). Lysine and threonine often exert a cooperative inhibition when present together, but do not inhibit growth when added to a medium singly (Cattoir-Reynaerts et al., 1981). Glycine. Glycine is an ingredient of many media. It has usually been added in small amounts, and has been included by some workers amongst the vitamin ingredients. Despite frequent use, it is difficult to find hard evidence that glycine is really essential for so many tissue cultures, but possibly it helps to protect cell membranes from osmotic and temperature stress (Orczyk and Malepszy, 1985). White (1939) showed that isolated tomato roots grew better when his medium was supplemented with glycine rather than yeast extract and that glycine could replace the mixture of nine amino acids that had been used earlier. It was employed as an organic component by Skoog (1944) and continued to be used in his laboratory until the experiments of Murashige and Skoog (1962). They adopted the kinds and amounts of organic growth factors specified by White (1943a) and so retained 2 mg/l glycine in their medium without further testing. Linsmaier and Skoog (1965), furthering the study of medium components to organic ingredients, omitted glycine from MS medium and discovered that low concentrations of it had no visible effect on the growth of tobacco callus, while at 20 mg/l it depressed growth. No doubt the success of MS medium has caused the 2 mg/l glycine of Skoog (1944) to be copied in many subsequent experiments. Many workers overlook the later Linsmaier and Skoog paper. Casein and other protein hydrolysates. Proteins, which have been hydrolysed by acid, or enzymes, and so broken down into smaller molecules, are less costly than identified amino acids. The degree of degradation varies: some protein hydrolysates consist of mixtures of amino acids together with other nitrogenous compounds such as peptide fragments, vitamins, and elements which might (if they can form inorganic ions, or are associated with organic compounds that can be taken


Chapter 3

up by plant tissues) be able to serve as macro- or micro-elements. Peptones are prepared from one or several proteins in a similar fashion but generally consist of low molecular weight proteins. Although protein hydrolysates are a convenient source of substances which may promote plant growth, they are by nature relatively undefined supplements. The proportion of individual amino acids in different hydrolysates depends on the nature of the source protein and the method by which the product has been prepared. The hydrolysate most often used in culture media is that of the milk protein, casein, although lactalbumin hydrolysate has been employed (La Motte and Lersten, 1971). Peptones and tryptone have been used less frequently, but there are reports of their having been added to media with advantage (e.g. Muralidhar and Mehta, 1982; Pierik et al., 1988). Casein hydrolysates can be a source of calcium, phosphate, several microelements, vitamins and, most importantly, a mixture of up to 18 amino acids. Several casein hydrolysates (CH) are available commercially but their value for plant tissue culture can vary considerably. Acid hydrolysis can denature some amino acids and so products prepared by enzymatic hydolysis are to be preferred. The best can be excellent sources of reduced nitrogen, as they can contain a relatively large amount of glutamine. Casein hydrolysate produces an improvement in the growth of Cardamine pratensis and Silene alba suspensions, only if the medium is deficient in phosphorus. Glutamine has the same effect; it is the most common amino acid in CH, and its synthesis requires ATP. For these reasons, Bister-Miel et al., (1985) concluded that CH overcomes the shortage of glutamine when there is insufficient phosphorus for adequate biosynthesis. However several investigators have concluded that casein hydrolysate itself is more effective for plant culture than the addition of the major amino acids which it provides. This has led to speculation that CH might contain some unknown growthpromoting factor (Inoue and Maeda, 1982). In prepared mixtures of amino acids resembling those in CH, competitive inhibition between some of the constituents is often observed. For instance, the induction of embryogenesis in carrot cell suspensions on a medium containing glutamine as the only nitrogen source, was partly inhibited by the further addition of L-amino acids similar in composition to those in CH. This suppression was mainly caused by the L-tyrosine in the mixture (Anderson, 1976).

81

There may be a limit to the amount of CH, which can be safely added to a medium. Anstis and Northcote (1973) reported that the brand of CH known as ‘N-Z-amine’, can produce toxic substances if concentrated solutions are heated, or if solutions are frozen and thawed several times. Possibly these are reasons why mixtures of amino acids occasionally provide more valuable supplements than CH. Nicotiana tabacum callus grew better on a nitrogenfree MS medium when a mixture of the amino acids L-glutamine (6 mM), L-aspartic acid (2 mM), Larginine (1 mM) and glycine (0.1 mM) was added, rather than 2 g/l casein hydrolysate (which would have provided about 2 mM glutamine, 0.6 mM aspartic acid, 0.2 mM arginine and 0.3 mM glycine) (Muller and Grafe, 1978). 2.1.13. Beneficial effects of amino acid additions

Improved growth. The growth rate of cell suspensions is frequently increased by the addition of casein hydrolysate or one or more amino acids (particularly glutamine) to media containing both nitrate and ammonium ions. Some workers have included a mixture of several amino acids in their medium without commenting on how they improved growth. In other cases the benefit resulting from a specific compound has been clearly shown. The lag phase of growth in suspensions of Pseudotsuga menziesii cultured on Cheng (1977; 1978) medium was eliminated by the addition of 50 mM glutamine, and the final dry weight of cells was 4 times that produced on the unammended medium (Kirby, 1982). Similarly the rate of growth of Actinidia chinensis suspensions was improved by the addition of 5mM glutamine (Suezawa et al., 1988) and those of Prunus amygdalus cv. ‘Ferragnes’ could not be maintained unless 0.2% casamino acids was added to the medium (Rugini and Verma, 1982). Molnar (1988b) found that the growth of Brassica nigra cell suspensions was improved by adding 1-4 g/l CH or a mixture of 4 mM alanine, 4 mM glutamine and 1 mM glutamic acid. In this case the medium contained MS salts (but less iron) and B5 vitamins. Amino acid supplements have also been used to boost the rate of growth of callus cultures. For instance, Short and Torrey (1972) added 5 amino acids and urea to a medium containing MS salts for the culture of pea root callus, and Sandstedt and Skoog (1960) found that aspartic and glutamic acids promoted the growth of tobacco callus as much as a mixture of several amino acids (such as found in yeast extract). Glutamic acid seemed to be primarily responsible for the growth promotion of sweet clover


82

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

callus caused by casein hydrolysate on a medium containing 26.6 mM NO3⎯, 12.5 mM NH4+ and 2.0 mM PO43- (Taira et al., 1977). Amino acids are often added to media for protoplast culture. It was essential to add 2 mM glutamine and 2 mM asparagine to a medium containing MS salts, to obtain cell division, colony growth and plantlet differentiation from Trigonella protoplasts (Shekhawat and Galston, 1983). Shoot cultures. Many shoot cultures are grown on MS medium containing glycine, although in most cases the amino acid is probably not an essential ingredient. Usually it is unnecessary to add amino acids to media supporting shoot cultures, but methionine may represent a special case. Druart (1988) found that adding 50-100 mg/l L-methionine to the medium seemed to stimulate cytokinin activity and caused cultures of Prunus glandulosa var. sinensis to have high propagation rates through several subcultures. This promotive effect of Lmethionine was thought to be due to it acting as a precursor of ethylene (see Chapter 7). Glutamine inhibited the growth of apical domes excised from Coleus blumei shoots (Smith, 1981) and 50-100 mg/l glutamic acid inhibited shoot growth, the formation of axillary buds and shoot proliferation in cultures of woody plants (Druart, loc. cit.). L-Citrulline is an important intermediate in nitrogen metabolism in the genus Alnus. The addition of 1.66 mM (4.99 mM NH2) to WPM medium improved the growth of A. cordata and A. subcordata shoot cultures (Cremiere et al., 1987). Contaminants grow more rapidly on media containing amino acids. Casein hydrolysate is therefore sometimes added to the media for Stage I shoot cultures so that infected explants can be rejected quickly (Schulze, 1988). The health of shoots grown from seedling shoot tips of Feijoa (Acca) sellowiana was improved when 500 mg/l CH was added to Boxus (1974) medium (which does not contain ammonium ions) (Bhojwani et al., 1987). Organogenesis. The presence of amino acids can enhance morphogenesis, either when they provide the only source of reduced nitrogen, or when they are used as a supplement to a medium containing both NO3⎯ and NH4+. In a medium containing 25 mM nitrate, but no NH4+, direct adventitious shoot formation on cauliflower peduncle explants was induced by the addition of a mixture of the amino acids asparagine, proline, tyrosine and phenylalanine, each at a concentration of only 0.1 mM. (Margara, 1969b). A high rate of adventitious shoot

regeneration and embryogenesis, from Beta vulgaris petioles or petiole callus, was achieved on a medium comprised of several amino acids and a complex vitamin mixture with MS salts (Freytag et al., 1988). The addition of CH to MS medium was found to be essential for shoot formation from callus (Chand and Roy, 1981). Adding only 1-10 mg/l of either L-leucine or Lisoleucine to Gamborg et al., (1968) B5 medium, decreased callus growth of Brassica oleracea var capitata, but increased adventitious shoot formation. Basu et al., (1989) thought that this might be due to these amino acids being negative effectors of threonine deaminase (TD) enzyme, the activity of which was diminished in their presence. Threonine, methionine and pyruvic acid, which increased callus growth in this species, enhanced TD activity. There are several examples of the amino acid Lasparagine being able to stimulate morphogenesis. This may be because it too can be a precursor of ethylene (Durzan, 1982), the biosynthesis of which may be increased by greater substrate availability. Kamada and Harada (1977) found that the addition of 5 mM L-asparagine stimulated both callus and bud formation in stem segments of Torenia fournieri, while alanine (and, to a lesser extent, glutamic acid) increased flower bud formation from Torenia internode segments when both an auxin and a cytokinin were present. An increase in the number of adventitious buds formed on the cotyledons and hypocotyl of Chamaecyparis obtusa seedlings occurred when 1.37 mM glutamine and 1.51 mM asparagine were added together to Campbell and Durzan (1975) medium, but not when they were supplied on their own (Ishii, 1986). L-asparagine was also added to MS medium by Green and Phillips (1975), to obtain plant regeneration from tissue cultures of maize; adding it to Finer and Nagasawa (1988) 10A4ON medium caused there to be more embryogenic clumps in Glycine max suspension cultures (Finer and Nagasawa, 1988). Amino acid additions do not invariably enhance morphogenesis. Supplementing Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) medium with 0.5-5 mM glutamine, caused callus of Zamia latifolia to show greatly decreased organogenesis (Webb and Rivera, 1981) and ammending Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) medium with 100 mg/l CH, prevented adventitious shoot formation from stem internode callus of apple and cherry rootstocks (James et al., 1984). Embryogenesis. The presence the ammonium ion is usually sufficient for the induction of


Chapter 3

embryogenesis in callus or suspension cultures containing NO3⎯, but on media where NH4+ is lacking [e.g. White (1954)], casein hydrolysate, or an amino acid such as alanine, or glutamine, is often promotory (Ranga Swamy, 1958; Ammirato and Steward, 1971; Street, 1979). For embryogenesis in carrot cultures, Wetherell and Dougall (1976) have shown that in a medium containing potassium nitrate, reduced nitrogen in the form of ammonium chloride matched the effectiveness of an equivalent concentration of nitrogen from casein hydrolysate. Casein hydrolysate could be replaced by glutamine, glutamic acid, urea or alanine. Suspensions of wild carrot cells grew and produced somatic embryos on a medium containing either glutamine or CH as the sole nitrogen source (Anderson, 1976). There have also been many reports of embryogenesis being promoted by the addition of casein hydrolysate, or one or more specific amino acids, when both NO3⎯ and NH4+ were available in the medium. Some examples are given in Table 3.7. In many cases, embryogenic callus and/or embryo formation did not occur without the presence of the amino acid source, suggesting that without amino acid, the medium was deficient in NH4+ or total nitrogen. Armstrong and Green (1985) found that the frequency of friable callus and somatic embryo formation from immature embryos of Zea mays increased almost linearly with the addition of up to 25 mM proline to Chu et al., (1975) N6 medium [total N, 34.99 mM; NO3/NH4 ratio, 3.99],

but there was no benefit from adding proline to MS medium (containing 150 mg/l asparagine hydrate). [total N, 60.01 mM; NO3/NH4 ratio, 1.91]

The growth of somatic embryos can also be affected by the availability of reduced nitrogen. That of Coronilla varia embryos was poor on Gamborg et al., (1968) B5 medium (Total N 26.74 mM; NH4+ 2.02 mM), unless 10 mM asparagine or 20 mM NH4Cl was added to the medium, or unless the embryos were moved to Saunders and Bingham (1972) BOi2Y medium, which has 37.81 mM total inorganic N, 12.49 mM NH4+ and 2000 mg/l casein hydrolysate (approx. 9.9 mM NH4+ equivalence) (Moyer and Gustine, 1984). However, the germination of Triticum aestivum somatic embryos was completely prevented by adding 800 mg/l CH to MS medium (Ozias Akins and Vasil, 1982; Carman et al., 1988). Culture of immature cotyledons. Young storage cotyledons isolated from immature zygotic embryos accumulate protein efficiently when cultured with amino acids in a medium without nitrate and

83

ammonium ions. A medium such as that of Millerd et al. (1975), or of Thompson et al., (1977) is normally used, but where the effect of different amino acids on protein assimilation is being studied, the amino acid content of the medium is varied. Glutamine is often found to be the most efficient nitrogen source for this purpose (Thompson et al., 1977; Haga and Sodek, 1987), but protein increase from culture with asparagine and glutamate (glutamic acid) is usually also significant (Lea et al., 1979). 2.1.14. acids

Causes of the stimulatory effect of amino

We may conclude therefore, that for many cultural purposes, amino acids are not essential media components; but their addition as identified pure compounds, or more cheaply through casein hydrolysates, can be an easy way of ensuring against medium deficiency, or of providing a source of nitrogen that is immediately available to cultured cells or tissues. An observation by Murashige and Skoog (1962) that the presence of casein hydrolysate allowed vigorous organ development over a broader range of IAA and kinetin levels, may be of significance. In gram moles per litre, amino acids can be a much more efficient source of reduced nitrogen than ammonium compounds. For instance, the mixture of amino acids provided by 400 mg/l of casein hydrolysate (containing at most as much reduced nitrogen as 3.3 mM NH4+) was as effective as 14.95 mM NH4Cl in stimulating the division of protoplastderived cells of Antirrhinum (Poirier-Hamon et al., 1974). Why should this be, and why can additions of amino acids (sometimes in comparatively small amounts) stimulate growth or morphogenesis when added to media, which already contain large amounts of NH4+? Some hypotheses, which have been advanced are: • Conservation of ATP - alleviating phosphate deficiency. Durzan (1982) pointed out that when plant tissues take up the ammonium ion, they consume adenosine tri-phosphate (ATP) in converting it to amino acids. If suitable amino acids are available from the medium, some of ATP may be conserved. Bister-Miel et al., (1985) noted that CH promoted growth in cultures where phosphate became growth-limiting. They suggested that amino acids compensated for phosphate deficiency. With the plant well supplied with amino acids, some of the phosphate, which is normally used for ATP production can be diverted to other uses. Several


84

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients Table 3.7 Some examples of the promotion of embryogenesis by amino acids in media containing NO3- and NH4+

Type of culture Aesculus hippocastrum Dactylis glomerata Daucus carota

Zygotic embryo callus Suspension-derived callus Hypocotyl callus

Dioscorea rotundata Glycine max

Zygotic embryo callus Suspension

Gossypium klotzschianum Larix decidua

Basal medium used MS Schenk and Hildebrandt (1972) Gamborg et al. (1968) B5 MS

Amino acid supplements CH (250 mg/l) + Proline (250 mg/l) CH (1.5 g/l)

Reference Radojevic (1988) Gray et al. (1984)

Proline (100 mM) + Nuti Ronchi et al. Serine (100 mM) (1984) CH (1 g/l) Osifo (1988)

Kartha et al. (1974a) Suspension Gamborg et al. (1968) B5 Gametophyte callus Litvay et al. (1981) LM

Nigella sativa

Roots or leaf callus

Trigonella foenumgraecum

Leaf callus

Triticum aestivum

Anther

Vitis vinifera Zea mays

Anther Zygotic embryo callus

L-asparagine Finer and Nagasawa (5 mM) (1988) Glutamine (10 mM) Price and Smith (1979a,b) CH (1 g/l) + Nagmani and Glutamine Bonga (1985) (500 mg/l) MS CH Bannerjee and (100 – 500 mg/l) Gupta (1976) MS CH (50 mg/l) Gupta et al. (1987) (500 mg/l was inhibitory) Chu and Hill (1988) Serine, proline, Chu and Hill (1988) MN6 arinine, aspartic acid and alanine (each at 40 mg/l) + glutamine (400 mg/l) ½ MS CH (250 mg/l) Mauro et al. (1986); Chu et al. (1975) Proline (20-25 mM) Kamo et al. (1985) N6 Armstrong and Green (1985)

authors have pointed out that CH itself is also a source of phosphate. For example, Bridson (1978) and some chemical catalogues, show that some casein hydrolysates normally contain about 1.3g P2O5 per 100g. The addition of 2 g/l of CH will therefore increase the phosphate content of MS medium by 11% and that of White (1954) medium by 44% (assuming complete phosphate availability). • A capacity to act as chelating agents. Some amino acids can act as chelating agents (see later in section on chelates) • Enhanced nitrogen assimilation. Glutamine and glutamic acid are directly involved in the assimilation of NH4+. A direct supply of these amino acids should

therefore enhance the utilization of both nitrate and ammonium nitrogen and its conversion into amino acids. • A replacement for toxic ammonium ions. Certain plant tissues are particularly sensitive to NH4+. Ochatt and Caso (1986) and Ochatt and Power (1988a, b) found that protoplasts of Pyrus spp. would not tolerate the ion, and that to obtain sustained cell division it was necessary to eliminate it from MS medium, and use 50 mg/l casein hydrolysate as a source of reduced nitrogen. CH can however be extremely toxic to freshly isolated protoplasts of some species and varieties of plants (Ranch and Widholm, 1980; Russell and McCown, 1988). Conifer tissues too are unable to cope with high


Chapter 3

concentrations of NH4+, but cultures can be supplied with equivalent levels of reduced nitrogen in the form of amino acids without the occurrence of toxicity (Durzan, 1982). In soybean suspension cultures, the high level of ammonium in MS medium has been shown to inhibit isocitrate dehydrogenase (a Krebs’ cycle enzyme) and glutamine synthetase, which contribute to the conversion of NH4+ to glutamine (Gamborg and Shyluk, 1970). • Adjustment of intracellular pH. As intracellular pH is important for the activation of sea urchin eggs, and amino acids can promote embryogenesis, Nuti Ronchi et al., (1984) speculated that the uptake and assimilation of amino acids might help to regulate cellular pH in plants. As mentioned before, there is commonly a minimum inoculation density below which growth cannot be initiated in vitro. This minimum varies according to both the source of the cells and the nature of the medium. It can usually be lowered by employing a ‘conditioned’ medium (i.e. a fresh medium into which the products of another medium in which cells are actively growing, have been added). Alternatively, initial growth at low densities can be supported by the close presence of other actively growing plant cells (‘nurse cultures’). Compounds responsible for this effect must be freely diffusible from living cells and could include growth substances, reducing sugars, vitamins and amino acids. Addition of such supplements has been found to overcome the inhibited growth of some cells at low densities (Kao and Michayluk, 1975). 2.2. PHOSPHATE

Phosphorus is a vital element in plant biochemistry. It occurs in numerous macromolecules such as nucleic acids, phospholipids and co-enzymes. It functions in energy transfer via the pyrophophate bond in ATP. Phosphate groups attached to different sugars provide energy in respiration and photosynthesis and phosphate bound to proteins regulates their activity. Phosphorus is absorbed into plants in the form of the primary or secondary orthophosphate anions H2PO4- and HPO42- by an active process, which requires the expenditure of respiratory energy. Phosphate, in contrast to nitrate and sulphate, is not reduced in plants, but remains in the highly oxidized form. It is used in plants as the fully oxidized orthophosphate (PO43-) form. In culture media the element is provided as soluble potassium mono- and di-hydrogen phosphates. The di- and mono-valent phosphate

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anions respectively provided by these chemicals are interconvertible in solution depending on pH. Monovalent H2PO4- predominates at pH values below 7, characteristic of most tissue culture media, and it is this ion, which is most readily absorbed into plants (Devlin, 1975). Conversion of H2PO4- into divalent HPO42- begins to occur as solutions become more alkaline. The divalent ion is said to be only sparingly available to plants but Hagen and Hopkins (1955) and Jacobsen et al., (1958) thought that its absorption could be significant, because even though the ion is normally at a relatively low concentration in nutrient solutions, its affinity with the site of absorption is greater than that of the mono-valent form. Trivalent PO43-, which appears in alkaline solutions, is not generally absorbed by plants. In some early tissue culture media, all (e.g. Bouharmont, 1961), or part (e.g. Vacin and Went, 1949) of the phosphorus was supplied as sparinglysoluble phosphates. A slow rate of phosphorus availability seems to be possible from such compounds. The optimum rate of uptake of phosphate (HPO42-) into cultured Petunia cells occurred at pH 4 (Chin and Miller, 1982) but Zink and Veliky (1979) did not observe any decline in the absorption of phosphate by Ipomoea suspension cultures at pH 6.5, when HPO42- and H2PO4- were present in approximately equal concentrations. Plant tissue cultures secrete phosphatase enzymes into the medium (Ciarrocchi et al., 1981), which could release phosphate ions from organic phosphates. In the cytoplasm, phosphate is maintained at a constant concentration of 5-10 mM, more or less independent of the external concentration. Phosphate in the vacuole fluctuates according to the external concentration but does not increase above 25 mM (Schachtman et al., 1998). When there is a high supply of phosphate and it is taken up at rates that exceed the demand, a number of processes act to prevent toxic phosphate concentrations, among others storage into inorganic compounds such as phytic acid. High concentrations of dissolved phosphate can depress growth, possibly because calcium and some microelements are precipitated from solution and/or their uptake reduced. In Arabidopsis thaliana, four different phophate transporter genes have been isolated (APT1-4). In vivo, the genes are predominantly expressed in the roots and their expression is constitutive or induced by phosphate starvation. Overexpression of APT1 gene in tobacco cell cultures increased the rate of phosphate uptake (Mitsukawa et al., 1997).


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

Although the concentration of phosphate introduced into plant culture media has been as high as 19.8 mM, the average level is 1.7 mM and most media contain about 1.3 mM. However many reports indicate that such typical levels may be too low for some purposes. When phosphate is depleted from MS medium, there is an increase in free amino acids in Catharanthus roseus cells, because protein synthesis has ceased and degradation of proteins is occurring (Ukaji and Ashihara, 1987). Phosphate (starting concentration 2.64 mM) and sucrose were the only nutrients completely depleted in Catharanthus roseus batch suspension cultures, and the period of growth could be prolonged by increasing the levels of both (MacCarthy et al., 1980). MS medium contains only 1.25 mM phosphate which may be insufficient for suspension cultures of some plants. The phosphate in MS medium is insufficient for Cardamine pratensis suspension cultures, all having been absorbed in 5 days: it is however adequate for Silene alba suspensions (Bister-Miel et al., 1985). The phosphate in MS medium is also inadequate for static cultures of some plants, or where a large amount of tissue or organs are supported on a small amount of medium (for example where many separate shoots are explanted together in a static shoot culture). The concentration of the ion is then likely to be reduced almost to zero over several weeks (Barroso et al., 1985; Singha et al., 1987; Lumsden et al.,1990). Insufficient levels of phosphate were present from MS during culture of Hemerocallis, Iris and Delphinium (Leiffert et al., 1995). Although growth can continue for a short while after the medium is depleted of phosphate, for some purposes it has been found to be beneficial to increase the phosphate concentration of MS to 1.86 mM (Jones and Murashige, 1974), 2.48 mM (Murashige et al., 1972; Murashige, 1974; Jakobek et al., 1986), 3.1 mM (Miller and Murashige, 1976) or 3.71 mM (Thorpe and Murashige, 1968, 1970), for example, to induce adventitious shoot formation from callus, or to increase the rate of shoot multiplication in shoot cultures. It should be noted that there is in vivo a significant retranslocation of phosphate from older leaves to the growing shoot (Schachtman et al., 1998). Retranslocation also occurs in tissue culture. In Dahlia culture in liquid medium, phosphate is almost completely taken up after 2 weeks (Fig. 3.4a). In spite of this, the concentration in tissues formed after the exhaustion is ‘normal’ (Fig. 3.4b). The depletion of phosphate early during culture has also a

major effect on the pH of tissue culture media in which added phosphate is the major buffering component. When phosphate levels are increased to obtain a more rapid rate of growth of a culture, it can be advisable to investigate the simultaneous enhancement of the level of myo-inositol in the medium 2.3. POTASSIUM

Potassium is the major cation (positive ion) within plants reaching in the cytoplasm and chloroplasts concentrations of 100 – 200 mM. The biphasic uptake kinetics suggest two uptake systems: a highaffinity and a low-affinity one. K+ is not metabolised. It contributes significantly to the osmotic potential of cells. K+ counterbalances the negative charge of inorganic and organic anions. It functions in cell extension through the regulation of turgor, it has a major role in stomatal movements and functions in long-distance nutrient flow. Potassium ions are transported quickly across cell membranes and two of their major roles are regulating the pH and osmotic environment within cells. Potassium, calcium, sodium and chloride ions conserve their electrical charges within the plant, unlike the cation NH4+ and the anions NO3-, SO42-, and H2PO4-, which are rapidly incorporated into organic molecules. In intact plants, potassium ions are thought to cycle. They move, associated with cations (particularly NO3⎯), upwards from the roots in the xylem. As nitrate is reduced to ammonia and assimilated, carboxylic acid ions (RCO3-, malate) are produced. These become associated with the released K+ ions and are transported in the phloem to the roots, where they are decarboxylated, releasing K+ for further anion transport (Ben-Zioni et al., 1971). Carboxylate transported to the roots gives rise to OH ⎯ ion, which is excreted into the soil (or medium) to counterbalance NO3⎯ uptake (Touraine et al., 1988). Potassium ions will clearly have a similar role in cultured tissues, but obvious transport mechanisms will usually be absent. Many proteins show a high specificity for potassium which, acting as a cofactor, alters their configuration so that they become active enzymes. Potassium ions also neutralise organic anions produced in the cytoplasm, and so stabilise the pH and osmotic potential of the cell. In whole plants, deficiency of potassium results in loss of cell turgor, flaccid tissues and an increased susceptibility to drought, salinity, frost damage and fungal attack. A high potassium to calcium ratio is said to be


Chapter 3

characteristic of the juvenile stage in woody plants (Boulay, 1987). Potassium deficiency in plant culture media is said to lead to hyperhydricity (Pasqualetto et al., 1988), and a decrease in the rate of absorption of phosphate (Chin and Miller, 1982). However quite wide variations in the potassium content of MS medium had little effect on the growth or proliferation of cultured peach shoots (Loreti et al., 1988). Lavee and Hoffman (1971) reported that the optimum rate of callus growth of two apple clones was achieved in a medium containing 3.5 mM K+: when the concentration was much higher than this, or when it was less than 1.4 mM, the callus grew less vigorously. However, the growth rate of wild carrot suspensions was said by Brown et al., (1976) to be at, or near, the maximum when K+ concentration was 1 mM: for embryogenesis 10-50 mM K+ was required. Uptake of potassium into plants is reduced in the absence of calcium (Devlin, 1975). Within a large sample of different macronutrient compositions, it is found that authors have tended to relate the concentration of potassium to the level of nitrate. This is correlated with a coefficient of 0.78, P<0.001 (George et al., 1988). The average concentration of potassium in these media was 13.6 mM and the most common value (median), 10.5 mM. Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium contains 20.04 mM K+.

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Sodium only appears to be essential to those salttolerant plants, which have a C4 (crassulacean acid) metabolism. Examples are Bryophyllum tubiflorum (Crassulaceae) and Mesembryanthemum crystallimum (Aizoaceae). In these plants the element is necessary for CO2 fixation in photosynthesis.

2.4. SODIUM

Sodium ions (Na+) are taken up into plants, but in most cases they are not required for growth and development and many plants actively secrete them from their roots to maintain a low internal concentration. The element can function as an osmotic stabilizer in halophytic plants; these have become adapted so that, in saline soils with low water potential, they can accumulate abnormally high concentrations of Na+ ion in vacuoles, and thereby maintain sufficient turgor for growth. Sodium does appear to have a beneficial nutritional effect on some plants and is therefore considered as a functional element (Subbarao et al., 2003). Small amounts of sodium chloride (e.g. 230 mg/l) can stimulate the growth of plants in the families Chenopodiaceae and Compositae even when there is no limitation on the availability of K+ (Brownell, 1979). In other plants such as wheat, oats, cotton and cauliflower (Sharma and Singh, 1990), sodium can partially replace potassium, but is not essential.

Fig. 3.4 Top: Depletion of P in the medium compared to the growth of Dahlia cultures. Bottom (Right) P content in 1-week old Dahlia shoots taken from the culture after 1 week when P had not yet been exhausted. (Left) 6-week old shoots in which the upper part had been formed after all P had been taken up from the medium. The high content in the newly formed upper part of the shoots indicates massive retranslocation of P after uptake from older to newer tissue (G. de Klerk, unpub. data).

Most macronutrient formulations do not contain any sodium at all, and the average concentration in 615 different preparations was 1.9 mM (George et al., 1988). Even if the element is not deliberately added as a macronutrient, small amounts are incorporated in most media from the salts added to provide micronutrients. Plant macronutrient preparations


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

containing high concentrations of both sodium and chloride ions are not well formulated. 2.5. MAGNESIUM

Magnesium is an essential component of the chlorophyll molecule and is also required nonspecifically for the activity of many enzymes, especially those involved in the transfer of phosphate. ATP synthesis has an absolute requirement for magnesium and it is a bridging element in the aggregation of ribosome subunits. Magnesium is the central atom in the porphyrin structure of the chlorophyll molecule. Within plants, the magnesium ion is mobile and diffuses freely and thus, like potassium, serves as a cation balancing and neutralising anions and organic acids. Macklon and Sim (1976) estimated there to be 2.1 mM Mg2+ in the cytoplasm of Allium cepa roots while McClendon (1976) put the general cytoplasmic requirement of plants as high as 16 mM. Plant culture media invariably contain relatively low concentrations of magnesium (average 6.8 mM, median 5.3 mM). Very often MgSO4 is used as the unique source of both magnesium and sulphate ions. Walker and Sato (1981) found there to be a large reduction in the number of somatic embryos formed from Medicago sativa callus when Mg2+ was omitted from the medium. In sympathy with this finding, Kintzios et al., (2004) observed in tissue culture of melon that the highest level of magnesium occurred in direct somatic embryogenic cultures and the lowest level in callus cultures. 2.6. SULPHUR

The sulphur utilised by plants is mainly absorbed as SO42-, which is the usual source of the element in plant culture media. Uptake is coupled to nitrogen assimilation (Reuveny et al., 1980), and is said to be independent of pH. It results in the excretion of OHions by the plant, making the medium more alkaline. However, according to Mengel and Kirkby (1982), plants are relatively insensitive to high sulphate levels and only when the concentration is in the region of 50 mM, is growth adversely affected. Although sulphur is mainly absorbed by plants in the oxidized form, that which is incorporated into chemical compounds is mainly as reduced -SH, -S- or -S-S- groups. The sulphur-containing amino acids cysteine and methionine become incorporated into proteins. Sulphur is used by plants in lipid synthesis and in regulating the structure of proteins through the formation of S-S bridges. The element also acts as a

ligand joining ions of iron, zinc and copper to metalloproteins and enzymes. The reactive sites of some enzymes are -SH groups. Sulphur is therefore an essential element and deficiency results in a lack of protein synthesis. Sulphur-deficient plants are rigid, brittle and thin-stemmed. Important sulphur compounds are glutathione, which acts in detoxification of oxygen radicals, and the proteins thioredoxin and ferrodoxin that are involved in redox chemistry. Growth and protein synthesis in tobacco cell suspensions were reduced on a medium containing only 0.6 mM SO42- instead of 1.73 mM (Klapheck et al., 1982) and when the supply of S in the medium was used up, large amounts of soluble nitrogen accumulated in the cells. Most media contain from 25 meq/l SO42- (1 – 2.5 mM). 2.7. CALCIUM

As a major cation, calcium helps to balance anions within the plant, but unlike potassium and magnesium, it is not readily mobile. Because of its capacity to link biological molecules together with coordinate bonds, the element is involved in the structure and physiological properties of cell membranes and the middle lamella of cell walls. The enzyme β-(1→3)-glucan synthase depends on calcium ions, and cellulose synthesis by cultured cells does not occur unless there are at least micro-molar quantities of Ca2+ in the medium. Many other plant enzymes are also calcium-dependent and calcium is a cofactor in the enzymes responsible for the hydrolysis of ATP. Although calcium can be present in millimolar concentrations within the plant as a whole, calcium ions are pumped out of the cytoplasm of cells. Ca2+ is sequestered in the vacuole, complexes with calcium-binding proteins and may precipitate into calcium oxalate crystals to maintain the concentration at around only 0.1 mM. The active removal of Ca2+ is necessary to prevent the precipitation of phosphate (and the consequent disruption of phosphatedependent metabolism) and interference with the function of Mg2+. The uniquely low intra-cellular concentration of Ca2+ allows plants to use calcium as a chemical ‘second messenger’ (Hepler and Wayne, 1985; Sanders et al., 1999). Regulatory mechanisms are initiated when Ca2+ binds with the protein calmodulin, which is thus enabled to modify enzyme activities. A temporary increase in Ca2+concentration to 1 or 10 mM does not significantly alter the ionic environment within the cell, but is yet sufficient to


Chapter 3

trigger fundamental cell processes such as polarized growth (for example that of embryos - Shelton et al., 1981), response to gravity and plant growth substances, cytoplasmic streaming, and mitosis (Ferguson and Drbak, 1988; Poovaiah, 1988). Physiological and developmental processes, which are initiated through the action of phytochrome are also dependent on the presence of Ca2+ (Shacklock et al., 1992). A short-term increase in cytosolic free Ca2+ has been observed for osmoadaptation (Taylor et al., 1996), phytoalexin synthesis (Knight et al., 1991), thermotolerance (Gong et al., 1998) and induction of free-radical scavengers (Price et al., 1994). Large quantities of calcium can be deposited outside the protoplast, in cell vacuoles and in cell walls. Calcification strengthens plant cell walls and is thought to increase the resistance of a plant to infection. By forming insoluble salts with organic acids, calcium immobilises some potentially damaging by-products. The element gives protection against the effects of heavy metals and conveys some resistance to excessively saline conditions and low pH. The Ca2+ ion is involved in in vitro morphogenesis and is required for many of the responses induced by plant growth substances, particularly auxins and cytokinins. In the moss Funaria, cytokinin causes an increase in membraneassociated Ca2+ specifically in those areas which are undergoing differentiation to become a bud (Saunders and Hepler, 1981). Protocorm formation from callus of Dendrobium fibriatum was poor on Mitra et al., (1976) A medium when calcium was omitted (Mitra et al., 1976) and in Torenia stem segments, adventitious bud formation induced by cytokinin seems to be mediated, at least in part, by an increase in the level of Ca2+ within cells (Tanimoto and Harada, 1986). Exogenous Ca2+ enhanced the formation of meristemoids and the first phases of outgrowth into organs in tobacco pith explants (Capitani and Altamura, 2004). In carrot, somatic embryogenesis coincides with a rise of free cytosolic Ca2+ (Timmers et al., 1996) and applied Ca2+ increases the number of somatic embryos (Jansen et al., 1990). 2.7.1. Shoot tip necrosis

Calcium deficiency in plants results in poor root growth and in the blackening and curling of the margins of apical leaves, often followed by a cessation of growth and death of the shoot tip. The latter symptoms are similar to aluminium toxicity

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(Wyn Jones and Hunt, 1967). Tip necrosis has been especially observed in shoot cultures, sometimes associated with hyperhydricity. It often occurs after several subcultures have been accomplished (e.g. in Cercis canadensis - Yusnita et al., 1990). After death of the tip, shoots often produce lateral branches, and in extreme cases the tips of these will also die and branch again. The cause of tip necrosis has not always been determined [e.g. in Pistacia shoot cultures (Barghchi, 1986), where shoots showing symptoms may die after planting out (Martinelli, 1988)]. The occurrence of necrosis was reduced in Pistacia (Barghchi loc. cit.) and Prunus tenella (Alderson et al., 1987) by more frequent subculturing, but this is a costly and time-consuming practice. In Pictacia, calcium reduced necrosis (Barghchi and Alderson, 1996). Tip necrosis was found in Psidium guajava shoot cultures after prolonged subculturing, if shoots were allowed to grow longer than 3 cm, and was common in rapidly growing cultures (Amin and Jaiswal, 1988); it occurred on Sequoiadendron giganteum shoots only when they were grown on relatively dilute media (Monteuuis et al., 1987). Necrosis of Rosa hybrida ‘White Dream’, was cured by adding 0.1 mg/l GA3 to the medium (Valle and Boxus, 1987). Analysis of necrotic apices has shown them to be deficient in calcium (Debergh, 1988), and a shortage of this element has been associated with tip necrosis in Amelanchier, Betula, Populus, Sequoia, Ulmus, Cydonia and other woody plants, although the extent of damage is variable even between genotypes within a species (Sha et al., 1985; Singha et al., 1990). As calcium is not remobilised within plant tissues, actively growing shoots need a constant fresh supply of ions in the transpiration stream. An inadequate supply of calcium can result from limited uptake of the ion, and inadequate transport, the latter being caused by the absence of transpiration due to the high humidity in the culture vessel. A remedy can sometimes be obtained by reducing the culture temperature so that the rate of shoot growth matches calcium supply, using vessels which promote better gas exchange (thereby increasing the transpiration and xylem transport), or by increasing the concentration of calcium in the medium (McCown and Sellmar, 1987). The last two remedies can have drawbacks: the medium will dry out if there is too free gas exchange; adding extra calcium ions to the medium is not always effective (e.g. in cultures of Castanea sativa - Mullins, 1987); and can introduce


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undesirable anions. Chloride toxicity can result if too much calcium chloride is added to the medium (see below). To solve this difficulty, McCown et al., (Zeldin and McCown, 1986; Russell and McCown, 1988) added 6 mM calcium gluconate to Lloyd and McCown (1981) WPM medium to correct Ca2+ deficiency, without altering the concentrations of the customary anions. There is a limit to the concentration of calcium, which can be employed in tissue culture media because several of its salts have limited solubility. 2.8. CHLORIDE

The chloride ion (Cl-) has been found to be essential for plant growth (Broyer et al., 1954; Johnson et al., 1957; Ozanne et al., 1957; Ozanne, 1958), but seems to be involved in few biological reactions and only very small quantities are really necessary. Rains (1976) listed chlorine as a micronutrient. Chloride is required for the watersplitting protein complex of Photosystem II, and it can function in osmoregulation in particular in stomatal guard cells. The chloride ion is freely transported and many plants can tolerate the presence of high concentrations without showing toxicity. The chief role of chloride seems to be in the maintenance of turgor and in balancing rapid changes in the level of free cations such as K+, Mg2+ and Na+. Plants deprived of Cl- are liable to wilting (Johnson et al., 1957). In isolated chloroplasts, chloride (together with Mn2+) ions are required for oxygen evolution in photosystem II of photosynthesis (Bov et al., 1963;

Mengel and Kirkby, 1982; Shkolnik, 1984), although there has been some doubt whether this requirement exists in vivo (Terry, 1977). Chloride ions are best taken into plants at slightly acid pH (Jacobson et al., 1971). The most common concentration of chloride in culture media is 3 mM, the average 6 mM. MS medium contains 6 mM Cl-; Quoirin and Lepoivre (1977) medium, only 0.123 ÎźM. Some species are sensitive to chloride ions. McCown and Sellmer (1987) reported that too high a concentration, seemed to cause woody species to have yellow leaves and weak stems: sometimes tissues collapsed and died. An excess of Cl- has been thought to be one cause of the induction of hyperhydricity, and omission of the ion does seem to prevent the development of these symptoms in Prunus (Volume 2). Pevalek-Kozlina and Jelaska (1987) deliberately omitted chloride ions from WPM medium for the shoot culture of Prunus avium and obtained infrequent hyperhydricity in only one genotype. The presence of 7 mM Cl- can be toxic to pine suspension cultures (Teasdale, 1987). As chlorine has only a relatively small nutritional significance, steps are sometimes taken to reduce the concentration of chloride ion in culture media, but in order to adjust the concentration of other ions, it is then often necessary to make a marked increase in SO42-. For example, using ammonium sulphate instead of ammonium chloride to supply NH4+ in Eeuwens (1976) Y3 medium, would increase the sulphate level from 2 to 12 meq/l (from 1 to 6 mM).

3. MICRONUTRIENTS Plant requirements for microelements have only been elucidated over the past 50-60 years. Before the end of the last century, it had been realised that too little iron caused chlorophyll deficiency in plants, but the importance of other elements took many years to prove conclusively. MazĂŠ, for example, used hydroponic techniques during the years 1914-1919 to show that zinc, manganese and boron improved the growth of maize plants. Sommer and Lipman (1926) also showed the essentiality of boron, and Sommer (1931) of copper, but uncertainty over which elements were really indispensible to growth still existed in 1933 when Hoagland and Snyder proposed two supplementary nutrient solutions for water culture which in total contained 26 elements. It took several further years to prove that molybdenum (Arnon and Stout, 1939) and cobalt in very small

amounts, were most important for healthy plant growth. Early plant tissue culture work was to both profit from, and contribute to the findings of previous hydroponic studies. Our understanding has been enhanced by investigations into the biochemical role of minor elements. 3.1. EARLY USE IN PLANT TISSUE CULTURE MEDIA

At the time of the early plant tissue culture experiments, uncertainty still existed over the nature of the essential microelements. Many tissues were undoubtedly grown successfully because they were cultured on media prepared from impure chemicals (see below) or solidified with agar, which acted as a micronutrient source.


Chapter 3

In the first instance, the advantage of adding various micronutrients to culture media was mainly evaluated by the capability of individual elements to improve the growth of undifferentiated callus or isolated root cultures. Knudson (1922) incorporated Fe and Mn in his very successful media for the nonsymbiotic germination of orchid seeds, and, following a recommendation by Berthelot (1934), Gautheret (1939) and NobĂŠcourt (1937) included in their media (in addition to iron) copper, cobalt, nickel, titanium and beryllium. Zinc was found to be necessary for the normal development of tomato root systems (Eltinge and Reed, 1940), and without Cu, roots ceased to grow (Glasstone, 1947). Hannay and Street (1954) showed that Mo and Mn were also essential for root growth. An advantage adding five micronutrients to tissue culture media was perhaps first well demonstrated by Heller in 1953 who found that carrot callus could be maintained for an increased number of passages when Fe, B, Mn, Zn and Cu were present. 3.2. MICRONUTRIENTS FROM TRACE IMPURITIES

Micronutrients tend to be added to modern media by the addition of fairly standard chemicals. Street (1977) rightly emphasised that even analytical grade chemicals contain traces of impurities that will provide a hidden supply of micronutrients to a medium. An illustration of this, comes from the work of Dalton et al., (1983) who found traces of silicon (Si) in a precipitate from MS medium which had been made up with analytical grade laboratory chemicals. Gelling agents contain inorganic elements but whether cultures can utilize them is unclear. Amounts of contaminating substances in chemicals would have been greater in times past, so that an early medium such as Knudson (1922; 1943) B, prepared today with highly purified chemicals, will not have quite the same composition as when it was first used by Knudson in 1922; the addition of some micronutrients might improve the results obtained from a present-day formulation of such early media. 3.3. OPTIMUM MICRO-ELEMENT CONCENTRATIONS

Most modern culture media use the microelements of Gamborg et al., (1968) B5 medium, or the more concentrated mixtures in MS or Bourgin and Nitsch (1967) H media. Several research workers have continued to use Heller (1953) micronutrient formulation, even though higher levels are now normally recommended. Quoirin and Lepoivre

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(1977) showed clearly that in conjunction with MS or their Quoirin and Lepoivre (1977) B macro-elements, the concentration of Mn in Heller’s salts should be increased by 100-fold to obtain the most effective growth of Prunus meristems. Cell growth and morphogenesis of some species may even be promoted by increasing the level of micronutrients above that recommended by Murashige and Skoog (1962). The induction and maintenance of callus and growth of cell suspensions of juvenile and mature organs of both Douglas fir and loblolly pine, was said to be improved on Litvay et al., (1981) LM medium in which Mg, B, Zn, Mo, Co and I were at 5 times the concentration of MS microelements, and Mn and Cu at 1.25 and 20 times respectively (Litvay et al., 1981; Verma et al., 1982). Other authors to have employed high micronutrient levels are Barwale et al., (1986) who found that the induction of adventitious shoots from callus of 54 genotypes of Glycine max was assisted by adding four times the normal concentration of minor salts to MS medium. A further example of where more concentrated micro-elements seemed to promote morphogenesis is provided by the work of Wang, et al., (1980, 1981). Embryogenesis could be induced most effectively in callus derived from Hevea brasiliensis anthers, by doubling the concentration of microelements in MS medium, while at the same time reducing the level of macronutrients to 60-80% of the original. Despite these reports, few research workers seem to have accepted the need for such high micronutrient levels. To diminish the occurrence of hyperhydricity in shoot culture of carnation, Dencso (1987) reduced the level of micronutrients (except iron, which was as recommended by Dalton et al., 1983) to those in MS medium, but this mixture was inadequate for Gerbera shoot cultures and the rate of propagation was less than that with the normal MS formulation. The need for macronutrient concentrations to be optimised as the first step in media development seems to be emphasised by results of Eeuwens (1976). In an experiment with factorial combinations of the macro- and micro-nutrient components of four media, his Eeuwens (1976) Y3 micronutrients gave a considerable improvement in the growth of coconut callus, compared with other micro-element mixtures, when they were used with Y3 and MS macronutrients, but not when used with those of White (1942) or Heller (1953; 1955).


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3.4. CELLULAR DIFFERENTIATION AND MORPHOGENESIS

Welander (1977) obtained evidence, which suggested that plant cells are more demanding for minor elements when undergoing morphogenesis. Petiole explants of Begonia hiemalis produced callus on media without micronutrients, but would only produce adventitious shoot buds directly when micronutrients were added to the macronutrient formulation. The presence of iron is particularly important for adventitious shoot and root formation (Legrand, 1975). That mineral nutrition can influence cellular differentiation in combination with growth hormones, was shown by Beasley et al., (1974). Cotton ovules cultured on a basic medium containing 5.0 mM IAA and 0.5 mM GA3, required 2 mM calcium (normally present in the medium) for the ovules to develop fibres. Magnesium and boron were essential for fibre elongation. 3.5. THE ROLES OF MICRONUTRIENTS

3.5.1. Manganese

The essential micronutrient metals Fe, Mn, Zn, B, Cu, Co and Mo are components of plant cell proteins of metabolic and physiological importance. At least five of these elements are, for instance, necessary for chlorophyll synthesis and chloroplast function (Sundqvist et al., 1980). Micronutrients have roles in the functioning of the genetic apparatus and several are involved with the activity of growth substances. Manganese (Mn) is one of the most important microelements and has been included in the majority of plant tissue culture media. It is generally added in similar concentrations to those of iron and boron, i.e. between 25-150 mM. Manganese has similar chemical properties to Mg2+ and is apparently able to replace magnesium in some enzyme systems (Hewitt, 1948). However there is normally 50- to 100-fold more Mg2+ than Mn2+ within plant tissues, and so it is unlikely that there is frequent substitution between the two elements. The most probable role for Mn is in definition of the structure of metalloproteins involved in respiration and photosynthesis (Clarkson and Hanson, 1980). It is known to be required for the activity of several enzymes, which include decarboxylases, dehydrogenases, kinases and oxidases and superoxide dismutase enzymes. Manganese is necessary for the maintenance of chloroplast ultra-structure. Because Mn(II) can be oxidized to Mn(IV), manganese plays an important role in redox reactions. The evolution

of oxygen during photosystem II of the photosynthetic process, is dependent on a Mncontaining enzyme and is proportional to Mn content (Mengel and Kirkby, 1982; Shkolnik, 1984). Mn is toxic at high concentration (Sarkar et al., 2004). In tissue cultures, omission of Mn ions from Doerschug and Miller (1967) medium reduced the number of buds initiated on lettuce cotyledons. A high level of manganese could compensate for the lack of molybdenum in the growth of excised tomato roots (and vice versa) (Hannay and Street, 1954). Natural auxin levels are thought to be reduced in the presence of Mn2+ because the activity of IAA-oxidase is increased. This is possibly due to Mn2+ or Mncontaining enzymes inactivating oxidase inhibitors, or because manganous ions are one of the cofactors for IAA oxidases in plant cells (Galston and Hillman, 1961). Manganese complexed with EDTA increased the oxidation of naturally-occurring IAA, but not the synthetic auxins NAA or 2,4-D (MacLachlan and Waygood, 1956). However, ChĂŠe (1986) has suggested that, at least in blue light, Mn2+ tends to cause the maintenance of, or increase in, IAA levels within tissues by inactivating a co-factor of IAA oxidase. When the Mn2+ level in MS medium was reduced from 100 mM to 5 mM, the production in blue light, of axillary shoots by Vitis shoot cultures was increased. 3.5.2. Zinc

Zinc is a component of stable metallo-enzymes with many diverse functions, making it difficult to predict the unifying chemical property of the element, which is responsible for its essentiality (Clarkson and Hanson, 1980). Zinc is required in more than 300 enzymes including alcohol dehydrogenase, carbonic anhydrase, superoxide dismutase and RNApolymerase. Zinc forms tetrahedral complexes with N-, O-, and S-ligands. In bacteria, Zn is present in RNA and DNA polymerase enzymes, deficiency resulting in a sharp decrease in RNA levels. DNA polymerase is concerned with the repair of incorrectly formed pieces of DNA in DNA replication, and RNA polymerase locates the point on the DNA genome at which initiation of RNA synthesis is to take place. Divalent Mg2+, Mn2+ or Co2+ are also required for activation of these enzymes (Eichhorn, 1980). Zinc deficient plants suffer from reduced enzyme activities and a consequent diminution in protein, nucleic acid and chlorphyll synthesis. Molybdenumand zinc-deficient plants have a decreased chlorophyll content and poorly developed


Chapter 3

chloroplasts. Plants deprived of zinc often have short internodes and small leaves. 2+

The concentration of Zn in MS medium is 30 μM but amounts added to culture media have often varied widely between 0.1-70 μM and experimental results to demonstrate the most appropriate level are limited. When Eriksson (1965) added 15 mg/l Na2ZnEDTA.2H2O (40μM Zn2+)to Haplopappus gracilis cell cultures, he obtained a 15% increase in cell dry weight which was thought to be due to the presence of zinc rather than the chelating agent. Zinc was also shown to increase growth of a rice suspension. The highest concentration tested, 520 µM, resulted in the fastest rate of growth and it was suggested that zinc had increased auxin activity (see below) (Hossain et al., 1997). Zinc is required for adventitious root formation in Eucalyptus (Schwambach et al., 2005). In cassava, additional zinc promotes somatic embryogenesis and rooting (C.J.J.M Raemakers, pers. commun.). However, very high concentrations of zinc are found to be inhibitory, and the microelement has been noted to prevent root growth at a concentration higher than 50 μM. There is a close relationship between the zinc nutrition of plants and their auxin content (Skoog, 1940). It has been suggested that zinc is a component of an enzyme concerned with the synthesis of the IAA precursor, tryptophan (Tsui, 1948). The importance of Zn for tryptophan synthesis is especially noticeable in crown gall callus which normally produces sufficient endogenous auxin to maintain growth on a medium without synthetic auxins, but which becomes auxin-deficient and ceases to grow in the absence of Zn (Klein et al., 1962). 3.5.3. Boron

Boron is involved in plasma membrane integrity and functioning, probably by influencing membrane proteins, and cell wall intactness. Reviews have been provided by Lewis (1980) and by Blevins and Lukaszewski (1998). The element is required for the metabolism of phenolic acids, and for lignin biosynthesis: it is probably a component, or co-factor of the enzyme which converts p-coumaric acid to caffeate and 5-hydroxyferulate. Boron is necessary for the maintenance of meristematic activity, most likely because it is involved in the synthesis of Nbases (uracil in particular); these are required for RNA synthesis (Mengel and Kirkby, 1982). It is also thought to be involved in the maintenance of membrane structure and function, possibly by stabilizing natural metal chelates which are important

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in wall and membrane structure and function (Pollard et al., 1977; Clarkson and Hanson, 1980). Boron is concerned with regulating the activities of phenolase enzymes; these bring about the biosynthesis of phenylpropane compounds, which are polymerized to form lignin. Lignin biosynthesis does not take place in the absence of boron. Boron also mediates the action of phytochrome and the response of plants to gravity (Tanada, 1978). Use in culture media. In the soil, boron occurs in the form of boric acid and it is this compound, which is generally employed as the source of the element in tissue cultures. Uptake of boric acid occurs most readily at acid pH, possibly in the undissociated form (Oertli and Grgurevic, 1974) or as H2BO3- (Devlin, 1975). A wide range of boron concentrations has been used in media, the most usual being between from 50 and 100 μM: MS medium contains 100 μM. Bowen (1979) found boron to be toxic to sugarcane suspensions above 2 mg/l (185 μM), but there are a few reports of higher concentrations being employed (Table 3.8). High concentrations of boron may have a regulatory function; for example, 1.6-6.5 mM have been used in simple media to stimulate pollen germination (Brewbaker and Kwack, 1963; Taylor, 1972). Boric acid reacts with some organic compounds having two adjacent cis-hydroxyl groups (Greenwood, 1973). This includes o-diphenols, hexahydric alcohols such as mannitol and sorbitol (commonly used in plant tissue culture as osmotic agents), and several other sugars, but excludes sucrose which forms only a weak association. Once the element is complexed it appears to be unavailable to plants. This led Lewis (1980) to suggest that because boric acid was required for lignin biosynthesis, vascular plants were led, during evolution, to use sucrose exclusively for the transport of carbohydrate reserves. Although the addition of sugar alcohols and alternative sugars to sucrose can be beneficial during plant tissue culture (see Chapter 4), it is clearly necessary to return to a sucrose-based medium for long-term culture, or boron deficiency may result. Deficiency symptoms. Boron is thought to promote the destruction of natural auxin and increase its translocation. Endogenous IAA levels increase in the absence of boron and translocation is reduced, the compound probably being retained at the site of synthesis (Goldbach and Amberger, 1986). Plants suffering from boron deficiency have restricted root systems (Odhnoff, 1957; Whittington, 1959) and a


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

reduced capacity to absorb H2PO4- and some other ions. High levels of auxins can have the same effect on growth and ion uptake (Pollard et al., 1977). Neales (1959, 1964) showed that isolated roots stopped growing unless a minimum concentration of boron was present (although the necessity for the element was not so apparent when cultures were grown in borosilicate glass vessels). Inhibition of root elongation in the absence of boron has been

shown to be due to the cessation of mitosis and the inhibition of DNA synthesis (Moore and Hirsch, 1981). Boron deficiency also results in depressed cytokinin synthesis. Cell division is inhibited in the absence of boron, apparently because there is a decrease in nuclear RNA synthesis (Ali and Jarvis, 1988). However, deficiency often leads to increased cambial growth in intact dicotyledonous plants.

Table 3.8 Examples of cultures grown with unusually high concentrations of boron

Plant Antirrhinum majus Brassica napus Capsella bursa-pastoris Citrus medica Hevea brasiliensis Hordeum crosses Larix deciduas Lycopersicon esculentum Nicotiana tabacum Petunia hybrida Prunus amygdalus

Concentration of boron (ÎźM) 323

Type of Culture

Reference

200

Embryos from protoplast colonies Embryo

Monnier (1976)

646 320 242 250 250 242 323 566 200

Anther callus Anther: plant regeneration Embryo rescue Direct morphogenesis Callus and embryogenesis Isolated root Protoplant culture Callus and root formation Shoot

Drira and Benbadis (1975) Chen (1984) Jensen (1974) Bonga (1984)) Nagmani and Bonga (1985) Street and McGregor (1952) Ohyama and Nitsch (1972) Sangwan and Norreel (1975) Hisjima (1982a)

One of the changes seen in some plants grown under boron deficiency is the outgrowth of lateral buds resulting in plants with a bushy or rosette appearance. In pea, this was associated with a sharp decrease in IAA-export from the apex (Li et al., 2001). It is generally accepted that the outgrowth of lateral buds is inhibited by polar auxin transport in the stem and that disruption of this transport by decapitation or auxin transport inhibitors results in the outgrowth of lateral buds (Tamas, 1987). Cotton ovules which otherwise develop fibres when cultured, commence extensive callus formation when placed on a medium deficient in boron. On the other hand, the growth rate of callus cultures of Helianthus annuus and Daucus carota (Krosing, 1978), and cell cultures of sugar cane (Bowen, 1979), was much reduced when boron was not present in the growth medium. Boron influences the development of the suspensor of somatic embryos in Larix deciduas (Behrendt and Zoglauer, 1996). Boron had no influence on the induction of embryogenesis in Daucus carota but altered the development of

Poirier-Hamon et al., (1974)

embryos: root development was promoted at low concentrations and shoot development at high. This coincided with a high and low auxin-cytokinin ratio, respectively (Mashayekhi and Neumann, 2006). Adventitious root formation. Boron is thought to promote the destruction of auxin. Although auxin is required for the formation of adventitious root initials, boron is necessary in light grown-plants for the growth of these primordia (Middleton et al., 1978); possibly boron enhances the destruction of auxin in these circumstances, which in high concentrations is inhibitory to root growth (Jarvis, 1986). An interaction between boron and auxins in the rooting of cuttings has been noticed in several species (Hemberg, 1951; Weiser, 1959; Weiser and Blaney, 1960; Bowen et al., 1975; Josten and Kutschera, 1999) and a supply of exogenous borate has been shown to be essential (Ali and Jarvis, 1988). However, excessive boron concentrations lead to a reduction in the number of roots formed (Jarvis, 1986). Boron deficiency had no observed effect


Chapter 3

on the rooting of Eucalyptus (Schwambach et al., 2005).

microcuttings

3.6. COPPER AND MOLYBDENUM

Copper is an essential micronutrient, even though plants normally contain only a few parts per million of the element. Two kinds of copper ions exist; they are the monovalent cuprous [Cu(I)] ion, and the divalent cupric [Cu(II)] ion: the former is easily oxidized to the latter; the latter is easily reduced. The element becomes attached to enzymes, many of which bind to, and react with oxygen. They include the cytochrome oxidase enzyme system, responsible for oxidative respiration, and superoxide dismutase (an enzyme which contains both copper and zinc atoms). Detrimental superoxide radicals, which are formed from molecular oxygen during electron transfer reactions, are reacted by superoxide dismutase and thereby converted to water. Copper atoms occur in plastocyanin, a pigment participating in electron transfer. Several copper-dependent enzymes are involved in the oxidation and hydroxylation of phenolic compounds, such as ABA and dopamine (Lerch, 1981). The hydroxylation of monophenols by copper-containing enzymes leads to the construction of important polymeric constituents of plants, such as lignin. These same enzymes can lead to the blackening of freshly isolated explants. Copper is a constituent of ascorbic acid oxidase and the characteristic growth regulatory effects of ethylene are thought to depend on its metabolism by an enzyme, which contains copper atoms. High concentrations of copper can be toxic. Most culture media include ca. 0.1-1.0 µM Cu2+. Ions are usually added through copper sulphate, although occasionally cupric chloride or cupric nitrate have been employed. In hydroponic culture of Trifolium pratense, uptake of copper into the plant depended on the amount of nitrate in solution. Uptake was considerably reduced when NO3⎯ was depleted (Jarvis, 1984). The concentration of Cu in tissue culture media is very small relative to the level in plants (Table 3.1). It is therefore not surprising that various authors report strong increases of growth when Cu is added at 1- 5 µM (Dahleen, 1995; Nirwan and Kothari, 2003; Kintzios et al., 2001; Nas and Read, 2004; Bouman and Tiekstra, 2005) Plants utilise hexavalent molybdenum and absorb the element as the molybdate ion (MoO42-). This is normally added to culture media as sodium molybdate at concentrations up to 1 mM. Considerably higher

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levels have occasionally been introduced [e.g. in the media of Abou-Mandour (1977) and Asahira and Kano (1977)] apparently without adverse effect, although Teasdale (1987) found pine suspension cultures were injured by 50 mM. Molybdenum is a component of several plant enzymes, two being nitrate reductase and nitrogenase, in which it is a cofactor together with iron: it is therefore essential for nitrogen utilisation. Tissues and organs presented with NO3⎯ in a molybdenum-deficient medium can show symptoms of nitrate toxicity because the ion is not reduced to ammonia. 3.7. COBALT

Cobalt is not regarded as an essential element. Nevertheless, it was found to have been included in approximately half of a large sample of published plant culture media (George, et al., 1987). Murashige and Skoog (1962) included Co in their medium because it had been shown to be required by lower plants (Holm-Hansen et al., 1954) and that it might have a role in regulating morphogenesis in higher plants (Miller, 1954; Salisbury, 1959). However, no stimulatory effect on the growth of tobacco callus was observed by adding cobalt chloride to the medium at several concentrations from 0.1 µM and above, and at 80.0 and 160 µM the compound was toxic. Similarly Schenk and Hildebrandt (1972) obtained no clear evidence for a Co requirement in tests on a wide variety of plants, but retained the element in their medium because they occasionally observed an apparent stimulation to the callus growth of some monocotyledons. Pinus suspension cultures do not require cobalt (Teasdale, 1987). The concentration most commonly added to a medium is ca. 0.1 µM, although ten times this amount has sometimes been used. Cobalt is the metal component of Vitamin B12 which is concerned with nucleic acid synthesis (Fries, 1962), but evidence that the element has any marked stimulatory effect on growth or morphogenesis in plant tissue cultures is hard to find. Cobalt may replace nickel in urease and thereby render it inactive, e.g., in potato (Witte et al., 2002). Advantage from adding cobalt to plant culture media might be derived from the fact that the element can have a protective action against metal chelate toxicity and it is able to inhibit oxidative reactions catalysed by ions of copper and iron (Albert, 1958). The Co2+ ion can inhibit ethylene synthesis.


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

3.8. ALUMINIUM AND NICKEL

Several workers, following Heller (1953), have included aluminium and nickel in their micronutrient formulations. However, the general benefit of adding the former metal does not seem to have been adequately demonstrated. It was believed that in most plants Ni2+ is not absolutely required for normal growth and development (Mishra and Kar, 1975). However, more recently, it has been found by careful experimentation that nickel is essential (Gerendás et al., 1999). The ion is a component of urease enzymes (Dixon et al., 1975; Polacco, 1977a), which convert urea to ammonia. It has been shown to be an essential micronutrient for some legumes and to actvate urease in potato microshoot cultures (Witte et al., 2002). In tissue cultures the presence of 0.1 mM Ni2+ strongly stimulates the growth of soybean cells in a medium containing only urea as a nitrogen source. Slow growth occurs on urea without the deliberate addition of nickel, possibly supported by trace amounts of the element remaining in the cells (Polacco, 1977b). Cells and tissues are not normally grown with urea as a nitrogen source, and as urease is the only enzyme, which has been shown to have a nickel component, it could be argued that nickel is not essential. However, without it soybean plants grown hydroponically, accumulate toxic concentrations of urea (2.5%) in necrotic lesions on their leaf tips, whether supplied with inorganic nitrogen, or with nitrogen compounds obtained from bacterial symbiotic nitrogen fixation. These symptoms can be alleviated in plants growing in hydroponic culture by adding 1 mg/l Ni to the nutrient solution. Absence of nickel in a hydroponic solution also results in reduced early growth and delayed nodulation (Eskew et al., 1983). Despite these findings nickel has not been added deliberately to tissue culture media. However, it should be noted that agar contains relatively high levels of nickel (Table 3.2) and the possibility of urea toxicity may have been avoided because, in tissue cultures, urea diffuses into the medium (Teasdale, 1987). Quoirin and Lepoivre (1977) showed that at the concentrations recommended by Heller, Al3+ and Ni2+ were without effect on the growth of Prunus meristems and were inhibitory at higher levels. If it is thought that Ni should be added to a culture medium, 0.1 mM is probably sufficient. Aluminium has been said to be necessary for the growth of some ferns (Taubck, 1942), but is not

generally added to tissue culture media for fern propagation. 3.9. IODINE

Iodine is not recognised as an essential element for the nutrition of plants (Rains, 1976), although it may be necessary for the growth of some algae, and small amounts do accumulate in higher plants (ca.12 and 3 mol/kg dry weight in terrestrial and aquatic plants respectively – Raven, 1986). However, the iodide ion has been added to many tissue culture media (e.g. to 65% of micronutrient formulations). The practice of including iodide in plant culture media began with the report by White (1938) that it improved the growth of tomato roots cultured in vitro. Hannay (1956) obtained similar results and found that root growth declined in the absence of iodine which could be supplied not only from potassium iodide, but also from iodoacetate or methylene iodide, compounds which would only provide iodide ions very slowly in solution by hydrolysis. Street (1966) thought that these results indicated that iodine could be an essential nutrient element, but an alternative hypothesis is that any beneficial effect may result from the ability of iodide ions to act as a reducing agent (George et al., 1988). Oxidants convert iodide ions to free iodine. Eeuwens (1976) introduced potassium iodide into his Y3 medium at 0.05 mM (ten times the level used by Murashige and Skoog), as it prevented the browning of coconut palm tissue cultures. The presence of 0.06 µM potassium iodide slightly improved the survival and growth of cultured Prunus meristems (Quoirin and Lepoivre, 1977). Although Gautheret (1942) and White (1943) had recommended the addition of iodine to media for callus culture, Hildebrandt et al., (1946) obtained no statistically significant benefit from adding potassium iodide to tumour callus cultures of tobacco and sunflower. However, as the average weight of tobacco callus was 11% less without it, the compound was included (at different levels) in both of the media they devised. Once again iodine also had no appreciable effect on tobacco callus yield in the experiments of Murashige and Skoog (1962), but was nevertheless included in their final medium. Other workers have omitted iodine from MS medium (e.g. Roest and Bokelmann, 1975; Périnet et al., 1988; Gamborg, 1991) or from new media formulations without any apparent ill effects. However, Teasdale et al., (1986); Teasdale, (1987) reported a definite requirement of Pinus taeda suspensions for 25 mM


Chapter 3

KI when they were grown on Litvay et al., (1981) LM medium. There seems, at least in some plants, to be an interaction between iodine and light. Eriksson (1965) left KI out of his modification of MS medium, finding that it was toxic to Haplopappus gracilis cells cultured in darkness: shoot production in Vitis shoot cultures kept in blue light was reduced when iodine was present in the medium (Chée, 1986), but the growth of roots on rooted shoots was increased. Chée thought that these results supported the hypothesis that iodine enhanced the destruction and/or the lateral transport of IAA auxin. This seems to be inconsistent with the suggestion that I- acts mainly as a reducing agent. 3.10. SILICON

Silicon (Si) is the second most abundant element on the surface of the earth. Si has been demonstrated to be beneficial for the growth of plants and to alleviate biotic and abiotic stress (Epstein, 1971). The silicate ion is not normally added to tissue culture media, although it is likely to be present in low concentrations. Deliberate addition to the medium might, however, improve the growth of some plants. Adatia and Besford (1986) found that cucumber plants depleted silicate from a hydroponic solution and in consequence their leaves were more rigid, had a higher fresh weight per unit area and a higher chlorophyll content than the controls. The resistance of the plants to powdery mildew was also much increased. 3.11. IRON

Chelating agents. Some organic compounds are capable of forming complexes with metal cations, in which the metal is held with fairly tight chemical bonds. The complexes formed may be linear or ringshaped, in which case the complex is called a chelate (from the Greek word meaning a crab’s claw). Metals can be bound (or sequestered) by a chelating agent and held in solution under conditions where free ions would react with anions to form insoluble compounds, and some complexes can be more chemically reactive than the metals themselves. For example, Cu2+ complexed with amino acids is more active biologically than the free ion (Cruickshank et al., 1987). Chelating agents vary in their sequestering capacity (or avidity) according to chemical structure and their degree of ionisation, which changes with the pH of the solution. Copper is chelated by amino acids at relatively high pH, but in

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conditions of greater acidity, it is more liable to be complexed with organic acid ligands (White et al., 1981). The higher the stability of a complex, the higher the avidity of the complexing agent. One, and in many cases, two or three molecules of a complexing agent may associate with one metal ion, depending on its valency. Despite tight bonding, there is always an equilibrium between different chelate complexes and between ions in solution. Complexing agents also associate with some metal ions more readily than with others. In general Fe3+ (for agents able to complex with trivalent ions) complexes have a higher stability than those of Cu2+, then (in descending order), Ni2+, Al3+ (where possible), Zn2+, Co2+, Fe2+, Mn2+ and Ca2+ (Albert, 1958; Reilley and Schmid, 1958). For a chelated metal ion to be utilised by a plant there must be some mechanism whereby the complex can be broken. This could occur if it is absorbed directly and the ion displaced by another more avid binding agent, or if the complex is biochemically denatured. Metals in very stable complexes can be unavailable to plants; copper in EDTA chelates may be an example (Coombes et al., 1977). High concentrations of avid chelating agents are phytotoxic, probably because they competitively withdraw essential elements from enzymes. Naturally-occurring compounds act as chelating agents. Within the plant very many constituents such as proteins, peptides, porphyrins, carboxylic acids and amino acids have this property (Albert, 1958; Martin, 1979): some of those with high avidity are metal-containing enzymes. Amino acids are able to complex with divalent metals (Fig. 3.5). Grasses are thought to secrete a chelating agent from their roots to assist the uptake of iron (Römheld and Marschner, 1986). There are also synthetic chelating agents with high avidities (stability constants) for divalent and trivalent ions. Some are listed in Table 3.9, and the structure of those most commonly used in plant culture media is illustrated in Fig 3.6. The application of synthetic chelating agents and chelated micronutrients to the roots of some plants growing in alkaline soils can improve growth by supplying essential metals such as iron and zinc which are otherwise unavailable. The addition of such compounds to tissue culture media can help to make macro- and micro-nutrients more accessible to plant cells.


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

Fig. 3.5 Copper chelated with amino acid, glycine.

Iron chelates. A key property of iron is its capacity to be oxidized easily from the ferrous [Fe(II)] to the ferric [Fe(III)] state, and for ferric compounds to be readily reduced back to the ferrous form. In plants, iron is primarily used in the chloroplasts, mitochondria and peroxisomes of plants for effecting oxidation/reduction (redox) reactions. The element is required for the formation of amino laevulinic acid and protoporphyrinogen (which are respectively early and late precursors of chlorophyll) and deficiency leads to marked leaf chlorosis. Iron is also a component of ferredoxin proteins, which function as electron carriers in photosynthesis. Iron is therefore an essential micronutrient for plant tissue culture media and can be provided from either ferrous or ferric salts. In early experiments, ferrous sulphate or ferric citrate or tartrate were used in media as a source of the element. Citric and and tartaric acids can act as chelating agents for some divalent metals (Bobtelsky and Jordan, 1945), but are not very efficient at keeping iron in solution (Fig 3.6). If Fe2+ and Fe3+ ions escape from the chelating agent, they are liable to be precipitated as iron phosphate. The iron may then not be available to plant cells, unless the pH of the medium falls sufficiently to bring free ions back into solution. The problem of precipitation is more severe in aerated media and where the pH of the medium drifts towards alkalinity. Under these conditions Fe2+ (ferrous) ions are oxidized to Fe3+ (ferric) ions and unchelated ferric ions may then also be converted to insoluble Fe(OH)3. For plant hydroponic culture, the advantages of adding iron to nutrient solutions in the form of a chelate with EDTA was first recognised in the 1950’s (Jacobson, 1951; Weinstein et al., 1951). Street et al., (1952) soon found that iron in this form

was less toxic and could be utilised by in vitro cultures of isolated tomato roots over a wider pH range than ferric citrate. Klein and Manos (1960) showed that callus cultures of several species grew more rapidly on White (1954) medium if Fe3+ ions from Fe2(SO4)3 were chelated with EDTA, rather than added to the medium from the pure compound, and Doerschug and Miller (1967), that 0.036 mM Fe from NaFeEDTA was as effective as 0.067 mM Fe as ferric citrate, in promoting shoot bud initiation on lettuce cotyledons. Iron presented as ferric sulphate (0.025 mM Fe) was much less effective than either chelated form. Skoog and co-workers began to use EDTA in media for tobacco callus cultures in 1956 and discussed their findings in the same paper that describes MS medium (Murashige and Skoog, 1962). The addition of an iron (Fe)-EDTA chelate once again greatly improved the availability of the element. Following this publication, (Fe)-EDTA complexes were rapidly recognised to give generally improved growth of all types of plant cultures (Nitsch, 1969). EDTA has now become almost a standard medium component and is generally preferred to other alternative chelating agents (Table 3.8). Preparation and use. (Fe)-EDTA chelates for tissue cultures are prepared in either of two ways. • A ferric or ferrous salt is dissolved in water with EDTA and the solution is heated; • A ready-prepared salt of iron salt of EDTA is dissolved and heated. Heating can take place during the preparation of chelate stock solutions, or during the autoclaving of a medium. The form of iron complexed is invariably Fe(III). If iron has been provided from ferrous salts, it is oxidised during heating in aerated solutions. The rate of oxidation of the ferrous ion is enhanced in some complexes and retarded in others (Albert, 1958). That of Fe2+-EDTA is extremely rapid (Kolthoff and Auerbach (1952). Only a small proportion of Fe2+ is likely to remain: its chelate with EDTA is much less stable than the Fe(III) complex. Iron is however thought to be absorbed into plants in the ferrous form. Uptake of iron from EDTA probably occurs when molecules of Fe(III)-chelate bind to the outer plasma membrane (the plasmalemma) of the cytoplasm, where Fe(III) is reduced to Fe(II) and freed from the chelate (Chaney et al., 1972; Römheld and Marschner, 1983).


Chapter 3

In most recent plant tissue culture work, EDTA has been added to media at an equimolar concentration with iron, where it will theoretically form a chelate with all the iron in solution. However, it has been found in practice that the Fe(III)-EDTA chelate, although stable at pH 2-3, is liable to lose some of its bound iron in culture media at higher pH levels; the displaced iron may form insoluble ferric hydroxides and iron phosphate (Dalton et al., 1983). If this occurs, free EDTA will tend to form chelates with other metal ions in solution. Some micronutrients complexed with EDTA may then not be available to the plant tissues. Re-complexing may also happen if the EDTA to Fe ratio is increased by decreasing the amount of iron added to the medium (as has been proposed to solve the precipitation problem, see Chapter 4). It is not possible to add very much more than 0.1 mM EDTA to culture media because the chelating agent can become toxic to some plants (see below). Hill-Cottingham and Lloyd-Jones (1961) showed that tomato plants absorbed iron from FeEDTA more rapidly than they absorbed EDTA itself, but concluded that both Fe and Fe-chelate were probably taken up. They postulated that EDTA liberated by the absorption of Fe, would chelate other metals in the nutrient solution in the order given at the beginning of Section 3.6.. Teasdale (1987) calculated that in many media, nearly all the copper and zinc, and some manganese ions might be secondarily chelated, but it is unclear whether micronutrients in this form are freely available to plant tissues. One presumes they are, for deficiency symptoms are not reported from in vitro cultures. Ambiguous descriptions. In many early papers on plant tissue culture, the authors of scientific papers have failed to describe which form of EDTA was used in experiments, or have ascribed weights to EDTA, which should refer to its hydrated sodium salts. Singh and Krikorian (1980) drew attention to this lack of precision. They assumed that in papers where Na2EDTA is described as a medium constituent, it indicates the use of the anhydrous salt (which would give 11 mol/l excess of EDTA to iron, with unknown consequences). However, the disodium salt of EDTA is generally made as the dihydrate (Beilstein’s Handbuch der Organischen Chemie) and this is the form which will almost invariably have been used, Na2EDTA merely being a

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shorthand way of indicating the hydrated salt without being intended as a precise chemical formula. Further confusion has arisen through workers using ready-prepared iron-EDTA salts in media without specifying the weight or molar concentration of actual Fe used. Mono-, di-, tri-, and tetra-sodium salts of EDTA are possible, each with different (and sometimes alternative) hydrates, so that when a research report states only that a certain weight of ‘FeEDTA’ was used, it is impossible to calculate the concentration of iron that was employed with any certainty. The compound ‘monosodium ferric EDTA’ with the formula NaFeEDTA (no water of hydration) exists, and is nowadays commonly selected as a source of chelated iron. However in some papers ‘NaEDTA’ has been used as an abbreviation for some other form of iron-EDTA salt. For example the paper of Eeuwens (1976) describing Y3 medium, says that to incorporate 0.05 mM iron, 32.5 mg/l ‘sodium ferric EDTA’ was used. The weight required using a compound with the strict molecular formula NaFeEDTA would be 18.35 mg/l. Hackett (1970) employed ‘Na4FeEDTA’. Gamborg and Shyluk (1981) and Gamborg (1982) said that to prepare B5 or MS medium with 0.1 mM Fe, 43 mg/l of ‘ferric EDTA’ or ‘Fe-versenate’ (EDTA) should be weighed. The compound recommended in these papers was probably the Na2FeEDTA.2H2O chelate (theoretical mol. Wt. 428.2) as was the ‘FeEDTA’ (13% iron) employed by Davis et al., (1977). It should be noted that NaFeEDTA is the only source of Na in MS medium apart from the contamination in the gelling agents. Alternatives to EDTA. A few other chelating agents have been used in culture media in place of EDTA. The B5 medium of Gamborg et al., (1968) was originally formulated with 28 mg/l of the iron chelate ‘Sequestrene 330 Fe’. According to HeberleBors (1980), ‘Sequestrene 330 Fe’ is FeDTPA (Table 3.9), containing 10% iron (Anon, 1978). This means that the concentration of Fe in B5 medium was originally 0.05 mM. Gamborg and Shyluk (1981) have proposed more recently that the level of Fe should be increased to 0.1 mM. B5 medium is now often used with 0.1 mM FeEDTA, but some researchers still prefer FeDTPA, for example (Garton and Moses, 1986) used it in place of FeEDTA in Lloyd and McCown (1981) WPM medium for shoot culture of several woody plants. .


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

Fig. 3.6 Chemical structures of some chelating agents and iron chelates.

Growth regulatory effects of chelating agents. Although most iron, previously complexed to chelating agents such as EDTA, EDDHA and DTPA (Table 3.9) is absorbed as uncomplexed ions by plant roots, there is evidence that the chelating agents themselves can be taken up into plant tissues (Weinstein et al., 1951; Tiffin et al., 1960; Tiffin and Brown, 1961). Chelating compounds such as EDTA,

in low concentrations, exert growth effects on plants, which are similar to those produced by auxins. The effects include elongation of oat coleoptiles (Heath and Clark, 1956a.b), and etiolated lupin hypocotyls (Weinstein et al., 1956), the promotion of leaf epinasty (Weinstein et al., 1956) and the inhibition of root growth (Burstrom, 1961, 1963). Hypotheses put


Chapter 3

forward to explain these observations have included that: • chelating agents act as auxin synergists by sequestering Ca from the cell wall (Thimann and Takahashi, 1958); • the biological properties of the natural auxin IAA may be related to an ability to chelate ions; other chelating agents therefore mimic its action (Heath and Clark, 1960). Burstrom (1960) noted that EDTA inhibited root growth in darkness (not in light) but that the growth inhibition could be overcome by addition of Fe3+ or several other metal ions (Burstrom, 1961). He recognised that reversal of EDTA action by a metal does not mean that the metal is physiologically active but that it might only release another cation, which had previously been made unavailable to the tissue by chelation. Effects in tissue culture. Growth and morphogenesis in tissue cultures have been noted on several occasions to be influenced by chelating agents other than EDTA. It has not always been clear whether the observed effects were caused by the chelation of metal ions, or by the chelating agent per se. The growth rate of potato shoot tips was increased by 0.01-0.3 mg/l 8-hydroxyquinoline (8-HQ) when cultured on a medium which also contained EDTA (Goodwin, 1966), and more callus cultures of a haploid tobacco variety formed shoots in the absence of growth regulators when DHPTA was added to Kasperbauer and Reinert (1967) medium which normally contains 22.4 mg/l EDTA. The DHPTA appears to have been used in addition to the EDTA, not as a replacement, and was not effective on callus of a diploid tobacco (Kochhar et al., 1970). In the same experimental system, Fe-DHPTA and FeEDDHA were more effective in promoting shoot formation from the haploid-derived tissue than Fe with CDTA, citric acid or tartaric acid (Kochhar et al., 1971). The inclusion of EDTA into a liquid nutrient medium caused the small aquatic plant Lemna

perpusilla to flower only in short day conditions whereas normally the plants were day-neutral (Hillman, 1959, 1961). In the related species Wolffia microscopica, plants did not flower unless EDTA was present in the medium, and then did so in response to short days (Maheshwari and Chauhan, 1963). When, however, Maheshwari and Seth (1966) substituted Fe-EDDHA for EDTA and ferric citrate, they found that plants not only flowered more freely under short days, but also did so under long days. The physiological effect of EDTA and EDDHA as chelating agents was thus clearly different. This was again shown by Chopra and Rashid (1969) who found that the moss Anoectangium thomsonii did not form buds as other mosses do, when grown on a simple medium containing ferric citrate or Fe-EDTA, but did so when 5-20 mg/l Fe-EDDHA was added to the medium instead. An optimum concentration was between 5 and 8 mg/l. Rashid also discovered that haploid embryoids developed more freely from in vitro cultures of Atropa belladonna pollen microspores when Fe-EDDHA was incorporated into the medium, rather than Fe-EDTA (Rashid and Street, 1973). Heberle-Bors (1980) did not obtain the same result, and found that FeEDTA was superior to FeEDDHA for the production of pollen plants from anthers of this species and of two Nicotianas. In tobacco, the production of haploid plants was greatest with FeEDTA, next best with FeDTPA, FeEGTA, FeEDDHA, and poorest with Fe citrate. Each complex was tested at or about the same iron concentration. Heberle-Bors also showed that chelating agents are differentially absorbed by activated charcoal (see Chapter 7). In tissue culture of rose (Van Der Salm, 1994), Prunus (Mallosiotis et al., 2003), citrus (Dimassi et al., 2003) and red raspberry (Zawadzka and Orlikowska, 2006), it is advantageous to use FeEDDHA rather than FeEDTA. Toxicity caused by chelating agents. Although low concentrations of EDTA markedly stimulate the growth of whole plants in hydroponic cultures by making iron more readily available, the compound begins to be toxic at higher levels. By comparisons

Table 3.9 Some common chelating agents.

EDTA EGTA EDDHA DTPA DHPT

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Etyhylenediaminetetraaceticacid Ethyleneglycol-bis(2-aminoethylether)tetraaceticacid Etyhylenediamine-di(o-hydroxyphenyl)acetic acid Dietyhylenetriaminepentaacetic acid 1,3-diamino-2-hydroxypropane-tetraaceticacid


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media I: Macro- and Micro-Nutrients

with observations on animal tissues, Weinstein et al., (1951) suggested that toxicity arose through competition between EDTA and enzymes (and other physiologically-active complexes) in the plant, for metals essential to their activity. This will occur if the avidity of the chelating agent is greater than the metal binding capacity of proteins on the surface of cells (Albert, 1958). Toxicity can also occur in in vitro cultures. Legrand (1975) found that an optimum rate of adventitious shoot initiation occurred in endive leaf segments when only 7.5 mg/l EDTA (one fifth the concentration used in MS medium) was employed. In these circumstances, higher levels of EDTA were clearly inhibitory and more than 55 mg/l prevented shoot formation. Dalton et al., (1983) found that 0.3 mM EDTA (compared to the 0.1 mM in MS medium) reduced the growth rate of Ocimum cell suspensions. Flower buds of Begonia franconis died within a few days if cultured with a high level of FeEDTA (11.5 mM, i.e. 10-15 times the normal level) together with 0.4-1.6 mM H2PO4-. Berghoef and Bruinsma (1979a) thought that Fe3+ released from the FeEDTA complex, had precipitated the phosphate. Necrosis was avoided by increasing H2PO4- concentration to 6.4 mM.

Tissues may be damaged by culture in media containing synthetic chelating agents where the pH approaches neutrality, because at these pH levels, EDTA and EGTA have been shown to remove calcium ions from the membranes of mitochondria and this inhibits NAD(P)H oxidation and respiration (Moller and Palmer, 1981). Chelating agents have been found to inhibit the action of the growth substance ethylene (see Chapter 7) and are thought to do so by sequestering Cu ions within plant tissues, thereby interfering with the synthesis or action of a Cu-containing enzyme responsible for ethylene metabolism. EDTA can also inhibit the activity of plant polyphenol oxidase enzymes in vitro (Weinstein et al., 1951) and Smith (1968) thought that this might occur because EDTA made Cu ions less available for enzyme incorporation, when he found the chelating agent was able to prevent the blackening of freshlyisolated Carex flacca shoot tips. Several oxidative reactions are also biochemically catalysed by ions such as Cu2+, Co2+ and Zn2+, and where this is the case [e.g. the oxidation of glutathione – Martin (1979); catechol amine oxidation – Kiss and Gergely (1979)], chelating agents such as EDTA and CDTA are inhibitory.

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Chapter 4 The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media ll: Organic Additions, Osmotic and pH Effects, and Support Systems 1. ORGANIC SUPPLEMENTS thiamine, in media published by Bonner (1940), Gautheret (1942) and White (1943b); this was following the findings of Bonner and Devirian (1939) that nicotinic acid improved the growth of isolated roots of tomato, pea and radish; and the papers of Robbins and Schmidt (1939a,b) which indicated that pyridoxine was also required for tomato root culture. These four vitamins; myo-inositol, thiamine, nicotinic acid, and pyridoxine are ingredients of Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium and have been used in varying proportions for the culture of tissues of many plant species (Chapter 3). However, unless there has been research on the requirements of a particular plant tissue or organ, it is not possible to conclude that all the vitamins which have been used in a particular experiment were essential. The requirements of cells for added vitamins vary according to the nature of the plant and the type of culture. Welander (1977) found that Nitsch and Nitsch (1965) vitamins were not necessary, or were even inhibitory to direct shoot formation on petiole explants of Begonia x hiemalis. Roest and Bokelmann (1975) on the other hand, obtained increased shoot formation on Chrysanthemum pedicels when MS vitamins were present. Callus of Pinus strobus grew best when the level of inositol in MS medium was reduced to 50 mg/l whereas that of P. echinata. proliferated most rapidly when no inositol was present (Kaul and Kochbar, 1985). Research workers often tend to adopt a ‘belt and braces’ attitude to minor media components, and add unusual supplements just to ensure that there is no missing factor which will limit the success of their experiment. Sometimes complex mixtures of as many as nine or ten vitamins have been employed. Experimentation often shows that some vitamins can be omitted from recommended media. Although four vitamins were used in MS medium, later work at Professor Skoog’s laboratory showed that the optimum rate of growth of tobacco callus tissue on MS salts required the addition of only myo-inositol and thiamine. The level of thiamine was increased four-fold over that used by Murashige and Skoog (1962), but nicotinic acid, pyridoxine and glycine

Growth and morphogenesis of plant tissue cultures can be improved by small amounts of some organic nutrients. These are mainly vitamins (including some substances that are not strictly animal vitamins), amino acids and certain undefined supplements. The amount of these substances required for successful culture varies with the species and genotype, and is probably a reflection of the synthetic capacity of the explant. 1.1. VITAMINS

Vitamins are compounds required by animals in very small amounts as necessary ancillary food factors. Absence from the diet leads to abnormal growth and development and an unhealthy condition. Many of the same substances are also needed by plant cells as essential intermediates or metabolic catalysts, but intact plants, unlike animals, are able to produce their own requirements. Cultured plant cells and tissues can however become deficient in some factors; growth and survival is then improved by their addition to the culture medium. In early work, the requirements of tissue cultures for trace amounts of certain organic substances were satisfied by “undefined” supplements such as fruit juices, coconut milk, yeast or malt extracts and hydrolysed casein. These supplements can contribute vitamins, amino acids and growth regulants to a culture medium. The use of undefined supplements has declined as the need for specific organic compounds has been defined, and these have become listed in catalogues as pure chemicals. 1.2. THE DEVELOPMENT OF VITAMIN MIXTURES

The vitamins most frequently used in plant tissue culture media are thiamine (Vit. B1), nicotinic acid (niacin) and pyridoxine (Vit. B6) and apart from these three compounds, and myo-inositol, there is little common agreement about which other vitamins are really essential. The advantage of adding thiamine was discovered almost simultaneously by Bonner (1937, 1938), Robbins and Bartley (1937) and White (1937). Nicotinic acid and pyridoxine appear, in addition to 115

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(amino acid) were unnecessary (Linsmaier and Skoog, 1965). A similar simplification of the MS vitamins was made by Earle and Torrey (1965) for the culture of Convolvulus callus. Soczck and Hempel (1988) found that in the medium of Murashige et al. (1974) devised for the shoot culture of Gerbera jamesonii, thiamine, pyridoxine and inositol could be omitted without any reduction in the rate of shoot multiplication of their local cultivars. Ishihara and Katano (1982) found that Malus shoot cultures could be grown on MS salts alone, and that inositol and thiamine were largely unnecessary. 1.3. SPECIFIC COMPOUNDS

Myo-inositol. Myo-inositol (also sometimes described as meso-inositol or i-inositol) is the only one of the nine theoretical stereoisomers of inositol which has significant biological importance. Medically it has been classed as a member of the Vitamin B complex and is required for the growth of yeast and many mammalian cells in tissue culture. Rats and mice require it for hair growth and can develop dermatitis when it is not in the diet. Myoinositol has been classed as a plant ‘vitamin’, but note that some authors think that it should be regarded as a supplementary carbohydrate, although it does not contribute to carbohydrate utilization as an energy source or as an osmoticum. Historical use in tissue cultures. Myo-inositol was first shown by Jacquiot (1951) to favour bud formation by elm cambial tissue when supplied at 201000 mg/l. Necrosis was retarded, though the proliferation of the callus was not promoted. Myoinositol at 100 mg/1 was also used by Morel and Wetmore (1951) in combination with six other vitamins for the culture of callus from the monocotyledon Amorphophallus rivieri (Araceae). Bud initials appeared on some cultures and both roots and buds on others according to the concentration of auxin employed. The vitamin was adopted by both Wood and Braun (1961) and Murashige and Skoog (1962) in combination with thiamine, nicotinic acid and pyridoxine in their preferred media fur the culture of Catharanthus roseus and Nicotiana tabacum respectively. Many other workers have since included it in culture media with favourable results on the rate of callus growth or the induction of morphogenesis. Letham (1966) found that myoinositol interacted with cytokinin to promote cell division in carrot phloem explants.

Occurrence and biochemistry. Part of the growth promoting property of coconut milk is due to its myo-inositol content (Pollard et al., 1961). Coconut milk also contains scyllo-inositol (Table 4.1). This can also promote growth but to a smaller extent than the myo-isomer (Pollard et al., 1961). Inositol is a constituent of yeast extract (Steiner et al., 1969; Steiner and Lester, 1972) and small quantities may also be contained in commercial agar (Wolter and Skoog, 1966). Myo-inositol is a natural constituent of plants and much of it is often incorporated into phosphatidyl-inositol which may be an important factor in the functioning of membranes (Jung et al., 1972; Harran and Dickinson, 1978). The phosphatidylinositol cycle controls various cellular responses in animal cells and yeasts, but evidence of it playing a similar role in plants is only just being accumulated. Enzymes which are thought to be involved in the cycle have been observed to have activities in plants and lithium chloride (which inhibits myo-inositol-1-phosphatase and decreases the cycle) inhibits callus formation in Brassica oleracea (Bagga et al., 1987), and callus growth in Amaranthus paniculatus (Das et al., 1987). In both plants the inhibition is reversed by myo-inositol. As the myo-inositol molecule has six hydroxyl units, it can react with up to six acid molecules forming various esters. It appears that inositol phosphates act as second messengers to the primary action of auxin in plants: phytic acid (inositol hexaphosphate) is one of these. Added to culture media it can promote tissue growth if it can serve as a source of inositol (Watanabe et al., 1971). In some species, auxin can be stored and may be transported as IAAmyo-inositol ester (Chapter 5). o-Methyl-inositol is present in quite large quantities in legumes; inositol methyl ethers are known to occur in plants of several other families, although their function is unknown (Phillips and Smith, 1974). The stimulatory effect of myo-inositol in plant cultures probably arises partly from the participation of the compound in biosynthetic pathways leading to the formation of the pectin and hemicelluloses needed in cell walls (Loewus et al., 1962; Loewus, 1974; Loewus and Loewus, 1980; Harran and Dickinson, 1978; Verma and Dougall, 1979; Loewus and Loewus, 1980) and may have a role in the uptake and utilization of ions (Wood and Braun, 1961). In the experiments of Staudt (1984) mentioned below, when the P043– content of the medium was raised to 4.41 mM, the rate of callus growth of cv. ‘Aris’ was


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Chapter 4

progressively enhanced as the myo- inositol in the medium was put up to 4000 mg/l. This result seems

to stress the importance of inositol-containing phospholipids for growth.

Table 4.1. Substances identified as components of coconut milk (water) from mature green fruits and market-purchased fruits.

SUBSTANCE

QUANTITY/REFERENCE Mature green Mature fresh fruits fruits

Amino acids (mg/l) Alanine

127.3 (14)

Arginine

25.6 (14)

Aspartic acid Asparagine

35.9 (14) 10.1 (14)

Îł-Aminobutyric acid Glutamine acid

34.6 (14) 70.8 (14)

Glutamine

45.4 (14)

Glycine 9.7 (14) Histidine 6.3 (14) Homoserine -- (14) Hydroxyproline Lysine 21.4 Methionine 16.9 (14) Phenylalanine -- (14) Proline 31.9 Serine 45.3 (14) Typtophan Threonine 16.2 (2) Tyrosine 6.4 (14) Valine 20.6 (14) Other nitrogenous compounds Ammonium Ethanolamine Dihydroxyphenyl alanine Inorganic elements (mg/100g dry wt.) Potassium Sodium Phosphorus Magnesium Organic acids (meq/ml) Malic acid 34.3 (14) Shikimic, Quinic 0.6 (14) and 2 unknowns Pyrrolidone 0.4 (14) carboxylic acid Citric acid 0.4 (14) Succinic acid -- (14)

312 (13), 177.1 (14) 133 (13), 16.8 (14) 65 (13), 5.4 (14) ca.60 (13), 10.1 (14) 820 (13), 168.8 (14) 240 (13), 78.7 (14) ca.60 (13), 13.4 (14) 13.9 (14) Trace (13,14) 5.2 (14) Trace (13,14) 65.8 (14) 8 (13), Trace (14) 12 (13), 10.2 (14) 97 (13), 21.6 (14) 39 (13) 44 (13), 26.3 (14) 16 (13), 3.1 (14) 27 (13), 15.1 (14) (19) (19) (19)

SUBSTANCE

QUANTITY/REFERENCE Mature Mature fresh green fruits fruits

Sugars (g/l) Sucrose

9.2 (14)

8.9 (14)

Glucose

7.3 (14)

2.5 (14)

Fructose Sugar alcohols (g/l)

5.3 (14)

2.5 (14)

Mannitol

(1)

Sorbitol

15.0 (12), (17)

myo-Inositol

0.1 (12), (17)

scyllo-Inositol Vitamins (mg/l) Nicotinic acid Pantolhenic acid Biotin, Riboflavin Riboflavin Folic acid Thiamine, pyridoxine Growth substances (mg/l) Auxin Gibberellin 1,3-Diphenylurea Zeatin Zeatin glucoside Zeatin riboside 6-Oxypurine growth promoter Unknown cytokinin/s

0.5 (12), (17) 0.64 (4) 0.52 (4) 0.02 (4) 0.01 (4) 0.003 (4) Trace (4) 0.07 (7), (28) Yes (10,28) 5.8 (8), (6,17) (22,26) (26) (20), (24), (25) (27) 6, (18) (22)

12.0 (14) 0.41 (2)

Other (mg/l) RNA-polymerase RNA-phosphorus DNA-phosphorus Uracil, Adenine Leucoanthocyanins Phyllococosine Acid Phosphatase

0.2 (14)

Diastase

(2)

0.3 (14) 0.3 (14)

Dehydrogenase Peroxidase Catalase

(5) (5) (5)

312.0 (3) 105 (3) 37.0 (3) 30.0 (3)

20.0 (14) 0.1 (14)

Numbered references (within brackets) in the above table are listed in Section 1.11 of this Chapter.

(23) 35.4 (14) 3.5 (14) 21 (11) (15,17) (16) (5,9)


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

Activity in tissue cultures. Cultured plant tissues vary in their capacity for myo-inositol biosynthesis. Intact shoots are usually able to produce their own requirements, but although many unorganised tissues are able to grow slowly without the vitamin being added to the medium (Murashige, 1974) the addition of a small quantity is frequently found to stimulate cell division. The compound has been discovered to be essential to some plants. In the opinion of Kaul and Sabharwal (1975) this includes all monocotyledons, the media for which, if they do not contain inositol, need to be complemented with coconut milk, or yeast extract. Fraxinus pennsylvanica callus had an absolute requirement for 10 mg/1 myo-inositol to achieve maximum growth; higher levels, up to 250 mg/l had no further effect on fresh or dry weight yields (Wolter and Skoog, 1966). The formation of shoot buds on callus of Haworthia spp was shown to be dependent on the availability of myo-inositol (Kaul and Sabharwal, 1972, 1975). In a revised Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) medium [Staudt (1984) containing 1.84 mM PO43–], callus tissue of Vitis vinifera cv ‘MüllerThurgau’ did not require myo-inositol for growth, but that of Vitis vinifera x V. riparia cv. ‘Aris’ was dependent on it and the rate of growth increased as the level of myo-inositol was increased up to 250 mg/l (Staudt, 1984). Gupta et al. (1988) found that it was essential to add 5 g/l myo-inositol to Gupta and Durzan (1985) DCR-1 medium to induce embryogenesis (embryonal suspensor masses) from female gametophyte tissue of Pseudotsuga menziesii and Pinus taeda. The concentration necessary seems insufficient to have acted as an osmotic stimulus (see section 3). myoInositol reduced the rate of proliferation in shoot cultures of Euphorbia fulgens (Zhang et al., 1986). Thiamine. Thiamine (Vit. B1, aneurine) in the form of thiamine pyrophosphate, is an essential cofactor in carbohydrate metabolism and is directly involved in the biosynthesis of some amino acids. It has been added to plant culture media more frequently than any other vitamin. Tissues of most plants seem to require it for growth, the need becoming more apparent with consecutive passages, but some cultured cells are self sufficient. The maize suspension cultures of Polikarpochkina et al. (1979) showed much less growth in passage 2, and died in the third passage when thiamine was omitted from the medium.

MS medium contains 0.3 μM thiamine. That this may not be sufficient to obtain optimum results from some cultures is illustrated by the results of Barwale et al. (1986): increasing the concentration of thiamine-HCI in MS medium to 5 μM, increased the frequency with which zygotic embryos of Glycine max formed somatic embryos from 33% to 58%. Adding 30 μM nicotinic acid (normally 4 μM) improved the occurrence of embryogenesis even further to 76%. Thiamine was found to be essential for stimulating embryogenic callus induction in Zoysia japonica, a warm season turf grass from Japan (Asano et al., 1996). It has also been shown to stimulate adventitious rooting of Taxus spp. (Chée, 1995). There can be an interaction between thiamine and cytokinin growth regulators. Digby and Skoog (1966) discovered that normal callus cultures of tobacco produced an adequate level of thiamine to support growth providing a relatively high level of kinetin (ca. 1 mg/l) was added to the medium, but the tissue failed to grow when moved to a medium with less added kinetin unless thiamine was provided. Sometimes a change from a thiamine-requiring to a thiamine-sufficient state occurs during culture (see habituation – Chapter 7). In rice callus, thiamine influenced morphogenesis in a way that depended on which state the cells were in. Presence of the vitamin in a pre-culture (Stage I) medium caused thiaminesufficient callus to form root primordia on an induction (Stage II) medium, but suppressed the stimulating effect of kinetin on Stage II shoot formation in thiamine-requiring callus. It was essential to omit thiamine from the Stage I medium to induce thiamine-sufficient callus to produce shoots at Stage II (Inoue and Maeda, 1982). 1.4. OTHER VITAMINS

Pantothenic acid. Pantothenic acid plays an important role in the growth of certain tissues. It favoured callus production by hawthorn stem fragments (Morel, 1946) and stimulated tissue proliferation in willow and black henbane (Telle and Gautheret, 1947; Gautheret, 1948). However, pantothenic acid showed no effects with carrot, vine and Virginia creeper tissues which synthesize it in significant amounts (ca. 1 μg/ml). Vitamin C. The effect of Vitamin C (L-ascorbic acid) as a component of culture media will be discussed in Chapter 12. The compound is also used during explant isolation and to prevent blackening.


Chapter 4

Besides, its role as an antioxidant, ascorbic acid is involved in cell division and elongation, e.g., in tobacco cells (de Pinto et al., 1999). Ascorbic acid (4-8 x 10–4 M) also enhanced shoot formation in both young and old tobacco callus. (Joy et al., 1988). It speeded up the shoot-forming process, and completely reversed the inhibition of shoot formation by gibberellic acid in young callus, but was less effective in old callus. Clearly its action here was not as a vitamin. Vitamin D. Some vitamins in the D group, notably vitamin D2 and D3 can have a growth regulatory effect on plant tissue cultures. Their effect is discussed in Chapter 7. Vitamin E. The antioxidant activity of vitamin E (α-tocopherol) will be discussed in Chapter 12. Other vitamins. Evidence has been obtained that folic acid slows tissue proliferation in the dark, while enhancing it in the light. This is probably because it is hydrolysed in the light to p-aminobenzoic acid (PAB). In the presence of auxin, PAB has been shown to have a weak growth-stimulatory effect on cultured plant tissues (de Capite, 1952a,b). Riboflavin which is a component of some vitamin mixtures, has been found to inhibit callus formation but it may improve the growth and quality of shoots (Drew and Smith, 1986). Suppression of callus growth can mean that the vitamin may either inhibit or stimulate root formation on cuttings. Riboflavin has been shown to stimulate adventitious rooting on shoots of Carica papaya (Drew et al., 1993), apple shoots (van der Krieken et al., 1992) and Eucalyptus globulus (Trindade and Pais, 1997). It also enhances embryogenic callus induction in Zoysia japonica in association with cytokinins and thiamine (Asano et al., 1996). Glycine is occasionally described as a vitamin in plant tissue cultures: its use has been described in the section on amino acids. Adenine. Adenine (or adenine sulphate) has been widely used in tissue culture media, but because it mainly gives rise to effects which are similar to those produced by cytokinins, it is considered in the chapter on cytokinins (Chapter 6). Stability. Some vitamins are heat-labile; see the section on medium preparation in Volume 2. 1.5. UNDEFINED SUPPLEMENTS

Many undefined supplements were employed in early tissue culture media. Their use has slowly declined as the balance between inorganic salts has been improved, and as the effect of amino acids and

119

growth substances has become better understood. Nevertheless several supplements of uncertain and variable composition are still in common use. The first successful cultures of plant tissue involved the use of yeast extract (Robbins, 1922; White, 1934). Other undefined additions made to plant tissue culture media have been: • meat, malt and yeast extracts and fibrin digest; • juices, pulps and extracts from various fruits (Steward and Shantz, 1959; Ranga Swamy, 1963; Guha and Maheshwari, 1964, 1967), including those from bananas and tomatoes (La Rue, 1949); • the fluids which nourish immature zygotic embryos; • extracts of seedlings (Saalbach and Koblitz, 1978) or plant leaves (Borkird and Sink, 1983); • the extract of boiled potatoes and corn steep liquor (Fox and Miller, 1959); • plant sap or the extract of roots or rhizomes. Plant roots are thought to be the main site of cytokinin synthesis in plants (Chapter 6); • protein (usually casein) hydrolysates (containing a mixture of all the amino acids present in the original protein). Casein hydrolysates are sometimes termed casamino acids: they are discussed in Chapter 3). Many of these amendments can be a source of amino acids, peptides, fatty acids, carbohydrates, vitamins and plant growth substances in different concentrations. Those which have been most widely used are described below. 1.6. YEAST EXTRACT.

Yeast extract (YE) is used less as an ingredient of plant media nowadays than in former times, when it was added as a source of amino acids and vitamins, especially inositol and thiamine (Vitamin B1) (Bonner and Addicott, l937; Robbins and Bartley, 1937). In a medium consisting only of macro- and micronutrients, the provision of yeast extract was often found to be essential for tissue growth (White, 1934; Robbins and Bartley, 1937). The vitamin content of yeast extract distinguishes it from casein hydrolysate (CH) so that in such media CH or amino acids alone, could not be substituted for YE (Straus and La Rue, 1954; Nickell and Maretzki, 1969). It was soon found that amino acids such as glycine, lysine and arginine, and vitamins such as thiamine and nicotinic acid, could serve as replacements for YE, for example in the growth of tomato roots (Skinner and Street, 1954), or sugar cane cell suspensions (Nickell and Maretzki, 1969).


120

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

The percentage of amino acids in a typical yeast extract is high (e.g. 7% amino nitrogen - Nickell and Maretzki, 1969; Bridson, 1978; Thom et al., 1981), but there is less glutamic acid than in casein or other protein hydrolysate. Malt extract contains little nitrogen (ca. 0.5% in total). Yeast extract has been typically added to media in concentrations of 0.1-1 g/l; occasionally 5, 10 and even 20 g/l (Morel and Muller, 1964) have been included. It normally only enhances growth in media containing relatively low concentrations of nitrogen, or where vitamins are lacking. Addition of 125-5000 mg/l YE to MS medium completely inhibited the growth of green callus of 5 different plants whereas small quantities added to Vasil and Hildebrandt (1966) THS medium (which contained 0.6 times the quantity of NO3– and NH4+ ions and unlike MS did not contain nicotinic acid or pyridoxine) gave more vigorous growth of carrot, endive and lettuce callus than occurred on MS. There was still no growth of parsley and tomato callus on THS medium: these tissues only grew well on unmodified MS (Vasil and Hildebrandt, 1966a,b,c). Stage I media are sometimes fortified with yeast extract to reveal the presence of micro-organisms which may have escaped decontamination procedures: it is then omitted at later stages of culture. Yeast extract has been shown to have some unusual properties which may relate to its amino acid content. It elicits phytoalexin accumulation in several plant species and in Glycyrrhiza echinata suspensions it stimulated chalcone synthase activity leading to the formation of narengin (Ayabe et al., 1988). It also stimulated furomocoumarin production in Glehnia littoralis cell suspensions (Kitamura et al., 1998). On Monnier (1976, 1978) medium 1 g/l yeast extract was found to inhibit the growth of immature zygotic embryos of Linum, an effect which, when 0.05 mg/1 BAP and 400 mg/l glutamine were added, induced the direct formation of adventitious embryos (Pretova and Williams, 1986). Yeast extract is now purchased directly from chemical suppliers. In the 1930s and 1940s it was prepared in the laboratory. Brink et al. (1944) macerated yeast in water which was then boiled for 30 minutes and, after cooling, the starchy material was removed by centrifugation. However, Robbins and Bartley (1937) found that the active components of yeast could be extracted with 80% ethanol.

1.7. POTATO EXTRACT

Workers in China found that there was a sharp increase in the number of pollen plants produced from wheat anthers when they were cultured on an agar solidified medium containing only an extract of boiled potatoes, 0.1 mM FeEDTA, 9% sucrose and growth regulators. Potato extract alone or potato extract combined with components of conventional culture media (Chuang et al., 1978) has since been found to provide a useful medium for the anther culture of wheat and some other cereal plants. For example, the potato medium was found to be better for the anther culture of spring wheat than the synthetic (N6) medium (McGregor and McHughen, 1990). Sopory et al. (1978) obtained the initiation of embryogenesis from potato anthers on potato extract alone and Lichter (1981) found it beneficial to add 2.5 g/l Difco potato extract to a medium for Brassica napus anther culture, but it was omitted by Chuong and Beversdorf (1985) when they repeated this work. We are not aware of potato extract being added to media for micropropagation, apart from occasional reports of its use for orchid propagation. Sagawa and Kunisaki (1982) supplemented 1 litre of Vacin and Went (1949) medium with the extract from 100g potatoes boiled for 5 minutes, and Harvais (1982) added 5% of an extract from 200g potatoes boiled in 1 litre water to his orchid medium. Of interest was the finding that potato juice treatment enabled in vitro cultures of Doritaenopsis (Orchidaceae) to recover from hyperhydricity (Zou, 1995). 1.8. MALT EXTRACT

Although no longer commonly used, malt extract seems to play a specific role in cultures of Citrus. Malt extract, mainly a source of carbohydrates, was shown to initiate embryogenesis in nucellar explants (Rangan et al., 1968; Rangan, 1984). Several recent studies showed a role for the extract in the multiplication of Citrus sinensis somatic embryos (Das et al., 1995), and in other Citrus spp. (Jumin, 1995), in the promotion of plantlet formation from somatic embryos derived from styles of different Citrus cultivars (De Pasquale et al., 1994), and in somatic embryogenesis and plantlet regeneration from pistil thin cell layers of Citrus (Carimi et al., 1999). Malt extract also promoted germination of early cotyledonary stage embryos arising from the in vitro rescue of zygotic embryos of sour orange (Carimi et al., 1998). The extract is commercially available and used at a level of 0.5 – 1 g/l.


Chapter 4 1.9. BANANA HOMOGENATE

Homogenised banana fruit is sometimes added to media for the culture of orchids and is often reported to promote growth. The reason for its stimulatory effect has not been explained. One suggestion mentioned earlier is that it might help to stabilise the pH of the medium. Pierik et al. (1988) found that it was slightly inhibitory to the germination of Paphiopedilum ciliolare seedlings but promoted the growth of seedlings once germination had taken place. 1.10. FLUIDS WHICH NOURISH EMBRYOS

The liquid which is present in the embryo sac of immature fruits of Aesculus (e.g. A. woerlitzensis) (Shantz and Steward, 1956, 1964; Steward and Shantz, 1959; Steward and Rao, 1970) and Juglans regia (Steward and Caplin, 1952) has been found to have a strong growth-promoting effect on some plant tissues cultured on simple media, although growth inhibition has occasionally been reported (Fonnesbech, 1972). Fluid from the immature female gametophyte of Ginkgo biloba (Steward and Caplin, 1952) and extracts from the female gametophyte of Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mapes and Zaerr, 1981) and immature Zea mays grains (less than two weeks after pollination) can have a similar effect. The most readily obtained fluid with this kind of activity is coconut milk (water). 1.11. COCONUT MILK/WATER

When added to a medium containing auxin, the liquid endosperm of Cocos nucifera fruits can induce plant cells to divide and grow rapidly. The fluid is most commonly referred to as coconut milk, although Tulecke et al. (1961) maintained that the correct English term is ‘coconut water’, because the term coconut milk also describes the white liquid obtained by grating the solid white coconut endosperm (the ‘meat’) in water and this is not generally used in tissue culture media. However, in this section, both terms are used. Coconut milk was first used in tissue cultures by Van Overbeek et al. (1941, 1942) who found that its addition to a culture medium was necessary for the development of very young embryos of Datura stramonium. Gautheret (1942) found that coconut milk could be used to initiate and maintain growth in tissue cultures of several plants, and Caplin and Steward (1948) showed that callus derived from phloem tissue explants of Daucus carota roots grew much more rapidly when 15% coconut milk was

121

added to a medium containing IAA. Unlike other undefined supplements to culture media (such as yeast extract, malt extract and casein hydrolysate) coconut milk has proved harder to replace by fully defined media. The liquid has been found to be beneficial for inducing growth of both callus and suspension cultures and for the induction of morphogenesis. Although commercial plant tissue culture laboratories (particularly those in temperate countries) would endeavour not to use this ingredient on account of its cost, it is still frequently employed for special purposes in research. It is possible to get callus growth on coconut milk alone (Steward et al., 1952), but normally it is added to a recognised medium. Effective stimulation only occurs when relatively large quantities are added to a medium; the incorporation of 10-15 percent by volume is quite usual. For instance, Burnet and Ibrahim (1973) found that 20% coconut milk (i.e. one-fifth of the final volume of the medium) was required for the initiation and continued growth of callus tissue of various Citrus species in MS medium; Rangan (1974) has obtained improved growth of Panicum miliaceum in MS medium using 2,4-D in the presence of 15% coconut milk. By contrast, Vasil and co-workers (e.g. Vasil and Vasil, 1981a,b) needed to add only 5% coconut milk to MS medium to obtain somatic embryogenesis from cereal callus and suspension cultures. Many workers try to avoid having to use coconut milk in their protocols. It is an undefined supplement whose composition can vary considerably (Swedlund and Locy, 1988). However, adding coconut milk to media often provides a simple way to obtain satisfactory growth or morphogenesis without the need to work out a suitably defined formulation. Suggestions that coconut milk is essential for a particular purpose need to be treated with some caution. For instance, in the culture of embryogenic callus from root and petiole explants of Daucus carota, coconut milk could be replaced satisfactorily either by adenine or kinetin, showing that it did not contribute any unique substances required for embryogenesis (Halperin and Wetherell, 1964). Preparation. Ready prepared coconut water (milk) can be purchased from some chemical suppliers, but the liquid from fresh nuts (obtained from the greengrocer) is usually perfectly adequate. One nut will usually yield at least 100 ml. The water is most simply drained from dehusked coconuts by drilling holes through two of the micropyles. Only normal uncontaminated water should be used and so


122

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

nuts should be extracted one by one, and the liquid endosperm from each examined to ascertain that it is unfermented before addition to a bulk supply. Water from green but mature coconuts may contain slightly different quantities of substances to that in the nuts purchased in the local market (Table 4.1) and has been said to be a more effective stimulant in plant media than that from ripe fruits, but Morel and Wetmore (1951) found to the contrary. Tulecke et al. (1961) discovered that the water from highly immature coconuts contained smaller quantities of the substances normally present in mature nuts. References to composition of coconut water (numbers refer to citations in Table 4.1). (1) Dunstan (1906), (2) DeKruijff (1906), (3) McCance and Widdowson (1940), (4) Vandenbelt (1945), (5) Sadasivan (1951), (6) Shantz and Steward (1952), (7) Paris and Duhamet (1953), (8) Shantz and Steward (1955), (9) Wilson and Cutter (1955), (10) Radley and Dear (1958), (11) Steward and Shantz (1959), (12) Pollard et al. (1961), (13) Figures of Steward et al. (1961), given by Raghavan (1977), (14) Tulecke et al. (1961), (15) Steward and Mohan Ram (1961), (16) Kuraishi and Okumura (1961), (17) Steward (1963), (18) Zwar et al. (1963), (19) Steward et al. (1964), (20) Letham (1968), (21) Steward et al. (1969), (22) Zwar and Bruce (1970), (23) Mondal et al. (1972), (24) Letham (1974), (25) Van Staden and Drewes (1975), (26) Van Staden (1976), (27) Letham (1982), (28) Dix and Van Staden (1982). Use of Coconut water. Coconut water is usually strained through cloth and deproteinized by being heated to 80-100°C for about 10 minutes while being stirred. It is then allowed to settle and the supernatant is separated from the coagulated proteins by filtration through paper. The liquid is stored frozen at -20°C. Borkird and Sink (1983) did not boil the water from fresh ripe coconuts, but having filtered it through several layers of cheesecloth, adjusted the pH to 10 with 2 N NaOH and then kept it overnight at 4°C. The following day the pH was re-adjusted to 7.0 with 5 N HCl, and the preparation was refiltered before being stored frozen at –20°C. Some workers autoclave media containing coconut milk; others filter-sterilise coconut milk and add it to a medium after autoclaving has been carried out. Morel and Wetmore (1951) used filter sterilisation, but found that the milk lost its potency if stored sterile (but presumably unfrozen) for 3 months. Street (1977) advocated autoclaving coconut milk after it had been boiled and filtered; it was then stored at -20°C until required.

Active ingredients. The remarkable growth stimulating property of coconut milk has led to attempts to isolate and identify the active principles. This has proved to be difficult because the fractions into which coconut milk has been separated each possess only a small proportion of the total activity and the different components appear to act synergistically. Substances so far identified include amino acids, organic acids, nucleic acids, purines, sugars, sugar alcohols, vitamins, growth substances and minerals (Table 4.1). The variable nature of the product is illustrated in the table by the analytical results obtained by different authors. Auxin activity. The liquid has been found to have some auxin activity which is increased by autoclaving, probably because any such growth substances exist in a bound form and are released by hydrolysis. But although coconut milk can stimulate the growth of some in vitro cultures in the absence of exogenous auxin, it normally contains little of this kind of growth regulator and an additional exogenous supply is generally required. In modern media, where organic compounds are often added in defined amounts, the main benefit from using coconut milk is almost certainly due to its providing highly active natural cytokinin growth substances. Cytokinin activity. Coconut milk was shown to have cytokinin activity by Kuraishi and Okumura (1961) and recognised natural cytokinin substances have since been isolated [9-β-D-ribo-furanosyl zeatin (Letham, 1968); zeatin and several unidentified ones (Zwar and Bruce, 1970); N, N′-diphenyl urea (Shantz and Steward, 1955)] but the levels of these compounds in various samples of coconut milk have not been published. An unusual cytokinin-like growth promoter, 2-(3-methylbut-2-enylamino)-purin6-one was isolated by Letham (1982). Because coconut milk contains natural cytokinins, adding it to media often has the same effect as adding a recognised cytokinin. This means that a beneficial effect on growth or morphogenesis is often dependent on the presence of an auxin. Steward and Caplin (1951) showed that there was a synergistic action between 2,4-D and coconut milk in stimulating the growth of potato tuber tissue. Lin and Staba (1961) similarly found that coconut milk gave significantly improved callus growth on seedling explants of peppermint and spearmint initiated by 2,4-D, but only slightly improved the growth initiated by the auxin 2BTOA (2-benziothiazoleoxyacetic acid). The occurrence of gibberellin-like substances in coconut milk has also been reported (Radley and Dear, 1958).


Chapter 4

Suboptimum stimulation and inhibition. In cases where optimal concentrations of growth adjuvants have been determined, it has been found that the level of the same or analogous substances in coconut milk may be suboptimal. La Motte (1960) noted that 150 mg/l of tyrosine most effectively induced morphogenesis in tobacco callus cultures, but coconut milk added at 15% would provide only 0.96 mg/l of this substance (Tulecke et al., 1961). Fresh and autoclaved coconut milk from mature nuts has proved inhibitory to growth or morphogenesis (Noh et al., 1988) in some instances. It is not known which ingredients cause the inhibition but the growth of cultured embryos seems particularly liable to be prevented, suggesting that the compound responsible might be a natural dormancy-inducing factor such as abscisic acid. Van Overbeck et al. (1942, 1944) found that a factor was present in coconut milk which

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was essential for the growth of Datura stramonium embryos, but that heating the milk or allowing it to stand could lead to the release of toxic substances. These could be removed by shaking with alcohols or ether or lead acetate precipitation. Duhamet and Mentzer (1955) isolated nine fractions of coconut milk by chromatography, and found one of these to be inhibitory to cultured crown gall tissues of black salsify when more than 10-20% coconut milk was incorporated into the medium. Norstog (1965) showed that autoclaved coconut milk could inhibit the growth of barley embryos but that filter-sterilised milk was stimulatory. Coconut water inhibited somatic embryo induction in Pinus taeda (Li and Huang, 1996) and both autoclaved or filter-sterilized coconut milk inhibited the growth of wheat embryoshoot apices (Smith, 1967).

2. ORGANIC ACIDS Organic acids can have three roles in plant culture media: • they may act as chelating agents, improving the availability of some micronutrients, • they can buffer the medium against pH change, • they may act as nutrients. A beneficial effect is largely restricted to the acids of the Krebs’ cycle. Dougall et al. (1979) found that 20 mM succinate, malate or fumarate supported maximum growth of wild carrot cells when the medium was initially adjusted to pH 4.5. Although 1 mM glutarate, adipate, pimelate, suberate, azelate or phthalate controlled the pH of the medium, little or no cell growth took place. 2.1. USE AS BUFFERS

The addition of organic acids to plant media is not a recent development. Various authors have found that some organic acids and their sodium or potassium salts stabilise the pH of hydroponic solutions (Trelease and Trelease, 1933) or in vitro media (Van Overbeek et al., 1941, 1942; Arnow et al., 1953), although it must be admitted that they are not as effective as synthetic biological buffers in this respect (see Section 5). Norstog and Smith (1963) discovered that 100 mg/l malic acid acted as an effective buffering agent in their medium for barley embryo culture and also appeared to enhance growth in the presence of glutamine and alanine. Malic acid, now at 1000 mg/l was retained in the improved Norstog (1973) Barley II medium. In the

experiments of Schenk and Hildebrandt (1972) low levels of citrate and succinate ions did not impede callus growth of a wide variety of plants and appeared to be stimulatory in some species. The acids were also effective buffers between pH 5 and pH 6, but autoclaving a medium containing sodium citrate or citric acid caused a substantial pH increase.. 2.1.1. Complexing with metals

Divalent organic acids such is citric, maleic, malic and malonic (depending on species) are found in the xylem sap of plants, where together with amino acids they can complex with metal ions and assist their transport (White et al., 1981). These acids can also be secreted from cultured cells and tissues into the growth medium and will contribute to the conditioning effect. Ojima and Ohira (1980) discovered that malic and citric acids, released into the medium by rice cells during the latter half of a passage, were able to make unchelated ferric iron available, so correcting an iron deficiency. 2.1.2. Nutritional role

As explained in Chapter 3, adding Krebs’ cycle organic acids to the medium can enhance the metabolism of NH4+. Gamborg and Shyluk (1970) found that some organic acids could promote ammonium utilisation and the incorporation of small quantities of sodium pyruvate, citric, malic and fumaric acids into the medium, was one factor which enabled Kao and Michayluk (1975) to culture Vicia hajastana cells at low density. Their mixture of


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

organic acid ions has been copied into many other media designed for protoplast culture. Cultures may not tolerate the addition of a large quantity of a free acid which will acidify the medium. For example, Triticale anther callus grew well on Chu et al. (1975) N6 medium supplemented with 35 mg/l of a mixture of sodium pyruvate, malic acid, fumaric acid, citric acid, but not when 100 mg/l was added (Chien and Kao, 1983). When organic anions are added to the medium from the sodium or potassium salts of an acid there are metallic cations to counterbalance the organic anions, and it seems to be possible to add larger quantities without toxicity. Five mM (1240 mg/l .3H2O) potassium succinate enhanced the growth of cultured peach embryos (Ramming, 1990), and adding 15 mM (4052 mg/1 .4H2O) sodium succinate to MS medium (while also increasing the sucrose content from 3% to 6%) increased the cell volume and dry weight of Brassica nigra suspensions by 2.7 times (Molnar, 1988). Some plants seem to derive nutritional benefit from the presence of one particular organic acid. Murashige and Tucker (1969) showed that orange juice added to a medium containing MS salts promoted the growth of Citrus albedo callus. Malic and other Krebs’ cycle acids also have a similar effect; of these, citric acid produces the most

pronounced growth stimulation. A concentration of up to 10.4 mM can be effective (Goldschmidt, 1976; Einset, l978; Erner and Reuveni, 1981). Succulent plants, in particular those in the family Crassulaccae, such as Bryophyllum and Kalanchoe fix relatively large amounts of carbon dioxide during darkness, converting it into organic acids, of which malic acid is particularly important. The organic acids are metabolised during daylight hours. In such plants, malic acid might be expected to prove especially efficient in enhancing growth if added to a culture medium. Lassocinski (1985) has shown this to be the case in chlorophyll-deficient cacti of three genera. The addition of L-malic acid to the medium of Savage et al. (1979) markedly improved the rate of survival and vigour of small cacti or areoles. Organic acid (citrate, lactate, succinate, tartrate, and oxalate) pretreatment of alfalfa callus dramatically decreased the growth of callus, but increased the subsequent yield of somatic embryos and embryo development, as well as conversion to plantlets (Nichol et al., 1991). They suggested that the acids may act in the physiological selection for embryogenic callus, by inducing preferential growth of slower-growing-compact cell aggregates compared to the faster growing friable callus.

3. SUGARS -NUTRITIONAL AND REGULATORY EFFECTS Carbohydrates play an important role in in vitro cultures as an energy and carbon source, as well as an osmotic agent. In addition, carbohydrate-modulated gene expression in plants is known (Koch, 1996). Plant gene responses to changing carbohydrate status can vary markedly. Some genes are induced, some are repressed, and others minimally affected. As in microorganisms, sugar-sensitive plant genes are part of an ancient system of cellular adjustment to critical nutrient availability. However, there is no evidence that this role of carbohydrate is important in normal growth and organized development in cell cultures.3.1. Sugars as energy sources 3.1.1. Carbohydrate autotrophy.

Only a limited number of plant cell lines have been isolated which are autotrophic when cultured in vitro. Autotrophic cells are capable of fully supplying their own carbohydrate needs by carbon dioxide assimilation during photosynthesis (Bergmann, 1967; Tandeau de Marsac and PeaudLenoel, 1972a,b; Chandler et al., 1972; Anon, 1980; Larosa et al., 1981). Many autotrophic cultures have

only been capable of relatively slow growth (e.g. Fukami and Hildebrandt, 1967), especially in the ambient atmosphere where the concentration of carbon dioxide is low (see Chapter 12). However, since these early trials, very good progess is being made with photoautrophic shoot cultures and photoautotrophic micropropagation is now possible (Kozai, 1991). Success is dependent on enriching the CO2 concentrations in the vessels during the photoperiod, reducing or eliminating sugar from the medium, and optimising the in vitro environment. Nevertheless, for the normal culture of either cells, tissues or organs, it is necessary to incorporate a carbon source into the medium. Sucrose is almost universally used for micropropagation purposes as it is so generally utilisable by tissue cultures. Refined white domestic sugar is sufficiently pure for most practical purposes. The presence of sucrose in tissue culture media specifically inhibits chlorophyll formation and photosynthesis (see below) making autotrophic growth less feasible.


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Chapter 4 3.2 ALTERNATIVES TO SUCROSE

3.2.1. Other Sugars.

The selection of sucrose as the most suitable energy source for cultures follows many comparisons between possible alternatives. Some of the first work of this kind on the carbohydrate nutrition of plant tissue was done by Gautheret (1945) using normal carrot tissue. Sucrose was found to be the best source of carbon followed by glucose, maltose and raffinose; fructose was less effective and mannose and lactose were the least suitable. The findings of this and other work is summarized in Table 4.2. Sucrose has almost invariably been found to be the best carbohydrate; glucose is generally found to support growth equally well, and in a few plants it may result in better in

vitro growth than sucrose, or promote organogenesis where sucrose will not; but being more expensive than sucrose, glucose will only be preferred for micropropagation where it produces clearly advantageous results. Multiplication of Alnus crispa, A. cordata and A. rubra shoot cultures was best on glucose, while that of A. glutinosa was best on sucrose (Tremblay and Lalonde, 1984; Tremblay et al., 1984; Barghchi, 1988). Direct shoot formation from Capsicum annum leaf discs in a 16 h day required the presence of glucose (Phillips and Hubstenberger, 1985). Glucose is required for the culture of isolated roots of wheat (Furguson, 1967) and some other monocotyledons (Bhojwani and Razdan, 1983).

Table 4.2. The main sugars which can utilized by plants. The value of as sugar for carbon nutrition is indicated by the size of the type.

SUGAR

Reducing Capacity

Products of hydrolytic/enzymatic breakdown

Monosaccharides Hexoses

Glucose

Reducing sugar

Fructose

Reducing sugar

None None

Galactose

Reducing sugar

None

Mannose

Reducing sugar

None

Slow reduction Slow reduction Slow reduction

None None None

Pentoses Arabinose Ribose Xylose

Disaccharides

Sucrose

Non-reducing

Glucose, fructose

Maltose

Reducing sugar

Glucose

Cellobiose Trehalose Lactose

Reducing sugar Non-reducing Reducing sugar

Glucose Glucose Glucose, fructose

Trisaccharides Raffinose

Non-reducing

Glucose, galactose, fructose

Some other monosaccharides such as arabinose and xylose; disaccharides such as cellobiose, maltose and trehalose; and some polysaccharides; all of which are capable of being broken down to glucose and fructose (Table 4.2), can also sometimes be used as partial replacements for sucrose (Straus and LaRue, 1954; Sievert and Hildebrandt, 1965; Yatazawa et al., 1967; Smith and Stone, 1973; Minocha and Halperin, 1974; Zaghmout and Torres, 1985). In Phaseolus callus, Jeffs and Northcote (1967) found that sucrose could be replaced by maltose and trehalose (all three sugars have an alpha-glucosyl radical at the nonreducing end), but not by glucose or fructose alone or

in combination, or by several other different sugars. Galactose has been said to be toxic to most plant tissues; it inhibits the growth of orchids and other plants in concentrations as low as 0.01% (0.9 mM) (Ernst et al., 1971; Arditti and Ernst, 1984). However, cells can become adapted and grown on galactose, e.g., sugar cane cells (Maretzski and Thom, 1978). The key was the induction of the enzyme galactose kinase, which converts galactose to galactose-1-phosphate. More recently, other reports on galactose use have appeared. It promoted callus growth in rugosa rose, but inhibited somatic embryogenesis (Kunitake et al., 1993). Galactose


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

promoted early somatic embryo maturation stages in European silver fir (Schuller and Reuther, 1993). When used instead of sucrose, it improved rooting of Annona squamosa microshoots (Lemos and Blake, 1996). In addition, galactose has been found to reduce or overcome hyperhydricity in shoot cultures (Druart, 1988; see Volume 2). Fructose has also been reported to be effective in preventing hyperhydricity (Rugini et al., 1987). There are some situations where fructose supports growth just as well as sucrose or glucose (Steffen et al., 1988) and occasionally it gives better results. Some orchid species have been reported to grow better on fructose than glucose (Ernst, 1967; Ernst et al., 1971; Arditti, 1979). Fructose was the best sugar for the production of adventitious shoots from Glycine max cotyledonary nodes, especially if the concentration of nutrient salts supplied was inadequate (Wright et al., 1986). Shoot and leaf growth and axillary shoot formation in Castanea shoot cultures was stimulated when sucrose was replaced by 30 g/l fructose. The growth of basal callus was reduced and it was possible to propagate from mature explants of C. crenata, although this was not possible on the same medium supplemented with sucrose (Chauvin and Salesses, 1988). However, fructose was reported to be toxic to carrot tissue if, as the sole source of carbon, it was autoclaved with White (1943a) A medium. When filter sterilized, fructose supported the growth of callus cultures which had a final weight 70% of those grown on sucrose (Pollard et al., 1961). Sucrose in culture media is usually hydrolysed totally, or partially, into the component monosaccharides glucose and fructose (see below) and so it is logical to compare the efficacy of combinations of these two sugars with that of sucrose. Kromer and Kukulczanka (1985) found that meristem tips of Canna indica survived better on a mixture of 25 g/l glucose plus 5 g/l fructose, than on 30 g/l sucrose. Germination of Paphiopedilum orchid seeds was best on a medium containing 5g/l fructose plus 5 g/l glucose; a mixture of 7.5 g/l of each sugar was optimal for further growth of the seedlings (Pierik et al., 1988). In spite of its rapid hydrolysis to glucose and fructose, sucrose appears to have a specific stimulatory effect on embryo development in Douglas fir, that was not observed when it was replaced by the monosaccharides (Taber et al., 1998). The general superiority of sucrose over glucose for the culture of organised plant tissues such as isolated roots may be on account of the more

effective translocation of sucrose to apical meristems (Butcher and Street, 1964). In addition, there could be an osmotic effect, because, from an equal weight of compound, a solution of glucose has almost twice the molarity of a sucrose solution, and will thus, in the absence of inversion of the disaccharide, induce a more negative water potential (see below). Maltose. Plant species vary in their ability to utilise unusual sugars. For instance, although Gautheret (1945) could grow carrot callus on maltose, Mathes et al. (1973) obtained only minimal growth of Acer tissue on media supplemented with this sugar. Similarly, growth of soybean tissue on maltose is normally very slow, but variant strains of cells have been selected which can utilise it (Limberg et al., 1979), perhaps because the new genotypes possessed an improved capacity for its active transport. Later studies have given a more prominent role to maltose as a component of tissue culture media. Maltose serves as both a carbon source and as an osmoticum. Compared to sucrose there is a slower rate of extracellular hydrolysis, it is taken up more slowly, and hydrolysed intracellularly more slowly. Maltose led to a substantial increase in somatic embryos from Petunia anthers (Raquin, 1983). It also led to an increase in callus induction and plantlet regeneration during in vitro androgenesis of hexaploid winter triticale and wheat (Karsai et al., 1994). Maltose also increased callus induction in rice microspore culture, with an acceleration of initial cell divisions (Xie et al., 1995). For barley microspore culture, the inclusion of maltose led to a higher frequency of green plants (Finnie et al., 1989). Maltose has been reported to equal or surpass sucrose in supporting embryogenesis in a number of species, including carrot (Verma and Dougall, 1977; Kinnersley and Henderson, 1988), alfalfa (Strickland et al., 1987), wild cherry (Reidiboym-Talleux et al., 1999), Malus (Daigny et al., 1996), Abies (Norgaard 1997) and loblolly pine (Li et al., 1998). The number of plants regenerated from indica (Biswas and Zapata, 1993), and japonica (Jain et al., 1997) rice varieties was also greater when protoplasts were cultured with maltose rather than sucrose. Transfer from a medium containing sucrose or glucose to one supplemented with maltose has been used by Stuart et al. (1986) and Redenbaugh et al. (1987) to enhance the conversion of alfalfa embryos. Similarly, maltose led to a much higher germination rate from asparagus somatic embryos than sucrose (Kunitake et al., 1997). Lactose. The disaccharide lactose has been detected in only a few plants. When added to tissue


Chapter 4

culture media it has been found to induce the activity of β-galactosidase enzyme which can be secreted into the medium. The hydrolysis of lactose to galactose and glucose then permits the growth of Nemesia strumosa and Petunia hybrida callus, cucumber suspensions (Hess et al., 1979; Callebaut and Motte, 1988), cotton callus and cell suspensions (Mitchell et al., 1980), and Japanese morning glory callus (Hisajima and Thorpe, 1981). The key to lactose utilization in Japanese morning glory was not only the extracellular hydrolysis of this disaccharide, but the induction of galactose kinase, which prevented the accumulation of toxic galactose (Hisajima and Thorpe, 1985). Rodriguez and Lorenzo Martin (1987) found that adding 30 g/l lactose to MS medium instead of sucrose increased the number of shoots produced by a Musa accuminata shoot culture, but no new shoots were produced on subsequent subculture, although they were when sucrose was present. In addition to lactose, plant cells have been shown to become adapted and then to grow on other galactose-containing oligosaccharides, including melibiose (Nickell and Maretzki, 1970; Gross et al., 1981), raffinose (Wright and Northcote, 1972; Thorpe and Laishley, 1974; Gross et al., 1981), and stachyose (Verma and Dougall, 1977; Gross et al., 1981). Corn syrups. Kinnersley and Henderson (1988) have shown that certain corn syrups can be used as carbon sources in plant culture media and that they may induce morphogenesis which is not provoked by supplementing with sucrose. Embryogenesis was induced in a 10-year old non-embryogenic cell line of Daucus carota and plantlets were obtained from Nicotiana tabacum anthers by using syrups. Those used contained a mixture of glucose, maltose, maltotriose and higher polysaccharides. Their stimulatory effect was reproduced by mixtures of maltose and glucose. 3.2.2. Sugar alcohols.

Sugar alcohols were thought not usually to be metabolised by plant tissues and therefore unavailable as carbon sources. For this reason, mannitol and sorbitol have been frequently employed as osmotica to modify the water potential of a culture medium. In these circumstances, sufficient sucrose must also be present to supply the energy requirement of the tissues. Adding either mannitol or sorbitol to the medium may make boron unavailable (See Chapter 3).

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Mannitol was found to be metabolised by Fraxinus tissues (Wolter and Skoog, 1966). Later, studies with carrot and tobacco suspensions and cotyledon cultures of radiata pine showed that although mannitol was taken up very slowly, it was readily metabolized (Thompson et al., 1986). Thus, this sugat alcohol is only of value as a short-term osmotic agent. In contrast, sorbitol is readily taken up and metabolized in some species. It has been found to support the growth of apple callus (Chong and Taper, 1972, 1974a,b) and that of other rosaceous plants (Coffin et al., 1976), occasionally giving rise to more vigorous growth than can be obtained on sucrose. The ability of Rosaceae to use sorbitol as a carbon source is reported to be variety dependent. Albrecht (1986) found that shoot cultures of one crabapple variety required sorbitol for growth and would not grow on sucrose; another benefited from being grown on a mixture of sorbitol and sucrose and the growth of a third suffered if any sucrose was replaced by sorbitol. The apple rootstock ‘Ottawa 3’ produced abnormal shoots on sorbitol (Chong and Pua, 1985). Evidence is accumulating to show that sugar alcohols generally exhibit non-osmotic roles in regulating morphogenesis and metabolism in plants that do not produce polyols as primary photosynthetic products (Steinitz, 1999). In addition to being metabolised to varying degrees in heterotrophic cultures, such as tobacco, maize, rice, citrus and chichory, sugar alcohols stimulate specific molecular and physiological responses, where they apparently act as chemical signals. The cyclic hexahydric alcohol myo-inositol does not seem to provide a source of energy (Smith and Stone, 1973) and its beneficial effect on the growth of cultured tissues when used as a supplementary nutrient must depend on its participation in biosynthetic pathways (see vitamins above). 3.2.3. Starch.

Cultured cells of a few plants are able to utilise starch in the growth medium and appear to do so by release of extracellular amylases (Nickell and Burkholder, 1950). Growth rates of these cultures are increased by the addition of gibberellic acid, probably because it increases the synthesis or secretion of amylase enzymes (Maretzki et al., 1971, 1974). 3.3. HYDROLYSIS OF SUCROSE.

The remainder of this section on sugars is devoted to the apparent effects of sucrose concentration on cell differentiation and morphogenesis. Reports on


128

The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

the subject should be tempered with the knowledge that some or all of the sucrose in the medium is liable to be broken down into its constituent hexose sugars, and that such inversion will also occur within plant tissues, where reducing sugar levels of at least 0.5 per cent are likely to occur (Helgeson et al., 1972). 3.3.1. Autoclaving.

A partial hydrolysis of sucrose takes place during the autoclaving of media (Ball, 1953; Wolter and Skoog, 1966) the extent being greater when the compound is dissolved together with other medium constituents than when it is autoclaved in pure aqueous solution (Ferguson et al., 1958). In a fungal medium, not dissimilar to a plant culture medium, Bretzloff (1954) found that sucrose inversion during autoclaving (15 min at 15 lbs/in2) was dependent on pH in the following way: pH 3.0 100% pH 3.4 75% pH 3.8 40% pH 4.2 25% pH 4.7 12.5% pH 5.0 10% pH 6.0 0% These results suggest that the proportion of sucrose hydrolysed by autoclaving media at conventional pH levels (5.5-5.8) should be negligible. Most evidence suggests that this is not the case and that 10-15% sucrose can be converted into glucose and fructose. Cultures of some plants grow better in media containing autoclaved (rather than filtersterilised) sucrose (Ball, 1953; Guha and Johri, 1966; Johri and Guha, 1963; Verma and Van Huystee, 1971; White, 1932) suggesting that the cells benefit from the availability of glucose and/or fructose. However, Nitsch and Nitsch (1956) noted that glucose only supported the growth of Helianthus callus if it had been autoclaved, and Romberger and Tabor (1971) that the growth of Picea shoot apices was less when the medium contained sucrose autoclaved separately in water (or sucrose autoclaved with only the organic constituents of the medium) than when all the constituents had been autoclaved together. They suggested that a stimulatory substance might be released when sugars are autoclaved with agar. In other species there has been no difference between the growth of cultures supplied with autoclaved or filter sterilised sucrose (Mathes et al., 1973) or growth has been less on a medium containing autoclaved instead of filter sterilised sucrose (Stehsel and Caplin, 1969).

3.3.2. Enzymatic breakdown.

Sucrose in the medium is also inverted into monosaccharides during the in vitro culture of plant material. This occurs by the action of invertase located in the plant cell walls (Burstrom, 1957; Yoshida et al., 1973) or by the release of extracellular enzyme (King and Street, 1977). In most cultures, inversion of sucrose into glucose and fructose takes place in the medium; but, because the secretion of invertase enzymes varies, the degree to which it occurs differs from one kind of plant to another. After 28 days on a medium containing either 3 or 4% sucrose, single explants of Hemerocallis and Delphinium had used 20-30% of the sugar. Of that which remained in the medium which had supported Hemerocallis, about 45% was sucrose, while only 5% was sucrose in the media in which Delphinium had been grown. In both cases the rest of the sucrose had been inverted (Lumsden et al., 1990). The sucrose-inverting capacity of tomato root cultures was greatest in media of pH 3.6-4.7. Activity sharply declined in less acid media (Weston and Street, 1968). Helgeson et al. (1972) found that omission of IAA auxin from the medium in which tobacco callus was cultured, caused there to be a marked rise in reducing sugar due to the progressive hydrolysis of sucrose, both in the medium and in the tissue. A temporary increase in reducing sugars also occurred at the end of the lag phase when newly transferred callus pieces started to grow rapidly. It is interesting to note that cell wall invertase possessed catalytic activity in situ, whether or not tobacco tissue was grown on sucrose (Obata-Sasamoto and Thorpe, 1983). In cultures of some species, uptake of sugar may depend on the prior extracellular hydrolysis of sugar. This is the case in sugar cane (Komor et al., 1981); and possibly also in Dendrobium orchids (Hew et al., 1988) and carrot (Kanabus et al., 1986). Nearly all the sucrose in suspension cultures of sugar cane and sugar beet was hydrolysed in 3 days (Zamski and Wyse, 1985) and Daucus carota suspensions have been reported to hydrolyse all of the sucrose in the medium (Thorpe, 1982) into the constituent hexoses within 3 days (Kanabus et al., 1986) or within 24 h (Dijkema et al., 1990). However, most species can take up sucrose directly as was shown through studies with asymetrically labeled 14C-sucrose (Parr and Edelman, 1975), and metabolise it intracellularly. Within the cell, soluble invertase, sucrose phosphate synthetase and sucrose synthetase serve to hydrolyse sucrose (Thorpe, 1982). Thus, in Acer (Copping and


Chapter 4

Street, 1972) the soluble invertase activity paralleled growth rate, while in tobacco (Thorpe and Meier, 1973) and Japanese morning glory (Hisajima et al., 1978) sucrose synthetase was more important. In the last species, the change in activity of sucrose synthetase was greater than that of sucrose phosphate synthetase, an enzyme not extensively examined in cultured cells. The growth of shoots from non-dormant buds of mulberry is not promoted by sucrose, only by maltose, glucose or fructose. Even though mulberry tissue hydrolysed sucrose into component monosaccharides, shoots did not develop. In the presence of 3% fructose, sucrose was actually inhibitory to shoot development at concentrations as low as 0.2% (Oka and Ohyama, 1982). 3.4. UPTAKE.

The uptake of sugar molecules into plant tissues appears to be partly through passive permeation and partly through active transport. The extent of the two mechanisms may vary. Active uptake is associated with the withdrawal of protons (H+) from the medium. Charge compensation is effected by the excretion of a cation (H+ or K+) (Komor et al., 1977, 1981). Glucose was taken up preferentially by carrot suspensions during the first 7 days of a 14 day passage; fructose uptake followed during days 7-9 (Dijkema et al., 1990). At concentrations below 200 mM, glucose was taken up more rapidly into strawberry fruit discs and protoplasts than either sucrose or fructose (Scott and Breen, 1988). 3.5. EFFECTIVE CONCENTRATIONS.

In most of the comparisons between the nutritional capabilities of sugars discussed above, the criterion of excellence has been the most rapid growth of unorganised callus or suspension-cultured cells. For this purpose 2-4% sucrose w/v is usually optimal. Similar concentrations are also used in media employed for micropropagation, but laboratories probably pay insufficient attention to the effects of sucrose on morphogenesis (see below) and plantlet development. Sucrose levels in culture media which result in good callus growth may not be optimal for morphogenesis, and either lower or higher levels may be more effective. The optimum concentration of sucrose to induce morphogenesis or growth differs between different genotypes, sometimes even between those which are closely related. For instance, Damiano et al. (1987) found that the concentration of sucrose necessary to

129

produce the best rate of shoot proliferation in Eucalyptus gunnii shoot cultures varied between clones. The influence of sucrose concentration on direct shoot formation from Chrysanthemum explants varied with plant cultivar (Fig 4.1). Experiments of Molnar (1988) have shown that the optimum level of sucrose may depend upon the other amendments added to a culture medium. The most rapid growth of Brassica nigra suspensions on one containing MS salts (but less iron and B5 vitamins) occurred when 2% sucrose was added. However, when it was supplemented with 1-4 g/l casein hydrolysate or a mixture of 3 defined amino acids, growth was increased on up to 6% sucrose. A similar result was obtained if, instead of the amino acids, 15 mM sodium succinate was added. There was an extended growth period and the harvested dry weight of the culture was 2.8 times that on the original medium with 2% sucrose. The level of sucrose in the medium may have a direct effect on the type of morphogenesis. Thus, sucrose (87 mM) favored organogenesis, while a higher level (350 mM) favoured somatic embryogenesis from immature zygotic embryos of sunflower (Jeannin et al., 1995). In vitro minicrowns of asparagus developed short, thickened storage roots at high frequencies when the sucrose concentration in the medium was increased to 6% (Conner and Falloon, 1993). Lower sucrose concentrations, even with the addition of non- or poorly metabolised carbohydrates, such as cellobiose, maltose, mannose, melibiose and sorbitol produced thin fibrous roots, indicating that the additional sucrose was nutritional rather than osmotic. The respiration rate of cultured plant tissues rises as the concentration of added sucrose or glucose is increased. In wheat callus, it was found to reach a maximum when 90 g/1 (0.263 M) was added to the medium, even though 20 g/l produced the highest rate of growth and number of adventitious shoots (Galiba and Erdei, 1986). The uptake of inorganic ions can be dependent on sugar concentration and the benefit of adding increased quantities of nutrients to a medium may not be apparent unless the amount of sugar is increased at the same time (Gamborg et al., 1974). 3.5.1. Cell differentiation

Formation of vascular elements. Although sugars are clearly involved in the differentiation of xylem and phloem elements in cultured cells, it is still uncertain whether they have a regulatory role apart from providing a carbon energy source necessary for


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

active cell metabolism. Sucrose is generally required to be present in addition to IAA before tracheid elements are differentiated in tissue cultures. The number of both sieve and xylem elements formed [and possibly the proportion of each kind - Wetmore and Rier (1963); Rier and Beslow (1967)] depends on sucrose concentration (Aloni, 1980). In Helianthus tuberosus tuber slices, although sucrose, glucose and trehalose were best for supporting cell division and tracheid formation, maltose was only a moderately effective carbon source (Minocha and Halperin,

1974). Shininger (1979) has concluded that only carbohydrates which enable significant cell division are capable of promoting tracheary element formation. The occurrence of lignin in cultured cells is not invariably associated with thickened cell walls. Sycamore suspension cultures produced large amounts of lignin when grown on a medium with abnormally high sucrose (more than 6%) and 2,4-D levels. It was deposited within the cells and released into the medium (Carceller et al., 1971).

Fig. 4.1 The effect of sucrose concentration on direct adventitious shoot formation from flower pedicels of two chrysanthemum cultivars [from data of Roest and Bokelmann, 1975].

Chlorophyll formation. Levels of sucrose normally used to support the growth of tissue cultures are often inhibitory to chlorophyll synthesis (Rier and Chen, 1964; Edelman and Hanson, 1972) but the degree of inhibition does vary according to the species of plant from which the tissue was derived. In experiments of Hildebrandt et al. (1963) and Fukami and Hildebrandt (1967) for example, carrot and rose callus had a high chlorophyll content on Hildebrandt et al. (1946) tobacco medium with 2-8% sucrose; but tissue of endive, lettuce and spinach only produced large amounts of the pigment on a medium with no added sucrose (although a small amount of sugar was probably supplied by 15-16% coconut milk).

Cymbidium protocorms contain high chlorophyll levels only if they are cultured on media containing 0.2-0.5% sucrose. Their degree of greening declines rapidly when they are grown on sucrose concentrations higher than this (VansĂŠveren-Van Espen, 1973). Likewise, orchid protocorm-like bodies will not become green and cannot develop into plantlets if sucrose is present in the medium beyond the stage of their differentiation from the explants. Where added sucrose does reduce chlorophyll formation, it is thought that the synthesis of 5aminolaevulinic acid (ALA - a precursor of the porphyrin molecules of which chlorophyll is composed) is reduced due to an inhibition of the activity of the enzyme ALA synthase (Pamplin and


Chapter 4

Chapman, 1975). Sugars apart from sucrose are not inhibitory (Edelman and Hanson, 1972; El Hinnawiy, 1974). It has been said that cells grown on sucrose for prolonged periods may permanently lose the ability to synthesise chlorophyll (Van Huystee, 1977). Plastids become converted to amyloplasts packed with starch and this may change the expression of plastid DNA (Gunning and Steer, 1975) or result in a reduction of plastid RNA (Rosner et al., 1977). A small amount of photosynthesis may be carried out by cultured shoots providing they are not maintained on media containing a high concentration of sucrose. Photosynthesis increased in Rosa shoot cultures when they were grown initially on 20 or 40 g/l sucrose which was decreased to 10 g/l in successive subcultures (Langford and Wainwright, 1987). An increase in photosynthesis occurs when sucrose is omitted from the medium in which rooted plantlets are growing (Short et al., 1987), but these treatments are not successful in ensuring a greater survival of plantlets when they are transferred extra vitrum. A more recent study also showed the relative contribution of autotrophic and heterotrophic carbon metabolism in cultured potato plants (Wolf et al., 1998). With 8% sucrose in the medium 90% of the tissue carbon was of heterotrophic origin in lightgrown plants; while on 3% sucrose, only 50% was of heterotrophic origin. 3.6 STARCH ACCUMULATION AND MORPHOGSNESIS

3.6.1. Starch deposition preceeding morphogenesis.

Cells of callus and suspension cultures commonly accumulate starch in their plastids and it is particularly prevalent in cells at the stationary phase. Starch in cells of rice suspensions had different chemical properties to that in the endosperm of seeds (Landry and Smyth, 1988). In searching for features which might be related to later morphogenetic events in Nicotiana callus, Murashige and co-workers (Murashige and Nakano, 1968; Thorpe and Murashige, 1968a, b) noticed that starch accumulated preferentially in cells sited where shoot primordia ultimately formed. The starch is produced from sucrose supplied in the culture medium (Thorpe et al., 1986). As a result of this work, it was suggested that starch accumulation might be a prerequisite of morphogenesis. In tobacco, starch presumably acts as a direct cellular reserve of the energy required for morphogenesis, because it disappears rapidly as meristenoids and shoot primordia are formed (Thorpe and Meier, 1974, 1975). Morphogenesis is an

131

energy-demanding process and callus maintained on a shoot-inducing medium does have a greater respiration rate than similar tissue kept on a noninductive medium (Thorpe and Murashige, 1970; Thorpe and Meier, 1972). Organ-forming callus of tobacco has been found to accumulate starch prior to shoot or root formation, whereas callus not capable of morphogenesis did not do so (Kavi Kishor and Mehta, 1982). 3.6.2. Morphogenesis without starch deposition Cells of other plants which become committed to initiate organs do not necessarily accumulate starch as a preliminary to morphogenesis and it seems likely that the occurrence of this phenomenon is speciesrelated. The deposition of starch was observed as an early manifestation of organogenesis in Pinus coulteri embryos (Patel and Berlyn, 1983), but not in those of Picea abies (Von Arnold, 1987). Although zygotic embryos of the latter species immediately began to accumulate starch (particularly in the chloroplasts of cells in the cortex) when they were placed on a medium containing sucrose. It was never observed in meristematic cells from which adventitious buds developed (Von Arnold, 1987). However, if a major role for the accumulation of starch prior to the initiation of organized development is for energy production, this role would be satisfied by the lipid reserves in zygotic embryos of conifers (Thorpe, 1982). Indeed, the rapid and nearly linear degradation of triglycerides during the period of high respiration during shoot initiation in excised cotyledons of radiata pine (Biondi and Thorpe, 1982; Douglas et al., 1982) would support this view. Meristematic centres in bulb scales of Nerine bowdenii can be detected as groups of cells from which starch is absent (Grootaarts et al., 1981). Starch was not accumulated in caulogenic callus of Rosa persica x R. xanthina initiated from recentlyinitiated shoot cultures, but cells did accumulate starch when the shoot forming capacity of the callus was lost after more than three passages (Lloyd et al., 1988). Callus derived from barley embryos was noted to accumulate starch very rapidly and this was accompanied by a reduction in osmotic pressure within the cells (Granatek and Cockerline, 1978). Gibberellic acid, which in this plant could be used to induce shoot formation, brought about an increase in cell osmolarity. There are some further examples where a diminution of the amount of stored carbohydrate in cultured tissues has restored or improved their


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organogenetic capacity. A salt-tolerant line of alfalfa cells which showed no ability for shoot regeneration after three and a half years in culture on 3% sucrose was induced to form shoots and plantlets by being cultured for one passage of 24 days on 1% sucrose, before being returned to a medium containing 3% sucrose and a high 2,4-D level (Rains et al., 1980, and personal communication). Cells which in 3% sucrose were full of starch became starch-depleted during culture on a lower sucrose level. The number of somatic embryos formed by embryogenic ‘Shamouti’ orange callus, was increased when sucrose was omitted from the medium for one passage, before being returned to Murashige and Tucker (1969) medium with 5-6% sucrose (Kochba and Button, 1974).

3.6.3. Unusual sugars In some plants, unusual sugars are able to regulate morphogenesis and differentiation. Galactose stimulates embryogenesis in Citrus cultures (Kochba et al., 1978) and can enhance the maturation of alfalfa embryos. Callus of Cucumis sativus grew most rapidly on raffinose and was capable of forming roots when grown on this sugar; somatic embryos were only differentiated when the callus was cultured on sucrose (88-175 mM), but if a small amount of stachyose (0.3 mM) was added to 88 mM sucrose the callus produced adventitious shoots instead (Kim and Janick, 1989). Stachyose is the major translocated carbohydrate in cucurbits.

4. OSMOTIC EFFECT OF MEDIA INGREDIENTS Besides having a purely nutritive effect, solutions of inorganic salts and sugars, which compose tissue culture media, influence plant cell growth through their osmotic properties. A discussion is most conveniently accommodated at this point, as many of the papers published on the subject stress the osmotic effects of added sugars. 4.1. OSMOTIC AND WATER POTENTIALS: A GENERAL INTRODUCTION

Water movement into and out of a plant cell is governed by the relative concentrations of dissolved substances in the external and internal solutions, and by the pressure exerted by its restraining cell wall. The manner of defining the respective forces has changed in recent years, and as both old and new terminology are found in the tissue culture literature, the following brief description may assist the reader. More detailed explanations can be found in many text books on plant physiology. In the older concept, cells were considered to take up water by suction (i.e. by exerting a negative pressure) induced by the osmotically active concentration of dissolved substances within the cell. The suction force or suction pressure (SP) was defined as that resulting from the osmotic pressure of the cell sap (OPcs) minus the osmotic pressure of the external solution (OPext), and the pressure exerted on, and stretching the cell wall, turgor pressure (TP) - so called because it is at a maximum when the cells are turgid. This may be represented by the equations: SP = (OPcs - OPext) – TP or SP = OPcs - (OPext + TP).

These definitions devised by botanists, are not satisfactory thermodynamically because water should be considered to move down an energy gradient, losing energy as it does so. The term water potential (Ψ - Greek capital letter psi) is now used, and solutions of compounds in water are said to exert an osmotic potential. As the potential of pure water is defined as being zero, and dissolved substances cause it to be reduced, solutions have osmotic potentials, Ψs (or Ψπ - Greek small letter pi) which are negative in value. Water is said to move from a region of high potential (having a less negative value) to one that is lower (having a more negative value). Both osmotic pressure and osmotic potential are used as terms in tissue culture literature and are equivalent except that they are opposite in sign (i.e. an OP of +6 bar equals a Ψs of -6 bar). Thermodynamically, the cell’s turgor pressure is defined as a positive pressure potential (Ψp). The water potential of a cell (Ψcell ) is then equal to the sum of its osmotic and pressure potentials plus the force holding water in microcapillaries or bound to the cell wall matrix (Ψm): Ψ cell = Ψs + Ψp + Ψm Modern statements of the older suction pressure concept are therefore that the difference in water potential (i.e. the direction of water movement) between a cell and solution outside is given by: ΔΨ = (Ψsinside cell – Ψsoutside cell) – Ψp or ΔΨ = Ψ cell – Ψπoutside and when ΔΨ = 0 (at equilibrium) Ψπoutside = Ψ cell The force of water movement between two cells, `


Chapter 4

‘A’ and ‘B’, of different water potential, is given by: ΔΨ = Ψ cellA – ΨcellB the direction of movement being towards the more negative water potential. The osmotic potential (pressure) of solutions is determined by their molar concentration and by temperature. The water potential of a plant tissue culture medium (Ψtcm) is equivalent to the osmotic potential of the dissolved compounds (Ψs). There is no pressure potential but, if they are added, substances such as agar and Gelrite contribute a matric potential (Ψm): Ψtcm = Ψs + Ψm Osmotic pressure and water potential are measured in standard pressure units thus: 1 bar = 0.987 atm = 106 dynes cm–2 = 105 Pa (0.1 MPa = 1 bar). Whereas molarity is defined as number of gram moles of a substance in one litre of a solution (i.e. one litre of solution requires less than one litre of solvent), molality is the number of gram moles of solute per kilogram of solvent, and thus, unlike osmotic potential (osmolality, measured in pressure units) is independent of temperature. It is therefore more convenient to give measurements of osmotic pressure in osmolality units. The osmole (Osm) is defined as: The unit of the osmolality of a solution exerting an osmotic pressure equal to that of an ideal nondissociating substance which has a concentration of one mole of solute per kilogram of solvent. The osmolality of a very dilute solution of a substance which does not dissociate into ions, will be the same as its molality (i.e. g moles per kilogram of solvent). The osmolality of a weak solution of a salt,

or salts, which has completely dissociated into ions, will equal that of the total molality of the ions. The osmotic potential of dilute solutions approximates to Van’t Hoff’s equation: Ψ = -cRT; where c = concentration of solutes in mol/litre; R = the gas constant and T = temperature in °K From the above equation, at 0°C one litre of a solution containing 1 mole of an undissociated compound, or 1 mole of ions, could be expected to have an osmolality of 1 Osm/kg, and an osmotic (water) potential of: Ψ= -1 (mole) x 0.082054 (atm /mole/°C) x 273.16 (°K) = - 22.414 atm Thus, although in practice the Van’t Hoff equation must be corrected by the osmotic coefficient, Φ: Ψ = − Φ cRT (Lang, 1967), it is possible to give approximate figures for converting osmolality into osmotic potential pressure units. These are shown in Table 4.3. This table can also be used to estimate the osmotic potential of nondissociating molecules such as sugars or mannitol. Thus at 25°C, 30 g/l sucrose (molecular wt. 342.3) should exert an osmotic potential of: 30 -2.4789 x = −0.217 MPa 342.3 The observed potential is -0.223 Mpa (Table 4.4). A definition. The osmotic properties of solutions can be difficult to describe without confusion. In this book, the addition of solutes to a solvent (which makes the osmotic or water potential more negative, but makes the osmolality of the solution increase to a larger positive value), has been said to reduce

Table 4.3 Factors by which osmolality (Osm/kg) should be multiplied to estimate an equivalent osmotic potential in pressure units.

For conversion to Atm Bar Dyne/cm2 Mpa *

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Multiply Osm/kg by the factor shown for an equivalent osmotic potential in pressure units1 15 ºC 20 ºC 0 ºC 25 ºC 30 ºC -22.414 -23.645 -24.055 -24.465 -24.875 -22.711 -23.958 -24.374 -24.789 -25.205 -22.711 -23.958 -24.374 -24.789 -25.205 x 106 x 106 x 106 x 106 x 106 -2.2711 -2.3958 -2.4374 -2.4789 -2.5205

Divide pressure units by the figures shown to find approximate osmolality, -223 1 e.g. − 223 kPa = x = 0.090 Osm/kg. 1000 - 2.4789


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II Table 4.4 The osmolality and osmotic potential of sucrose solutions at different concentrations.

Sucrose concentration (% , w/v) (mM) 0.5 14.61 1.0 29.21 1.5 43.82 2.0 58.43 2.5 73.04 3.0 87.64 4.0 116.86 5.0 175.28 6.0 233.71 8.0 292.14 10.0 350.57

Osmolality (Osm/kg) 0.015 0.030 0.045 0.060 0.075 0.090 0.121 0.186 0.253 0.324 0.396

(decrease) the osmotic potential of solutions. MS medium containing 3% sucrose (osmolality, ca. 186 mOsm/kg; ca. -461 kPa at 25°C) is thus described as having a lower water potential than the medium of White (1954) supplemented with 2% sucrose (osmolality, ca. 78 mOsm/kg; ca. −193 kPa at 25°C). 4.2. THE OSMOTIC POTENTIAL OF TISSUE CULTURE MEDIA

4.2.1. The total osmotic potential of solutes

The approximate total osmotic potential of a medium due to dissolved substances, can be estimated from: Ψs = Ψsmacronutrients + Ψssugars When 3% w/v sucrose is added to Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium, the osmolality of a filter sterilised preparation rises from 0.096 to 0.186 Osm/kg and at 25°C, the osmotic potential of the medium decreases from -0.237 to -0.460 MPa. Sugars are thus responsible for much of the osmotic potential of normal plant culture media. Even without any inversion to monosaccharides, the addition of 3% w/v sucrose is responsible for over four fifths of the total osmotic potential of White (1954) medium, 60% of that of Schenk and Hildebrandt (1972), and for just under one half that of MS. The contribution of the gelling agent. The water potential of media solidified with gels is more negative than that of a liquid medium, due to their matric potential, but this component is probably relatively small (Amador and Stewart, 1987). In the following sections, the matric potential of semi-solid media containing ca. 6 g/l agar has been assumed to be -0.01 MPa at 25°C, but as adding extra agar to media helps to prevent hyperhydricity, it is possible

Osmotic potential at 25 ºC (MPa) -0.037 -0.074 -0.112 -0.149 -0.186 -0.223 -0.300 -0.461 -0.627 -0.803 -0.982

that this is an underestimate. The contribution of nutrient salts. Inorganic salts dissociate into ions when they are dissolved in water, so that the water potential of their solutions (especially weak solutions) does not depend on the molality (or molarity) of undissociated compounds, but on the molality (or molarity) of their ions. Thus a solution of KCl with a molality of 0.1, will have a theoretical osmolality of 0.2, because in solution it dissociates into 0.1 mole K+ and 0.1 mole Cl–. Osmolality of a solution of mixed salts is dependent on the total molality of ions in solution. Dissociation may not be complete, especially when several different compounds are dissolved together as in plant culture media, which is a further reason why calculated predictions of water potential may be imprecise. In practice, osmotic potentials should be determined by actual measurement with an osmometer. Clearly though, osmotic potential of a culture medium is related to the concentration of solutes, particularly that of the macronutrients and sugar. Of the inorganic salts in nutrient media, the macronutrients contribute most to the final osmotic (water) potential because of their greater concentration. The osmolality of these relatively dilute solutions is very similar to the total osmolarity of the constituent ions at 0°C, and can therefore be estimated from the total molarity of the macronutrient ions. Thus based on its macronutrient composition, a liquid Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium (without sugar) with a total macronutrient ion concentration of 95.75 mM, will have an osmolality of ca. 0.0958 osmoles (Osm) per kilogram of water solvent (95.8 mOsm/kg), at 25°C, an osmotic potential of ca. 0.237 MPa (237 kPa). Estimates of osmolality


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Chapter 4

derived in this way agree closely to actual measurements of osmolality or osmolarity for named media given in the papers of Yoshida et al. (1973), Kavi Kishor and Reddy (1986) and Lazzeri et al. (1988) (see Table 4.5). The contribution of sugars. The osmolality and osmotic potential of sucrose solutions can be read from Table 4.6. Those of mannitol and sorbitol solutions of equivalent molarities will be approximately comparable. At concentrations up to 3% w/v, the osmolality of sucrose is close to molarity. It will be seen that the osmotic potential (in MPa) of sucrose solutions at 25°C can be roughly estimated by multiplying the % weight/volume concentration by -0.075: that of the monosaccharides fructose, glucose, mannitol and sorbitol (which have a molecular weight approximately 0.52 times that of sucrose), by multiplying by -0.14. If any of the sucrose in a medium becomes hydrolysed into monosaccharides, the osmotic potential of the combined sugar components (sucrose + glucose + fructose), (Ψssugars), will be lower (more negative) than would be estimated from Table 4.5. The effect can be seen in Table 4.6. From this data it seems that 40-50% of the sucrose added to MS medium by Lazzeri et al. (1988) was broken down into monosaccharides during autoclaving. Hydrolysis of sucrose by plant-derived invertase enzymes will also have a similar effect on osmotic potential. In some suspension cultures, all sucrose remaining in the medium is inverted within 24 h. A fully inverted sucrose solution would have almost double the negative potential of the original solution, but as the appearance of glucose and fructose by enzymatic hydrolysis usually occurs concurrently with the uptake of sugars by the tissues, it will tend to have a stabilizing effect on osmotic potential during the passage of a culture. Reported measurements of the

osmolality of MS medium containing 3% sucrose, after autoclaving, are: 230 mOsm/kg (0.65% Phytagar; Lazzeri et al., 1988) 240 ± 20 mOsm/kg (0.6-0.925% agar; Scherer et al., 1988) 230 ± 50 mOsm/kg (0.2-0.4% Gelrite; Scherer et al., 1988) 4.2.2. Decreasing osmotic potential with other osmotica

By adding soluble substances in place of some of the sugar in a medium, it can be shown that sugars not only act as a carbohydrate source, but also as osmoregulants. Osmotica employed for the deliberate modification of osmotic potential, should be largely lacking other biological effects. Those most frequently selected are the sugar alcohols mannitol and sorbitol. It is assumed that plants that do not have a native pathway for sugar alcohol biosynthesis are also deficient in pathways to assimilate them. Sugar alcohols, though, are usually translocated, and may be metabolised and utilized to various degrees (Steinitz, 1999; for mannitol Lipavska and Vreugedenhil, 1996 Tian and Russell, 1999; for sorbitol Pua et al., 1984). Polyethylene glycol may be more helpful as an inert nonpenetrating osmolyte although it may contain toxic contaminants (Chazen et al., 1995). Mannitol can easily penetrate cell walls, but the plasmalemma is considered to be relatively impermeable to it (Rains, 1989), whereas high-molecular-weight polyethylene glycol 4000 is too large to penetrate cell walls (Carpita et al., 1979; Rains, 1989). Thus, a nonpenetrating osmolyte cannot penetrate into the plant cells, but inhibits water uptake. Sodium sulphate and sodium chloride have also been used in some experiments.

Table 4.5. Predicted osmolality and the osmolality actually observed after autoclaving (data from Lazzeri et al., 1988).

MS + agar MS + agar + 0.5% sucrose MS + agar + 1.0% sucrose MS + agar + 2.0% sucrose MS + agar + 4.0% sucrose † 161 mOsm/kg by Brown et al. (1989)

Salts (mOsm/kg) 96 96 96 96 96

Predicted osmolality (no sucrose hydrolysis) Agar Sucrose (mOsm/kg) (mOsm/kg) 4 4 15 4 30 4 60 4 121

Total (mOsm/kg) 100 115 130 160 221

Oberved total osmolality (mOsm/kg) 115 140 184† 276


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II Table 4.6. The osmolality and osmotic potential of sucrose solutions of different concentrations.

Sucrose Concentration (% w/v) 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 4.0 6.0 8.0 10.0 12.0

mM 14.61 29.21 43.82 58.43 73.04 87.64 116.86 175.28 233.71 292.14 350.57

4.3. EFFECTS AND USES OF OSMOLYTES IN TISSUE CULTURE MEDIA

4.3.1. Protoplast isolation and culture

The osmotic potential of a plant cell is counterbalanced by the pressure potential exerted by the cell wall. To safely remove the cell wall during protoplast isolation without damaging the plasma membrane, it has been found necessary to plasmolyse cells before wall-degrading enzymes are used. This is done by placing the cells in a solution of lower water potential than that of the cell. Glucose, sucrose and especially mannitol and sorbitol, are usually added to protoplast isolation media for this purpose, either singly or in combination, at a total concentration of 0.35-0.7 M. These addenda are then retained in the subsequent protoplast culture medium, their concentration being progressively reduced as cell colonies start to grow. Tobacco cell suspensions take up only a very small amount of mannitol from solution (Thompson and Thorpe, 1981) and its effect as an osmotic agent appears to be exerted outside the cell (Thorpe, 1982). When protoplasts were isolated from Pseudotsuga and Pinus suspensions, which required a high concentration of inositol to induce embryogenesis , it was found to be essential to add 60 g/l (0.33 M) myoinositol (plus 30 g/l sucrose, 20 g/l glucose and 10 g/l sorbitol) to the isolation and culture media (Gupta et al., 1988). Mannitol and further amounts of sorbitol could not serve as substitutes. 4.3.2. Osmotic effects on growth

Solutions of different concentrations partly exert their effect on growth and morphogenesis by their nutritional value, and partly through their varying

Osmolality Osm/Kg 0.015 0.030 0.045 0.060 0.075 0.090 0.121 0.186 0.253 0.324 0.396

Osmotic potential at 25°C MPa -0.037 -0.074 -0.112 -0.149 -0.186 -0.223 -0.300 -0.461 -0.627 -0.803 -0.982

osmotic potential. LapeĂąa et al (1988) estimated that three quarters of the sucrose necessary to promote the optimum rate of direct adventitious shoot formation from Digitalis obscura hypocotyls, was required to supply energy, while the surplus regulated morphogenesis osmotically. How osmotic potential influences cellular processes is still far from clear. Cells maintained in an environment with low (highly negative) osmotic potential, lose water and in consequence the water potential of the cell decreases. This brings about changes in metabolism and cells accumulate high levels of proline (Rabe, 1990). The activity of the main respiratory pathway of cells (the cytochrome pathway) is reduced in conditions of osmotic stress, in favour of an alternative oxidase system (De KlerkKiebert and Van der Plas, 1985). The increase of the concentration of osmolytes, may also result in high levels of the plant hormone abscisic acid, both extra vitrum and in vitro (recent reviews Zhu, 2002; Riera et al., 2005). Equilibrium between the water potential of the medium and that of Echinopsis callus, only occurred when the callus was dead. Normally the water potential of the medium was greater so that water flowed into the callus (Kirkham and Holder, 1981). Clearly this situation could not occur in media which were too concentrated, and Cleland (1977) proposed that a critical water potential needs to be established within a cell before cell expansion and cell division, can occur. The osmotic concentration of culture media could therefore be expected to influence the rate of cell division or the success of morphogenesis of the cells or tissues they support. Both the inorganic and organic components will be


Chapter 4

contributory. The cells of many plants which are natives of sea-shores or deserts (e.g. many cacti) characteristically have a low water potential (Ψcell) and in consequence may need to be cultured in media of relatively low (highly negative) osmotic potentials (Lassocinski, 1985). Sucrose concentrations of 4.56% have sometimes been found to be beneficial for such plants (Sachar and Iyer, 1959; Johnson and Emino, 1979; Mauseth, 1979; Lassocinski, 1985). Above normal sucrose concentrations can often be beneficial in media for anther culture [e.g 13% sucrose in Gamborg et al. (1968) B5 medium Chuong and Beversdorf, 1985], and for the culture of immature embryos [e.g. 10% sucose in MS medium Stafford and Davies (1979); 12.5% in Phillips and Collins (1979) L2. medium - Phillips et al. (1982)]. If the osmotic potential of the medium does indeed influence the growth of tissue cultures, one might expect the sucrose concentration, which is optimal for growth, to vary from one medium to another, more sucrose being required in dilute media than in more concentrated ones. Evans et al. (1976) found this was so with cultures of soybean tissue. Maximum rates of callus growth were obtained in media containing either: 1. 50-75% of MS basal salts + 3-4% sucrose, or, 2. 75-100% of MS basal salts + 2% sucrose. Similarly Yoshida et al. (1973) obtained equally good growth rates of Nicotiana glutinosa callus with nutrient media in which 1. the salts exerted -0.274 MPa and sucrose -0.223 MPa, or 2. the salts exerted -0.365 MPa and sucrose -0.091 MPa. It was essential to add 60 g/l sucrose (i.e. Ψssucrose= -0.461 MPa at 25°C) to the ‘MEDIUM’ salts of de Fossard et al. (1974) (Ψ = -0.135 MPa) to obtain germination and seedling growth from immature zygotic embryos of tomato. However, if the ‘HIGH’ salts (Ψsmedium = -0.260 MPa) were used, 60 g/l sucrose gave only slightly better growth than 2.1 g/l (Ψssucrose = -0.156 MPa) (Neal and Topoleski, 1983). A detailed examination of osmotic effects of culture media on callus cultures was conducted by Kimball et al. (1975). Various organic substances were added to a modified Miller (1961) medium (which included 2% sucrose), to decrease the osmotic potential (Ψs) from -0.290 MPa. Surprisingly, the greatest callus growth was said to occur at -1.290 to -1.490 MPa (unusually low potentials which normally inhibit growth — see below) in the presence of

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mannitol or sorbitol, and between -1.090 to -1.290 MPa when extra sucrose or glucose were added. On the standard medium, many cells of the callus were irregularly shaped; as the osmotic potential of the solution was decreased there were fewer irregularities and at about Ψs = -1.090 MPa all the cells were spherical. The percentage dry matter of cultures also increased as Ψs was decreased. Doley and Leyton (1970) found that decreasing the water (osmotic) potential of half White (1963) medium by -0.100 or -0.200 MPa through adding more sucrose (and/or polyethylene glycol), caused the rate of callus growth from the cut ends of Fraxinus stem sections to be lower than on a standard medium. At the reduced water potential, callus had suberised surfaces and grew through the activity of a vascular cambium. It also contained more lignified xylem and sclereids. At each potential there was an optimal IAA concentration for xylem differentiation. When the concentration of sucrose in a high salt medium such as MS is increased above 4-5 per cent, there begins to be a progressive inhibition of cell growth in many types of culture. This appears to be an osmotic effect because addition of other osmotically-active substances (such as mannitol and polyethyleneglycol) to the medium causes a similar response (Maretzki et al., 1972). Usually, high concentrations of sucrose are not toxic, at least not in the short term, and cell growth resumes when tissues or organs are transferred to media containing normal levels of sugar. Increase of Ψs is one method of extending the shelf life of cultures. Pech and Romani (1979) found that the addition of 0.4 M mannitol to MS medium (modified organics), was able to prevent the rapid cell lysis and death which occurred when 2,4-D was withdrawn from pear suspension cultures. Decreasing the osmotic potential (usually by adding mannitol) together with lowering of the temperature has been used to reduce the growth rate for preservation of valuable genotypes in vitro. This has been reported, among others, for potato (Gopal et al., 2002; Harding et al., 1997), Dioscorea alata (Borges et al., 2003) and enset (Negash et al., 2001) 4.3.3. Tissue water content

The water content of cultured tissues decreases as the level of sucrose in the medium is increased. Isolated embryos of barley were grown by Dunwell (1981) on MS medium in sucrose concentrations up to 12 per cent. Dry weight increased as the sucrose concentration was raised to 6 or 9 per cent and shoot length of some varieties was also greater than on 3 per cent sucrose. Water content of the developing


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

plantlets was inversely proportional to the sucrose level. The dry weight of Lilium auratum bulbs and roots on MS medium increased as the sucrose concentration was augmented to 90 g/l but decreased dramatically with 150 g/l because growth was inhibited. The fresh weight/dry weight ratio of both kinds of tissue once again declined progressively as sucrose was added to the medium (0 - 150 g/l). In a medium containing 30 mg/l sucrose, the number and fresh weight of bulblets increased as MS salt strength was raised from one eighth to two times its normal concentration. An interaction between salt and sucrose concentrations was demonstrated in that optimum dry weight of bulbs could be obtained in either single strength MS + 120 g/l sucrose (osmolality, without sucrose inversion = ca. 492 mOsm/kg; Ψs = ca. -1.22 MPa), or double strength MS + 60 g/l sucrose (osmolality, without sucrose inversion = ca. 378 mOsm/kg; Ψs = ca. -0.94 MPa) (Takayama and Misawa, 1979). 4.3.4. Morphogenesis

The osmotic effect of sucrose in culture solutions was well demonstrated by a series of experiments on tobacco callus by Brown et al., (1979): rates of callus growth and shoot regeneration which were optimal on culture media containing 3 per cent sucrose, could be maintained when the sugar was replaced partially by osmotically equivalent levels of mannitol. The optimal (medium plus sucrose) here was between -0.4 and -0.6 MPa, and increasing sucrose levels above 3 per cent brought a progressive decrease in shoot regeneration. Similar results were obtained by Barg and Umiel (1977), but when they kept the osmotic potential of the culture solution roughly constant by additions of mannitol, the sucrose concentrations optimal for tobacco callus growth or morphogenesis were not the same (Fig. 4.2) Brown and Thorpe (1980) subsequently found that callus of Nicotiana capable of forming shoots, had a water potential (Ψ) of -0.8 MPa, while nonshoot-forming callus had a Ψ of -0.4 MPa. The two relationships were: Shoot forming callus Ψcell = Ψs +Ψp + Ψm –0.8 =–1 + 0.4 + 0 MPa Non-shoot-forming callus Ψcell = Ψs +Ψp + Ψm –0.4 = –0 + 0.3 + 0 MPa Correct water potential. An optimum rate of growth and adventitious shoot formation of wheat callus occurred on MS medium containing 2%

sucrose. Only a small number of shoots were produced on the medium supplemented with 1% sucrose, but if mannitol was added so that the total Ψcell = Ψs was the same as when 2% sucrose was present, the formation of adventitious shoots was stimulated (Galiba and Erdei, 1986). Very similar results were obtained by Lapeña et al. (1988). A small number of shoot buds were produced from Digitalis obscura hypocotyls on MS medium containing 1% sucrose: more than twice as many if the medium contained 2% sucrose (total Ψs given as -0.336 MPa), or 1% sucrose plus mannitol to again give a total Ψs equal to -0.336 MPa. Water potential can modify commitment. Morphogenesis can also be regulated by altering the water potential of media. Shepard and Totten (1977) found that very small (ca. 1-2 mm) calluses formed from potato mesophyll protoplasts were unable to survive in 1 or 2% sucrose, and the base of larger (510 mm) ones turned brown, while the upper portions turned green but formed roots and no shoots. The calli became fully green only on 0.2-0.5% sucrose. At these levels shoots were formed in the presence of 0.2-0.3 M mannitol. When the level of mannitol was reduced to 0.05 M, the proportion of calli differentiating shoots fell from 61% to 2%. The possibility of an osmotic affect was suggested because equimolar concentrations of myo-inositol were just as effective in promoting shoot regeneration. Another way to modify morphogenesis is to increase the ionic concentration of the medium. Pith phloem callus of tobacco proliferates on Zapata et al. (1983) MY1 medium supplemented with 10–5 M IAA and 2.5 x 10–6 M kinetin, but forms shoots on Murashige et al. (1972) medium containing 10–5 M IAA and 10–5 M kinetin. These two media contain very similar macronutrients (total ionic concentrations, respectively 96 and 101mM), yet adding 0.51.0% sodium sulphate (additional osmolality 89-130 mOsm/kg) decreased the shoot formation of callus grown on the shoot-forming medium, but increased it on the medium which previously only supported callus proliferation (Pua et al., 1985a). Callus cultured in the presence of sodium sulphate retained its shoot-producing capacity over a long period, although the effect was not permanent (Pua et al., 1985b; Chandler et al., 1987). In these experiments shoot formation was also enhanced by sodium chloride and mannitol. Increasing the level of sucrose from 1 to 3 per cent in MS medium containing 0.3 mg/l IAA,


Chapter 4

induced tobacco callus to form shoots, while further increasing it to 6 per cent resulted in root differentiation (Rawal and Mehta, 1982; Mehta, 1982). The formation of adventitious shoots from Nicotiana tabacum pith callus is inhibited on a medium with MS salts if 10-15% sucrose is added. Preferential zones of cell division and meristemoids produced in 3% sucrose then become disorganised into parenchymatous tissue (Hammersley-Straw and Thorpe, 1988).

139

It should be noted that auxin which has a very important influence on the growth and morphogenesis of cultured plant cells, causes their osmotic potential to be altered (Van Overbeek, 1942; Hackett, 1952; Ketellapper, 1953). When tobacco callus is grown on a medium which promotes shoot regeneration, the cells have a greater osmotic pressure (or more negative water potential) than callus grown on a non-inductive medium (Brown and Thorpe, 1980; Brown, 1982).

Fig. 4.2 The effect of sucrose concentration on the growth and morphogenesis of tobacco callus. [Drawn from data for four lines of tobacco callus in Barg and Umiel, 1977]. Callus growth = solid line. Morphogenesis = line of dashes. Scale was, 1 = No differentiation, 2 = Dark green callus with meristemoids, 3 = leafy shoots

Apogamous buds on ferns. Whittier and Steeves (1960) found a very clear effect of glucose concentration on the formation of apogamous buds on prothalli of the fern Pteridium. (Apogamous buds give rise to the leafy and spore-producing generation of the plant which has the haploid genetic constitution of the prothallus). Bud formation was greatest between 2-3% glucose (optimum 2.5%). Results which confirm this observation were obtained by Menon and Lal (1972) in the moss Physcomitrium pyriforme. Here apogamous sporophytes were formed most freely in low sucrose concentrations (0.5-2%) and low light conditions (50-100 lux), and were not produced at all when prothalli were cultured in 6% sucrose or high light (5000-6000 lux). Whittier and Steeves (loc. cit.) noted that they could not obtain the same rate of apogamous bud production by using 0.25% glucose plus mannitol or polyethyleneglycol; on the other hand, adding these osmotica to 2.5% glucose (so that the osmotic potential of the solution

was equivalent to one with 8% sucrose) did reduce bud formation. It therefore appeared that the stimulatory effect of glucose on morphogenesis was mainly due to its action as a respiratory substrate, but that inhibition might be caused by an excessively depressed osmotic potential. Differentiation of floral buds. Pieces of coldstored chicory root were found by Margara and Rancillac (1966) to require more sucrose (up to 68 g/l; 199 mM) to form floral shoots than to produce vegetative shoots (as little as 17 g/l; 50 mM). Tran Thanh Van and co-workers (Tran Thanh Van and Trinh, 1978) have similarly shown that the specific formation of vegetative buds, flower buds, callus or roots by thin cell layers excised from tobacco stems, could be controlled by selecting appropriate concentrations of sugars and of auxin and cytokinin growth regulators. Root formation and root growth. Media of small osmotic potential are usually employed for the


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

induction and growth of roots on micropropagated shoots. High salt levels are frequently inhibitory to root initiation. Where such levels have been used for Stage II of shoot cultures, it is common to select a low salts medium (e.g. ¼ or ½ MS), when detached shoots are required to be rooted at Stage III. By testing four concentrations of MS salts (quarter, half, three quarters and full strength) against four levels of sucrose (1, 2, 3 and 4%), Harris and Stevenson (1979) found that correct salt concentration (½ or ¼ MS) was more important than sucrose concentration for root induction on grapevine cuttings in vitro. The benefit of low salt levels for root initiation may be due more to the need for a low nitrogen level, than for an increased osmotic potential. Dunstan (1982) showed that microcuttings of several tree-fruit rootstocks rooted best on MS salts, but that in media of these concentrations, the amount of added sugar was not critical, although it was essential for there to be some present. For the best rooting of Castanea, it was important to place shoots in Lloyd and McCown (1981) WPM medium containing 4% sucrose (Serres, 1988). There are reports that an excessive sugar concentration can inhibit root formation. Green cotyledons of Sinapis alba and Raphanus sativus were found by Lovell et al. (1972) to form roots in 2% sucrose in the dark, but not in light of 5500 lux luminous intensity. In the light, rooting did occur if the explants were kept in water, or (to a lesser extent) if they were treated with DCMU (a chemical inhibitor of photosynthesis) before culture in 2% sucrose. The authors of this paper suggested that sugars were produced within the plant tissues during photosynthesis, which, added to the sucrose absorbed from the medium, provided too great a total sugar concentration for rooting. Rahman and Blake (1988) reached the same conclusion in experiments on Artocarpus heterophyllus. When shoots of this plant were kept on a rooting medium in the dark, the number and weight of roots formed on shoots, increased with the inclusion of up to 80 g/l sucrose. The optimum sucrose concentration was 40 g/l if the shoots were grown in the light. Root formation on avocado cuttings in 0.3 MS salts [plus Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) vitamins] was satisfactory with 1.5, 3 or 6% sucrose, and only reduced when 9% sucrose was added (Pliego-Alfaro, 1988). Although 4% (and occasionally 8%) sucrose has been used in media for isolated root culture, 2% has been used in the great majority of cases (Butcher and

Street, 1964). In an investigation into the effects of sucrose concentration on the growth of tomato roots, Street and McGregor (1952) found that although sucrose concentrations of between 1.5 and 2.5% caused the same rate of increase of root fresh weight, 1.5% sucrose was optimal. It produced the best rate of growth of the main root axis, and the greatest number and total length of lateral roots. Somatic embryogenesis. The osmotic potential of a medium can influence whether somatic embryogenesis can occur and can regulate the proper development of embryos. As will be shown below, a low osmotic potential is often favourable, but this is not always the case. For instance immature cotyledons of Glycine max produced somatic embryos on Phillips and Collins (1979) L2 medium containing less than 2% sucrose, but not if the concentration of sugar was increased above this level (Lippmann and Lippmann, 1984). Placing tissues in solutions with high osmotic potential will cause cells to become plasmolysed, leading to the breaking of cytoplasmic interconnections between adjacent cells (plasmodesmata). Wetherell (1984) has suggested that when cells and cell groups of higher plants are isolated by this process, they become enabled to develop independently, and express their totipotency. He pointed out that the isolation of cells of lower plants induces regeneration, and plasmolysis has long been known to initiate regeneration in multicellular algae, the leaves of mosses, fern prothallia and the gemmae of liverworts (Narayanaswami and LaRue, 1955; Miller, 1968). Carrot cell cultures preplasmolysed for 45 min in 0.5-1.0 M sucrose or 1.0 M sorbitol gave rise to many more somatic embryos when incubated in Wetherell (1969) medium with 0.5 mg/l 2,4-D than if they had not been pre-treated in this way. Moreover embryo formation was more closely synchronized. Ikeda-Iwai et al. (2003) found that in Arabidopsis a 6-12 hour treatment with 0.7 M sucrose, sorbitol or mannitol resulted in somatic embryogenesis. Callus derived from hypocotyls of Albizia richardiana, produced the greatest numbers of adventitious shoots on B5 medium containing 4% sucrose, but somatic embryos grew most readily when 2% sucrose was added. At least 1% sucrose was necessary for any kind of morphogenesis to take place (Tomar and Gupta, 1988). A similar result was obtained by Ćulafić et al. (1987) with callus from axillary buds of Rumex acetosella: adventitious shoots were produced on a medium containing MS


Chapter 4

salts and 2% sucrose (Ψs = ca. -0.39 MPa at 25°C), but embryogenesis occurred when the sucrose concentration was increased to 6% (Ψssucrose = -0.46 MPa, Ψs = ca. -0.70 MPa at 25°C) or if the medium was supplemented with 2% sucrose plus 21.3 g/l mannitol or sorbitol (which together have the same osmolality as 6% sucrose). A low (highly negative) osmotic potential helps to induce somatic embryogenesis in some other plants. Adding 10-30 g/l sorbitol to Kumar et al. (1988) L-6 medium (total macronutient ions 64.26 mM; 20 g/l sucrose), caused there to be a high level of embryogenesis in Vigna aconitifolia suspensions and the capacity for embryogenesis to be retained in longterm cultures. The formation of somatic embryos in ovary callus of Fuchsia hybrida was accelerated by adding 5% sucrose to B5 medium (Dabin and Beguin, 1987), and the induction of embryogenic callus of Euphorbia longan required the culture of young leaflets on B5 medium with 6% sucrose (Litz, 1988). There are exceptions, particularly with regard to embryo growth. The proportion of Ipomoea batatas somatic embryos forming shoots was greatest when a medium containing MS inorganics contained 1.6%, rather than 3% sucrose (Chée et al., 1990). Protocorm proliferation of orchids is most rapid when tissue is cultured in high concentrations of sucrose, but for plantlet growth, the level of sucrose must be reduced (Homès and Vanseveran-Van Espen, 1973). The induction of embryogenic callus from immature seed embryos of Zea mays was best on MS medium with 12% sucrose (Lu et al., 1982), and Ho and Vasil (1983) used 6-10% sucrose in MS medium to promote the formation of pro-embryoids from young leaves of Saccharum officinarum. However, in the experiments of Ahloowalia and Maretski (1983), somatic embryo formation from callus of this plant was best on MS medium with 3% sucrose, but growth of the embryos into complete plantlets required that the embryos should be cultured first on MS medium with 6% sucrose and then on MS with 3% sucrose. Polyethylene glycol 4000 (PEG 4000) improves root and shoot emergence without limiting embryo histodifferentiation in soybean somatic embryos (Walker and Parrott, 2001). Likewise in spruce, it was reported that polyethylene glycol might improve the quality of somatic embryos by promoting normal differentiation of the embryonic shoot and root (e.g. Stasolla et al., 2003). Non-penetrating osmotica like polyethylene glycol cannot enter plant cells, but restrict water uptake and provide a simulated drought

141

stress during embryo development. A combination of ABA and an osmoticum prevents precocious germination in white spruce (Attree et al., 1991) and allows embryo development to proceed. Advantageous effects of polyethylene glycol and ABA have been reported in a number of species (Hevea brasiliensis, Linossier et al., 1997; Picia abies, Bozhkov and Von Arnold, 1998; white spruce, Stasolla et al., 2003, Corydalis yanhusuo, Sagare et al., 2000; and Panax ginseng, Langhansová et al., 2004). When cultured on Sears and Deckard (1982) medium, embryogenesis in callus initiated from immature embryos of ‘Chinese Spring’ and some other varieties of wheat was incomplete, because shoot apices germinated and grew before embryos had properly formed. More typical somatic embryos could be obtained by adding 40 mM sodium or potassium chloride to the medium. The salts had to be removed to allow plantlets to develop normally (Galiba and Yamada, 1988). Transferring somatic embryos to a medium of lower (more negative) water potential is often necessary to ensure their further growth and/or germination. High sucrose levels are often required in media for the culture of zygotic embryos if they are isolated when immature. The use of 50-120 g/l sucrose in media is then reported, the higher concentrations usually being added to very weak salt mixtures. Embryos which are more fully developed when excised, grow satisfactorily in a medium with 10-30 g/l sugar. Storage organ formation. At high concentration, sucrose promotes the formation of tubers, bulbs and corms (e.g. Xu et al., 1998; Vreugdenhil et al., 1998; Ziv 2005, Gerrits and de Klerk 1992). This promotion might be mediated by ABA since osmotic stress induces ABA synthesis (Riera et al., 2005) and ABA promotes bulb (Kim et al., 1994) and tuber (Xu et al., 1998) formation. The situation is, however, more complex. Suttle and Hultstrand (1994) did not find a reduction of tuber formation in potato by adding fluridone, an ABAsynthesis inhibitor, and Xu et al. (1998) did not observe an increased ABA-level at high sucrose concentration. So in potato, the effect of sucrose is not likely to be mediated by ABA. Exogenous ABA does not promote Gladiolus corm formation (Dantu and Bhojwani, 1995) but bulb formation of lily was completely inhibited by fluridone and restored by simultaneous addition of ABA (Kim et al., 1994). To establish the effect of osmoticum directly, experiments have been carried out with addition of


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

mannitol instead of sucrose. Mannitol did not promote corm production of Gladiolus (De Bruyn and Ferreira, 1992) or bulb production in onion (Kahane and Rancillac, 1996), but data for lily suggested that, although it had a toxic effect, in this plant mannitol did stimulate bulb formation (Gerrits and De Klerk, 1992). Anther culture. The use of high concentrations of sucrose is commonly reported in papers on anther culture where the addition of 5-20% sucrose to the culture medium is found to assist the development of somatic embryos from pollen microspores. This appears to be due to an osmotic regulation of morphogenesis (Sunderland and Dunwell, 1977), for once embryoid development has commenced, such high levels of sucrose are no longer required, or may be inhibitory. A high concentration of mannitol has been used for pretreatment before the culture of barley anthers (Roberts-Oehlschlager and Dunwell 1990) and pollen (Wei et al., 1986); tobacco anthers (Imamura and Harada 1980) and pollen (Imamura et al., 1982); and before wheat microspore culture (Hu et al., 1995). A high concentration of mannitol has also been used to induce osmotic stress in microspore derived embryos of Brassica napus (Huang et al., 1991) and before anther culture of Brassica campestris (Hamaoka et al., 1991). Isolated microspores of Brassica napus cultured on a high concentration of mannitol and at a low concentration of sucrose (0.08–0.1%) yield no embryos whereas on high polyethyleneglycol 4000 the embryo yield is comparable to that of the sucrose control (Ikeda-Iwai, 2003). These results demonstrate that in microspore embryogenesis of Brassica napus the level of metabolizable carbohydrate required for microspore embryo induction and formation may be very low and that an appropriate osmoticum (polyethylene glycol 4000 or sucrose) is required. The temporary presence of high sucrose concentrations is said to prevent the proliferation of callus from diploid cells of the anther that would otherwise swamp the growth of the pollen-derived embryoids. The concentration of macronutrient ions generally used in anther culture media is not especially low. In a sample of reports it was found to be 68.7 mM (George et al., 1987), and so the total osmotic potential, Ψs, (salts plus sucrose) of many anther culture media is in the range -0.55 to -1.15 MPa.

4.3.5. Relative humidity.

The vapour pressure of water is reduced by dissolving substances in it. This means that the relative humidity of the air within closed culture vessels is dependent on the water potential of the medium according to the equation: Ψ=

1000 RT ⎛ p ⎞ ⎛ dp ⎞ lne ⎜ ⎟ ⎜ p ⎟ . ⎜ p − c dc ⎟ W0 ⎠ ⎝ 0⎠ ⎝

(after Glasstone, 1947) where: Ψ, R and T are as in the Van’t Hoff equation, W0 is the molecular weight of water, c is the concentration of the solution in moles per litre, and p0 and p are respectively the vapour pressures of water and the solution. If the change in vapour pressure dependent on the density of the solution, p – c (dp/dc), is treated as unity (legitimate perhaps for very dilute solutions, or when the equation is expressed in molality, rather than molarity), it is possible to estimate relative humidity (100 × p/p0) above tissue culture media of known water potentials, from: Ψ=

1000RT ⎛ p ⎞ lne ⎜ , (Lang, 1967) ⎜ p ⎟⎟ 18.016 ⎝ 0⎠

The relative humidity above most plant tissue cultures in closed vessels is thus calculated to be in the range 99.25-99.75% (Table 4.7), the osmolality of some typical media being • White (1963), liquid, 2% sucrose, 106 mOsm/kg • MS, agar, 3% sucrose, 230 mOsm/kg • MS, agar, 6% sucrose, 359 mOsm/kg • MS, agar, 12% sucrose (unusual), 659 mOsm/kg (in these cases, 50% hydrolysis of sucrose into monosaccharides is assumed to have taken place during autoclaving) Relative humidity can be reduced below the levels indicated above by, for example, covering vessels with gas-permeable closures while using nongelatinous support systems (see Section 6.3.1).


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Chapter 4

Table 4.7 The relative humidity within culture vessels which would be expected to result from the use of plant culture media of various osmolalities or water potentials

Relative humidity in vessel (%) 98 99 99.5 99.75

Water potential (kPa) at temperature: Osmolality (mOsm/kg) 1121 558 278 139

15 ºC -2686 -1337 -667 -333

20 ºC -2733 -1360 -678 -339

25 ºC -2780 -1383 -690 -344

30 ºC -2826 -1406 -701 -350

5. pH OF TISSUE CULTURE MEDIA The relative acidity or alkalinity of a solution is assessed by its pH. This is a measure of the hydrogen ion concentration; the greater the concentration of H+ ions (actually H3O+ ions), the more acid the solution. As pH is defined as the negative logarithm of hydrogen ion concentration, acid solutions have low pH values (0-7) and alkaline solutions, high values (7-14). Solutions of pH 4 (the concentration of H+ is 10–4 mol.l–1) are therefore more acid than those of pH 5 (where the concentration of H+ is 10–5 mol.l–1); solutions of pH 9 are more alkaline than those of pH 8. Pure water, without any dissolved gases such as CO2, has a neutral pH of 7. To judge the effect of medium pH, it is essential to discriminate between the various sites where the pH might have an effect: (1) in the explant, (2) in the medium and (3) at the interface between explant and medium. The pH of a culture medium must be such that it does not disrupt the plant tissue. Within the acceptable limits the pH also: • governs whether salts will remain in a soluble form; • influences the uptake of medium ingredients and plant growth regulator additives; • has an effect on chemical reactions (especially those catalysed by enzymes); and • affects the gelling efficiency of agar. This means that the effective range of pH for media is restricted. As will be explained, medium pH is altered during culture, but as a rule of thumb, the initial pH is set at 5.5 – 6.0. In culture media, detrimental effects of an adverse pH are generally related to ion availability and nutrient uptake rather than cell damage. 5.1. THE pH OF MEDIA

5.1.1. Buffering

The components of common tissue culture media have only little buffering capacity. Vacin and Went (1949) investigated the effect on pH of each

compound in their medium. The chemicals which seemed to be most instrumental in changing pH were FeSO4.7H2O and Ca(NO3)2.4H2O. Replacing the former with ferric tartrate at a weight which maintained the original molar concentration of iron, and substituting Ca3(PO4)2 and KNO3 for Ca(NO3)2.4H2O, they found that the solution was more effectively buffered. While amino acids also showed promise as buffering agents, KH2PO4 was ineffective unless it was at high concentration. In some early experiments attempts were made to stabilise pH by incorporating a mixture of KH2PO4 and K2HPO4 into a medium (see Kordan, 1959, for example), but Street and Henshaw (1966) found that significant buffering was only achieved by soluble phosphates at levels inhibitory to plant growth. For this reason Sheat et al. (1959) proposed the buffering of plant root culture media with sparingly-soluble calcium phosphates, but unfortunately if these compounds are autoclaved with other medium constituents, they absorb micronutrients which then become unavailable. A buffer is a compound which can poise the pH level at a selected level: effective buffers should maintain the pH with little change as culture proceeds. As noted before, plant tissue culture media are normally poorly buffered. However, pH is stabilised to a certain extent when tissues are cultured in media containing both nitrate and ammonium ions. Agar and Gelrite gelling agents may have a slight buffering capacity (Scherer, 1988). Organic acids: Many organic acids can act as buffers in plant culture media. By stabilizing pH at ca. pH 5.5, they can facilitate the uptake of NH4+ when this is the only source of nitrogen, and by their own metabolism, assist the conversion of NH4+ into amino acids. There can be improvement to growth from adding organic acids to media containing both NH4+ and NO3–, but this is not always the case. Norstog and Smith (1963) noted that 0.75 mM malic


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

acid was an effective buffer and appeared to enhance the effect of the glutamine and alanine which they added to their medium. Vyskot and Bezdek (1984) found that the buffering capacity of MS medium was increased by adding either 1.25 mM sodium citrate or 1.97 mM citric acid plus 6.07 mM dibasic sodium phosphate. Citric acid and some other organic acids have been noted to enhance the growth of Citrus callus when added to the medium (presumably that of Murashige and Tucker, 1969) (Erner and Reuveni, 1981). For the propagation of various cacti from axillary buds, Vyskot and Jara (1984) added sodium citrate to MS medium to increase its buffering capacity. Recognized biological buffers: Unlike organic acids, conventional buffers are not metabolised by the plant, but can poise pH levels very effectively. Compounds which have been used in plant culture media for critical purposes such as protoplast isolation and culture, and culture of cells at very low inoculation densities, include: • TRIS, Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane; • Tricine, N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methylglycine; • MES, 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulphonic acid; • HEPES, 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazine(2ethanesulphonic acid); and • CAPS, 3-cyclohexylamino-1-propanesulphonic acid. Such compounds may have biological effects which are unrelated to their buffering capacity. Depending on the plant species, they have been known to kill protoplasts or greatly increase the rate of cell division and/or plant regeneration (Conrad et al., 1981). The ‘biological’ buffers MES and HEPES have been developed for biological research (Good et al., 1966). MES: MES is one of the few highly effective and commercially available buffers with significant buffering capacity in the pH range 5-6 to which plant culture media are usually adjusted and has only a low capacity to complex with micronutrients. It is not toxic to most plants, although there are some which are sensitive. Ramage and Williams (2002) report that shoot regeneration from tobacco leaf discs was not affected by MES when increasing the concentration up to 100 mM. De Klerk et al (2007), though, observed a decrease of rooting from apple stem slices with increasing MES concentration (see below; Fig. 4.4). This effect of MES was not understood. It only occurred during the first days of the rooting process and was not observed during the

outgrowth phase after the meristems had been formed. During the culture of thin cell layers of Nicotiana, Tiburcio et al. (1989) found that the pH of LS medium could be kept close to 5.8 for 28 days by adding 50 mM MES, whereas without the buffer pH gradually decreased to 5.25. Regulating pH with MES alters the type of morphogenesis which occur in this (and other) tissues (see below). Parfitt et al. (1988) found 10 mM MES to be an effective buffer in four different media used for tobacco, carrot and tomato callus cultures, and peach and carnation shoot cultures, although stabilizing pH did not result in superior growth. The tobacco, peach and carnation cultures were damaged by 50 mM MES. Tris was toxic at all concentrations tested, although Klein and Manos (1960) had found that the addition of only 0.5 mM Tris effectively increased the fresh weight of callus which could be grown on White (1954) medium when iron was chelated with EDTA. MES has also been used successfully to buffer many cultures initiated from single protoplasts (Müller et al., 1983) and its inclusion in the culture medium can be essential for the survival of individual cells and their division to form callus colonies (e.g. those of Datura innoxia - Koop et al., 1983). MES was found to be somewhat toxic to single protoplasts of Brassica napus, but ‘Polybuffer 74’ (PB-74, a mixture of polyaminosulphonates), allowed excellent microcolony growth in the pH range 5.5-7.0 (Spangenberg et al., 1986). Used at 1/100 of the commercially available solution, it has a buffering capacity of a 1.3 mM buffer at its pK value (Koop et al., 1983). Banana homogenate is widely used in orchid micropropagation media. Ernst (1974) noted that it appeared to buffer the medium in which slipper orchid seedlings were being grown. 5.1.2. The uptake of ions and molecules

The pH of the medium has an effect on the availability of many minerals (Scholten and Pierik, 1998). In general, the uptake of negatively charged ions (anions) is favoured at acid pH, while that of cations (positively charged) is best when the pH is increased. As mentioned before, the relative uptake of nutrient cations and anions will alter the pH of the medium. The release of hydroxyl ions from the plant in exchange for nitrate ions results in media becoming more alkaline; when ammonium ions are


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Chapter 4

Table 4.8 The uptake of ions and its consequences in plant culture media

Rate Consequence

Uptake anion (e.g. NH4+)

Uptake cation (e.g. NO3⎯)

Best in alkaline or weakly acid solutions

Best in relatively acid solutions

Protons (H+) extruded by plant Medium becomes more ACID

Hydroxyl (OH⎯) ions extruded by plant Medium becomes more ALKALINE

taken up in exchange for protons, media become more acid (Table 4.8). Nitrate and ammonium ions: The uptake of ammonium and nitrate ions is markedly affected by pH. Excised plant roots can be grown with NH4+ as the sole source of nitrogen providing the pH is maintained within the range 6.8 to 7.2 and iron is available in a chelated form. At pH levels below 6.4 the roots grow slowly on ammonium alone and have an abnormal appearance (Sheat et al.,1959). This accords with experiments on intact plants where ammonium as the only source of nitrogen is found to be poorly taken up at low pH. It was most effectively utilised in Asparagus in a medium buffered at pH 5.5. At low pH (ca. 4 or less) the ability of the roots of most plants to take up ions of any kind may be impaired, there may be a loss of soluble cell constituents and growth of both the main axis and that of laterals is depressed (Asher, 1978). Nitrate on the other hand, is not readily absorbed by plant cells at neutral pH or above (Martin and Rose, 1976). Growth of tumour callus of Rumex acetosa on a nitrate-containing medium was greater at pH 3.5 than pH 5.0 (Nickell and Burkholder, 1950), while Chevre et al. (1983) reported that axillary bud multiplication in shoot cultures of Castanea was most satisfactory when the pH of MS was reduced to 4 and the Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations were doubled. pH Stabilization: One of the chief advantages of having both NO3– and NH4+ ions in the medium is that uptake of one provides a better pH environment for the uptake of the other. The pH of the medium is thereby stabilized. Uptake of nitrate ions by plant cells leads to a drift towards an alkaline pH, while NH4+ uptake results in a more rapid shift towards acidity (Street, 1969; Behrend and Mateles, 1975; Hyndman et al., 1982). For each equivalent of ammonium incorporated into organic matter, about 0.8-1 H+ (proton) equivalents are released into the external medium; for each equivalent of nitrate assimilated, 1-1.2 proton equivalents are removed from the medium (Fuggi et al., 1981). Raven (1986) calculated that there should be no change of pH

resulting from NO3– or NH4+ uptake, when the ratio of the two is 2 to 1. The pH shifts caused by uptake of nitrate and ammonium during culture (see above) can lead to a situation of nitrogen deficiency if either is used as the sole nitrogen source without the addition of a buffer (see later) (Hyndman et al., 1982). The uptake of NH4+, when this is the sole source of nitrogen is only efficient when a buffer or an organic acid is also present in the medium. In media containing both NO3– and NH4+ with an initial pH of 5-6, preferential uptake of NH4+ causes the pH to drop during the early growth of the culture. This results in increased NO3– utilisation (Martin and Rose, 1976) and a gradual pH rise. The final pH of the medium depends on the relative proportions of NO3– and NH4+ which are provided (Gamborg et al., 1968). After 7 days of root culture, White (1943a) medium (containing only nitrate), adjusted to pH 4.8-4.9, had a pH of 5.8-6.0 (Street et al., 1951, 1952), but Sheat et al. (1959) could stabilize the medium at pH 5.8 by having one fiftieth of the total amount of nitrogen as ammonium ion, the rest as nitrate. Changes in the pH of a medium do however vary from one kind of plant to another. Ramage and Williams (2002) observed a decrease in pH when tobacco leaf discs were cultured with only NH4+ nitrogen whereas no such decrease was observed on medium with both NH4+ and NO3–. No organogenesis occurred when the medium with only NH4+ was unbuffered but the inclusion of MES resulted in the formation of meristems (but no shoots). Media differing in total nitrogen levels (but all having the same ratio of nitrate to ammonium as MS medium), had a final pH of ca. 4.5 after being used for Stage III root initiation on rose shoots, whereas those containing ammonium alone had a final pH of ca. 4.1 (Hyndman et al., 1982). A similar observation with MS medium itself was made by Delfel and Smith (1980). No matter what the starting value in the range 4.5-8.0, the final pH after culture of Cephalotaxus callus was always 4.2. The medium of De Jong et al. (1974) always had a pH of 4.8-5.0 after Begonia buds had been cultured, whatever the


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

starting pH in the range 4.0-6.5. This is not to say that the initial pH was unimportant, because there was an optimum for growth and development (see later) (Berghoef and Bruinsma, 1979). Other Compounds: The availability and uptake of other inorganic ions and organic molecules is also affected by pH. As explained above, the uptake of phosphate is most efficient from acid solutions. Petunia cells took up phosphate most rapidly at pH 4 and its uptake declined as the pH was raised (Chin and Miller, 1982). Vacin and Went (1949) noted the formation of iron phosphate complexes in their medium by pH changes. Insoluble iron phosphates can also be formed in MS medium at pH 6.2 or above unless the proportion of EDTA to iron is increased (Dalton et al., 1983). The uptake of Cl– ions into barley roots is favoured by low pH, but Jacobson et al. (1971) noticed that it was only notably less at high pH in solutions strongly stirred by high aeration. They therefore suggested that H+ ions secreted from plant roots as a result of the uptake of anions, can maintain a zone of reduced pH in the Nernst layer, a stationary film of water immediately adjacent to cultured plant tissue (Nernst, 1904). In plant tissue culture, uptake of ions and molecules may therefore more liable to be affected by adverse pH in agitated liquid media, than in media solidified by agar. Lysine uptake into tobacco cells was found by Harrington and Henke (1981) to be stimulated by low pH. The effect of pH on uptake is especially relevant

for auxins (e.g., Edwards and Goldsmith 1980). Depending on the pH and their pKa, auxins are either present as an undissociated molecule or as an anion. For influx, the undissociated auxin molecule may pass through the membrane by diffusion whereas the anion is taken up by a carrier (Delbarre et al., 1996; Morris 2000). Dissociation dependens upon the pH. In the apoplast, the pH is low, ca. 5. When taken up, the auxin enters the cytoplasm with pH 7. At this pH, most auxin is present as anion and cannot diffuse out. Efflux of the anion is brought about by an efflux carrier system. Thus, the net uptake into cells of plant growth regulators which are weak lipophilic acids (such as IAA, NAA, 2,4-D and abscisic acid) will be greater, the more acid the medium and the greater the difference between its pH and that of the cell cytoplasm (Rubery, 1980). Shvetsov and Gamburg (1981) did in fact find that the rate of 2,4-D uptake into cultured corn cells increased as the pH of the medium fell from 5.5 to 4. Increased uptake of auxin at low pH was also found in apple microcuttings, both for IBA (Harbage et al., 1998) and IAA (De Klerk et al., 2007). As previously mentioned, auxins can themselves modify intra- and extra-cellular pH. Adding 2,4-D to a medium increased the uptake of nicotine into culture of Acer pseudoplatanus cells (Kurkdjian et al., 1982). 5.1.3. Choosing the pH of culture media: Starting pH

Many plant cells and tissues in vitro, will tolerate pH in the range of about 4.0-7.2; those inoculated

Fig. 4.3 Development of pH during tissue culture. The pH was set before autoclaving as is usually done, and measured directly after autoclaving and after 5 days of culture with 1-mm stem-slices cut from apple microshoots. The medium was in Petri dishes with BBL agar and modified MS medium. Per Petri dish, 30 ml of medium was added and 30 slices were cultured. (Data from de Klerk et al., 2007).


Chapter 4

into media adjusted to pH 2.5-3.0 or 8.0 will probably die (Butenko et al., 1984). Best results are usually obtained in slightly acid conditions. In a random sample of papers on micropropagation, the average initial pH adopted for several different media was found to be 5.6 (mode 5.7) but adjustments to as low as 3.5 and as high as 7.1 had been made. The pH for most plant cultures is thus lower than that which is optimum for hydroponic cultures, where intact plants with their roots in aerated solution usually grow most rapidly when the pH of the solution is in the range 6.0-7.3 (De Capite, 1948; Sholto Douglas, 1976; Cooper, 1979). Suspension cultured cells of Ipomoea, grew satisfactorily in Rose and Martin (1975) P2 medium adjusted initially to pH 5.6 or pH 6.3, but the yield of dry cells was less at two extremes (pH 4.8 and pH 7.1). Martin and Rose (1976) supposed that a low yield of cells from a culture started at pH 7.1 was due to the inability of the culture to utilise NO3–, but the cause of a reduction in growth at pH 4.8 was less obvious. It might have resulted from the plant having to expend energy to maintain an appropriate physiological pH internally. Kartha (1981) found that pH 5.6-5.8 supported the growth of most meristem tips in culture and that cassava meristems did not grow for a prolonged period on a medium adjusted to pH 4.8. The optimum pH (before autoclaving) for the growth of carnation shoot tips on Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) medium, was 5.5-6.5. When the medium was supplemented with 4 mg/l adenine sulphate and 2 g/l casein hydrolysate, the optimum pH was 5, and on media adjusted to 6.0 and 6.5, there was significantly less growth (Davis et al., 1977). Shoot proliferation in Camellia sasanqua shoot cultures was best when the pH of a medium with MS salts was adjusted to 5-5.5. Only in these flasks was the capacity of juvenile explants to produce more shoots than adult ones really pronounced (Torres and Carlisi, 1986). Norstog and Smith (1963) suggested that the pH of the medium used for the culture of isolated zygotic embryos, should not be greater than 5.2. 5.1.4. pH adjustment

Because there is then no need to take special aseptic precautions, and it is impractical to adjust pH once medium has been dispensed into small lots, the pH of a medium is usually adjusted with acid or alkali before autoclaving. According to Krieg and Gerhardt (1981), agar is partially hydrolysed if autoclaved at pH 6 or less and will not solidify so effectively when cooled. They recommend that agar

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media for bacteriological purposes should be sterilised at a pH greater than 6 and, if necessary, should be adjusted to acid conditions with sterile acid after autoclaving, when they have cooled to 45-50°C. The degree of hydrolysis in plant culture media autoclaved at pH 5.6-5.7, is presumably small. The effect of autoclaving: Autoclaving changes the pH of media (Fig. 4.3). In media without sugars, the change is usually small unless the phosphate concentration is low, when more significant fluctuations occur. Media autoclaved with sucrose generally have a slightly lower pH than those autoclaved without it, but if maltose, glucose, or fructose have been added instead of sucrose, the postautoclave pH is significantly reduced (Owen et al., 1991). The pH of liquid media containing MS salts [e.g. Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) or Skirvin and Chu (1979) media] containing 3-3.4% sucrose, has been found to fall during autoclaving from an adjusted level of 5.7, to pH 5.17 (Singha, 1982), to pH 5.5 (Owen et al., 1991), or to pH 4.6 (Skirvin et al., 1986). The drop in pH may vary according to the pH to which the medium was initially adjusted. In the experiments of Skirvin et al. (loc. cit.), the pH of a medium adjusted to 5.0, fell to 4.2; one adjusted to 6.4, fell to 5.1; that set at pH 8.5, fell to 8.1. Most agars cause the pH of media to increase immediately they are dissolved. Knudson (1946) noticed that the pH of his medium shifted from 4.64.7 to 5.4-5.5 once agar had been added and dissolved; and Singha (1982) discovered that the unadjusted pH of MS medium rose from pH 4 to pH 5.2, depending on the amount of agar added. However if a medium containing agar was adjusted to pH 5.7, and then autoclaved, the medium became more acid than if agar had not been added, the fall in pH being generally in proportion to the amount of agar present. The effect of storage. The pH of autoclaved plant media tends to fall if they are stored. Vacin and Went (1949) noted that autoclaving just accelerated a drop in the pH of Knudson (1946) C medium, as solutions left to stand showed similar changes. Sterilisation by filtration (see below) was not a satisfactory alternative, as it too effected pH changes. The compounds particularly responsible were thought to be unchelated ferrous sulphate (when the pH had initially been set between 3 and 6), and calcium nitrate (when the original pH was 6 to 9). Complex iron phosphates, unavailable to plants, were produced from the ferrous sulphate, but if iron was added as


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

ferric citrate or ferric tartrate (chelates), no significant pH changes resulted from autoclaving, and plants showed no iron-deficiency symptoms. Skirvin et al. (1986) found that both with and without agar, autoclaved MS medium tended to become more acid after 6 weeks storage, for example: Time Starting pH After autoclaving 6 weeks later

Liquid 5.7 4.6 4.1

MS medium With 0.6% Difco Bacto Agar 5.7 4.6 4.4

To minimise a change in the pH of stored media, it is suggested that they are kept in the dark: Owen et al., (1991) reported that the pH of MS containing 0.1M sucrose or 0.8% Phytagar, remained relatively stable after autoclaving if kept in the dark at 4°C, but fell by up to 0.8 units if stored in the light at 25°C. De Klerk et al. (2007) using BBL agar, also observed a shift of pH, but this was negligible when 10 mM MES was added (Fig. 4.3). Hydrolysis: Some organic components of culture media are liable to be hydrolysed by autoclaving in acid media. The degree of hydrolysis of different brands of agar may be one factor influencing the incidence of hyperhydricity in plant cultures. Agar media may not solidify satisfactorily when the initial pH has been adjusted to 4-4.5. The reduction in pH which occurs in most media during autoclaving may also cause unsatisfactory gelling of agar which has been added in low concentrations. Part of the sucrose added to plant culture media adjusted to pH 5.5 is also hydrolysed during autoclaving: the proportion degraded increases if the pH of the medium is much less than this. Hydrolysis of sucrose is, however, not necessarily detrimental. Activated charcoal: The presence of activated charcoal can alter the pH of a medium. As in the production of activated charcoal it is, at one stage washed with HCl, the pH of a medium can be lowered by acid residues (Owen et al., 1995; Wann et al., 1997). 4.1.5. pH changes during culture

Due to the differential uptake of anions and cations into plant tissues, the pH of culture media does not usually stay constant, but changes as ions and compounds are absorbed by the plant. It is usual for media containing nitrate and ammonium ions to decline slowly in pH during a passage, after being adjusted initially to pH 5.4-5.7, Sometimes after a

preliminary decrease, the pH may begin to rise and return to a value close to, or even well above that at which the culture was initiated. The pH of White (1954) medium, which contains only NO3– nitrogen, drifted from an initial 5.0 to 5.5 towards neutrality as callus was cultured on it (Klein and Manos, 1960). With some cultures, the initial pH of the medium may have little effect. Cell suspension cultures of Dioscorea deltoides in the medium of Kaul and Staba (1968) [containing MS salts], adjusted to a pH either 3.5, 4.3, 5.8 or 6.3, all had a pH of 4.6-4.7 within 10 h of inoculation. There was a further fall to pH 4.04.2 in the next 2-3 days, but during the following 1517 days the pH was 4.7-5.0, finally rising to pH 6.06.3 on about day 19 (Butenko et al., 1984). Similarly, Skirvin et al. (1986) found that MS medium adjusted to pH 3.33, 5.11, 6.63, or 7.98 before autoclaving, and then used for the culture of Cucumis melo callus, had a pH after 48 h in the range 4.6-5.0. Visseur (1987) also reported that although the pH of his medium (similar macronutrients to MS but more Ca2+ and PO43–) decreased if it was solidified with agar, but on a 2-phase medium, the final pH was 6.9 ± 0.4 irrespective of whether it was initially 4.8, 5.5 or 6.2. Despite the above remarks, it should be noted that the nature of the pH drift which occurs in any one medium, differs widely, according to the species of plant grown upon it. The pH of the medium supporting shoot cultures of Disanthus cercidifolius changed from 5.5 to 6.5 over a 6 week period, necessitating frequent subculturing to prevent the onset of senescence, whereas in the medium in which shoots of the calcifuge Lapageria rosea were grown, the pH, initially set to 3.5-5.0, only changed to 3.84.1 (Howard and Marks, 1987). Note also that the reversion of media to a homeostatic pH, may be due to the presence of both NO3– and NH4+ ions (Dougall, 1980). Adjustment of media containing only one of these nitrogen sources to a range of pH levels, would be expected to result in a more variable set of final values. As the pH of media deviate from the original titration level, simple unmonitored cultures may not provide the most favourable pH for different phases of growth and differentiation. In Rosa ‘Paul’s Scarlet’ suspensions, the optimum pH for the cell division phase was 5.2-5.4: pH 5.5-6.0 was best for the cell expansion phase (Nesius and Fletcher, 1973). The maximum growth rate of Daucus carota habituated callus on White (1954) medium with iron as FeEDTA, occurred at pH 6.0 (Klein and Manos, 1960).


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Chapter 4

It has been suggested that acidification of media is partly due to the accumulation of carbon dioxide in tightly closed culture flasks (Leva et al., 1984), but the decrease in pH associated with incubating anther cultures with 5% CO2 was found by Johansson and Eriksson (1984) to be only ca. 0.1 units. Removal of CO2 from an aerated cell suspension culture of Poinsettia resulted in an increase of about 0.2 pHunits (Preil, 1991). Auxin plant growth regulators promote cell growth by inducing the efflux of H+ ions through the cell wall. Hydrogen ion efflux from the cell is accompanied by potassium ion influx. When cultures are incubated in a medium containing an auxin, the medium will therefore become more acid while the pH of the cell sap will rise. The extent of these changes was found by Kurkdjian et al. (1982) to be proportional to auxin (2,4-D) concentration. 5.2. pH CONTROL WITHIN THE PLANT

The various compartments of cells have a different pH and this pH is maintained (Felle, 2001). In the symplasm, the pH of the cytoplasm is ca. 7 and of the vacuole ca. 5. The apoplasm has a pH of ca. 5. Plant cells typically generate an excess of acidic compounds during metabolism which have to be neutralised (Felle, 1998). One of the most important ways by which this is accomplished is for H+, or K+ to be pumped out of the cell, in exchange for anions (e.g. OH–), thereby decreasing the extracellular pH. Plant cells also compensate for an excess of H+ by the degradation of organic acids. Synthesis of organic acids, such as malate, from neutral precursors is used to increase H+ concentration when the cytoplasmic pH rises, for instance if plants are grown in alkaline soils (Raven and Smith, 1976; Findenegg et al., 1986). In intact plants, there is usually a downwards gradient from the low pH external to the cell, to higher pH levels in more mature parts, and this enables the upwards transport of non-electrolytic compounds such as sugars and amino acids (Böttger

and Luthen, 1986). Altering the pH of the external solution surrounding roots or cells can alter the pH of the cell (Smith and Raven, 1979). Because of necessary controls, the pH of the cytoplasm may be only slightly altered, that of vacuoles may show a more marked change. Changing the pH of the medium in which photo-autotrophic Chenopodium rubrum suspensions were cultured from 4.5 to 6.3, caused the pH of the cytoplasm to rise from 7.4 to 7.6 and that of the cell vacuoles to increase from 5.3 to 6.6. The increase in cytoplasmic pH caused there to be a marked diversion of carbon metabolism, away from sugar and starch, into the production of lipids, amino acids and proteins (Hüsemann et al., 1990). The maintenance of the pH is also illustrated in an experiment with detached leaves of Vicia faba (Felle and Hanstein, 2002). When the leaves were placed in a 10 mM MES-TRIS buffer and transferred to buffer with another pH, changes in the pH of the apoplasm were small: with an initial buffer pH = 4.1 and transfer to buffer pH = 6.8, the apoplastic pH of substomatal cavities increased from 4.71 to 5.13 and in the reverse transfer decreased from 5.13 to 4.70. This indicates that the pH of the apoplasm is not strongly influenced by the medium but stays close to the ‘natural’ pH of ca. 5.0. No exact details are given but in this experiment the distance between the site of the pH measurements and the MES-TRIS solution in which the leaves had been placed was probably large. The symplasm has a much larger capacity to buffer (Felle, 2001) so that its pH will be even less influenced by the medium pH. Thus, within the explant the pH of both apoplasm and symplasm will be affected only little by the medium pH. The situation may be different at the interface between explant and medium. The influence of medium pH will extend towards inner tissues of the explant as the buffering capacity of the medium is increased (and thus overcomes buffering by the tissue). Inside the explant, the pH will also greatly influence movement

Table 4.9. The influence of the initial pH of Linsmaier Skoog (1965) medium on morphogenesis in thin cell layers of Nicotiana (data of Mutaftschiev et al., 1987)

Initial pH of the medium 3.8 5.0 6.1 6.8

Mean number of organs per explant 4±2 2±1 20 ± 10 6±2

Mean percentage of explants forming: Callus

Roots

Vegetative buds

Flowers

60 ± 10 90 ± 10 0 0

40 ± 10 10 ± 10 0 0

0 0 100 20 ± 10

0 0 0 80 ± 10


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

through membranes, i.e. uptake in cells, as this often depends on the dissociation of compounds which is pH dependent. Changing the pH of the medium can thus have a regulatory role on plant cultures which is similar to that of plant growth regulating chemicals, one of the actions of which is to modify intracellular pH and the quantity of free calcium ions. Auxins can modify cytoplasmic pH by triggering the release of H+ from cells. In plant tissue culture these ions can acidify the medium (Kurkdjian et al., 1982). Proton release is thought to be the first step in acid-triggered and turgor-triggered growth (Schubert and Matzke, 1985). It should be noted that pH changes themselves may act as a signal (Felle, 2001). 5.3. THE EFFECT OF pH ON CULTURES

5.3.1. Initiating cultures at low pH

Plants of the family Ericaceae which only grow well on acid soils (e.g. rhododendrons and blueberries), have been said to grow best on media such as Anderson (1975), Anderson (1978; 1980) and Lloyd and McCown (1981) WPM, when the pH is first set to ca. 4.5 (Anderson, 1975; Skirvin, 1981), but for highly calcifuge species such as Magnolia soulangiana, a starting pH of 3.5 can result in the highest rate of shoot proliferation in shoot cultures (Howard and Marks, 1987). Chevre et al. (1983) state that chestnut shoot cultures grew and proliferated best

at pH 4 provided MS medium was modified by doubling the usual levels of calcium and magnesium. De Jong et al. (1974), using a specially developed medium, found that a low pH value favoured the growth of floral organs. A similar result was seen by Berghoef and Bruinsma (1979c) with Begonia buds. Growth was greatest when the pH of the medium was initially adjusted to acid, 4.5-5.0 being optimal. At pH 4.0 the buds became glassy. Before the discovery of effective chelating agents for plant cultures, root cultures were grown on media with a low pH. Tomato roots were, for instance, unable to grow on media similar to those of White (1943a), when the pH rose to 5.2 (Street et al., 1951). Boll and Street (1951) were able to show that the depression of growth at high pH was due to the loss of Fe from the medium and that it could be overcome by adding a chelated form of iron (see chapter 3). Using FeEDTA, Torrey (1956) discovered that isolated pea roots [grown on a medium containing Bonner and Devirian (1939) A macronutrients, which do not contain NH4+], grew optimally at pH 6.0-6.4 but were clearly inhibited at pH 7.0 or greater; and Street (1969) reported that growth of tomato roots could be obtained between pH 4.0 and pH 7.2, if EDTA was present in the medium. Because agar does not gel properly when the initial pH of the medium is adjusted to 4, it is necessary to use liquid media for low pH cultures; or employ another gelling agent, or a mechanical support.

Fig. 4.4 Effect of medium pH on adventitious rooting from apple stem disks. The pH at the x-axis is the pH as measured at the start of culture after autoclaving (cf. Fig. 4.3). (from de Klerk et al., 2007).


Chapter 4

Some other cultures may also be beneficially started at low pH, which may indicate that the tissues have an initial requirement for NO3–. Embryogenesis of Pelargonium was induced more effectively if MS, or other media, were adjusted to pH 4.5-5.0 before autoclaving (rather than pH 5.5 and above) (Marsolais et al., 1991). 5.3.2. Differentiation and Morphogenesis

Differentiation and morphogenesis are frequently found to be pH-dependent. Xylogenesis depends on the medium pH (Khan et al., 1986). The growth of callus and the formation of adventitious organs from thin cell layers excised from superficial tissues of the inflorescence rachis of Nicotiana, depended on the initial pH of Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) medium containing 0.5 μM IBA and 3 μM kinetin (Table 4.9) (Mutaftschiev et al., 1987). Pasqua et al. (2002) reported many quantitative effects of pH during regeneration from tobacco thin cell layers. The types of callus produced from the plumules of Hevea seedlings differed according to the pH of the medium devised by Chua (1966). Soft and spongy callus formed at acid (5.4) or alkaline (8.0) pH. A compact callus was obtained between pH 6.2 and 6.8. 5.3.3. Adventitious root formation

There are several reports in the literature which show that the pH of the medium can influence root formation of some plants in vitro. A slightly acid pH seems to be preferred by most species. Zatkyo and Molnar (1986), who showed a close correlation between the acidity of the medium (pH 7.0 to 3.0) and the rooting of Vitis, Ribes nigrum and Aronia melancarpa shoots, suggested that this was because acidity is necessary for auxin action. Sharma et al. (1981) found it advantageous to reduce the pH of the medium to 4.5 to induce rooting of Bougainvillea shoots and a reduction of the pH of MS medium to 4.0 (accompanied by incubation in the dark) was required for reliable root formation of two Santalum species (Barlass et al., 1980) and Correa decumbens and Prostanthera striatifolia (Williams et al., 1984; 1985). Other Australian woody species rooted satisfactorily at pH 5.5 and pH 4 was inhibitory (Williams et al., loc. cit.). Shoots from carnation meristem tips rooted more readily at pH 5.5 than pH 6.0 (Stone, 1963), and rooting of excised potato buds was best at pH 5.7, root formation being inhibited at pH 4.8 and at pH 6.2 or above (Mellor and Stace-Smith, 1969). Direct root formation on Nautilocalyx leaf segments was retarded if a modified MS medium containing IAA was adjusted initially to

151

an acid pH (3.5 or 4.0) or a neutral pH (6.5). Good and rapid root formation occurred when the medium was adjusted to between pH 5.0 to 6.3 (Venverloo, 1976). De Klerk et al (2007), working with apple stem slices, found only a small effect of pH on rooting (Fig. 4.4): when the pH was set before autoclaving at 4.5 (after autoclaving the pH was 4.54), the number of roots was 4.5, and with the pH set at 8.0 (after autoclaving the pH had dropped to 5.65), the number of roots per slice increased to 7. In medium buffered with MES, the maximum number of roots was formed at pH 4.4 (measured after autoclaving). In these experiments, the dose-response curve for root number did not correspond with the effect of pH on IAA uptake. Such discrepancy between the effects of the pH on uptake and root number, was also reported by Harbage, Stimart and Auer (1998). Direct formation of roots from Lilium auratum bulb scales occurred when MS medium was adjusted within the range 4-7 but was optimal at pH 6. The pH range for adventitious bulblet formation in this plant was from 4 to 8, but most bulblets were produced when the initial pH was between 5 and 7 (Takayama and Misawa, 1979). Substrates which are to acid or too alkaline can adversely affect rooting ex vitro. 5.3.4. Embryogenesis

Smith and Krikorian (1989) discovered that preglobular stage pro-embryos (PGSP) of carrot could be made to proliferate from tissues capable of direct embryo formation, with no auxin, on a medium containing 1-5 mM NH4+ (and no nitrate). Somatic embryos were formed when this tissue was moved to MS medium. The pH of the ‘ammonium-nitrogen’ medium fell from 5.5 to 4.0 in each subculture period, and it was later found (Smith and Krikorian, 1990a,b) that culture on a medium of low pH was essential for the maintenance of PGSP cultures. Sustained culture at a pH equal or greater than 5.7, with no auxin, allowed somatic embryo development. A similar observation to that of Smith and Krikorian had been made by (Stuart et al., 1987). Although the pH of a suspension culture of alfalfa ‘Regen-S’ cells in a modified Schenk and Hildebrandt (1972) medium with 15 mM NH4+ was adjusted to 5.8, it quickly fell back to pH 4.4-5.0 in a few hours. The pH then gradually increased as somatic embryos were produced, until at day 14 it was 5.0. In certain suspension cultures, the pH was titrated daily to 5.5, but on each occasion soon returned to nearly the same pH as that in flasks which were untouched. Even so,


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

the pH-adjusted suspensions produced more embryos than the controls. The ammonium ion has been found to be essential for embryogenesis. Is one of its functions to reduce the pH of the medium through rapid uptake and metabolism, thereby facilitating the uptake of nitrate, upon which embryogenesis is really dependent?

Embryogenesis from leaf explants of Ostericum koreanum, was found to depend strongly on pH (Cho et al 2003). As the explants were cultured continuously with NAA, it is possible that the observed relationship was caused by differential NAA uptake. This is also suggested by the slower rate of embryo development seen at low pH, because this would be expected where there is a high internal NAA concentration.

6. LIQUID MEDIA AND SUPPORT SYSTEMS The nutritional requirements of plant cultures can be supplied by liquid media but growth in liquid medium may be retarded and development affected by oxygen deprivation and hyperhydration. The oxygen concentration of liquid media is often insufficient to meet the respiratory requirements of submerged cells and tissues. It can be increased either by raising the oxygen concentration of the medium or placing cells or tissues in direct contact with air. If the water potential of the medium is greater (less negative) than that of a cell, water flows into the cell and the vacuole becomes distended. Cells and tissues affected in this way are described as hyperhydric. Shoots often show physiological disturbances with symptoms that can be recognised visually (Chapter 13) (Debergh et al., 1992; Gaspar et al., 1987; Preece and Sutter, 1991; Ziv, 1991). The term hyperhydric is preferable to the previously used term ‘vitrified’ for reasons explained by Debergh et al. (1992). Water potential is determined by osmotic potential of the solutes in the medium and, in the case of a gelled medium, by the matric potential of the gel (Section 4.1) (Beruto et al., 1995; Fujiwara and Kozai, 1995; Owens and Wozniak, 1991). Reductions in hyperhydricity can be achieved by increasing the concentrations of the solutes and the gel. Hyperhydricity may also be reduced through evaporation of water from tissues if they are placed in contact with air. Contact of cultured tissues with air, to alleviate problems of hyperhydricity and hypoxia, can be achieved by the use of either porous or semi-solid (gelled) supports. The advantage of supports, as opposed to thin layers of liquid medium, is that tissues can be placed in a sufficient volume of medium to prevent depletion of nutrients and allow for the dispersion of any toxins that might be produced by the plant tissues. The relative advantages of liquid medium, solid supports or gelled media, varies with the type of material being cultured, the purpose of the culture and the scale of culture, as discussed below.

6.1. LIQUID MEDIA

Liquid medium, without supporting structures, is used for the culture of protoplasts, cells or root systems for the production of secondary metabolites, and the propagation of somatic embryos, meristematic nodules, microtubers and shoot clusters. In liquid medium, these cultures often give faster growth rates than on agar-solidifed medium. Cultures may be fully or only partially immersed in the medium. Aeration of liquid medium in stationary Petri dishes is sometimes adequate for the culture of protoplasts and cells because of the shallow depth of the medium, but may still be suboptimal. Anthony et al. (1995) cultured protoplasts of cassava, in liquid medium in Petri dishes with an underlying layer of agarose in which glass rods were embedded vertically. Sustained protoplast division was observed in the cultures with glass rods but not in the controls without glass rods. The authors suggested that the glass rods extended the liquid meniscus, where the cell colonies were clustered thus causing gaseous exchange between the liquid and the atmosphere above to be facilitated. Anthony et al. (1997) cultured protoplasts of Passiflora and Petunia in 30 ml glass bottles containing protoplast suspensions in 2 ml aliquots, either alone or in the presence of the oxygen carriers Erythrogen™ or oxygenated Perfluorodecalin. Cell division in each of the two species was stimulated by both oxygen carriers. Laboratory-scale experimentation on immersed cultures of cells, tissues and organs, may be carried out in 125 ml or 250 ml Erlenmeyer flasks. Largescale cultures are usually carried out in bioreactors with a capacity of 1 litre or more. The concentration of oxygen in the medium is raised by oxygen in the gas phase above and air bubbles inside the liquid. Increasing the oxygen concentration and circulation of the medium is facilitated in flasks by the use of gyratory shakers and in bioreactors by stirring and/or bubbling air through the medium (Chapter 1). The


Chapter 4

use of bioreactors often involves the automated adjustment of the culture medium. The design of bioreactors for plant cells and organs was reviewed by Doran (1993) and the use of shake-flasks and bioreactors for the scale-up of embryogenic plant suspension cultures has been reviewed by Tautorus and Dunstan (1995). The importance of oxygen concentration in bioreactors can be illustrated by an investigation into the growth of hairy roots of Atropa belladonna (Yu and Doran, 1994). They found that no growth occurred at oxygen tensions of 50% air saturation but between 70% and 100% air saturation, total root length and the number of root tips increased exponentially. Hyperhydricity in liquid cultures may be avoided by adding to the medium osmoregulators, such as mannitol, maltose and sorbitol, and inhibitors of gibberellin biosynthesis including ancymidol and paclobutrazol (Ziv, 1989). Plantlets and microtubers can be cultured by partial submersion in liquid medium. One method of aerating tissues is by the automated flooding and evacuation of tissues by liquid medium. This method has been used to produce microtubers of potato from single node cuttings (Teisson and Alvard, 1999). An alternative approach to aeration is to apply the liquid medium over the plant tissues as a nutrient mist. For example, Kurata et al. (1991) found that nodes of potato grew better in nutrient mist than on agar-based cultures. 6.2. SUPPORT BY SEMI-SOLID MATRICES

Gelled media provide semi-solid, supporting matrices that are widely used for protoplast, cell, tissue and organ culture. Agar, agarose, gellan gums and various other products have been used as gelling agents. 6.2.1. Agar

Agar is very widely employed for the preparation of semi-solid culture media. It has the advantages that have made it so widely used for the culture of bacteria, namely :• it forms gels with water that melt at approx. 100°C and solidify at approx. 45°C, and are thus stable at all feasible incubation temperatures; • gels are not digested by plant enzymes; • agar does not strongly react with media constituents. To ensure adequate contact between tissue and medium, a lower concentration of agar is generally used for plant cultures than for the culture of bacteria. Plant media are not firmly gelled, but only rendered

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semi-solid. Depending on brand, concentrations of between 0.5-1.0% agar are generally used for this purpose. Agar is thought to be composed of a complex mixture of related polysaccharides built up from galactose. These range from an uncharged neutral polymer fraction, agarose, that has the capacity to form strong gels, to highly charged anionic polysaccharides, sometimes called agaropectins, which give agar its viscosity. Agar is extracted from species of Gelidium and other red algae, collected from the sea in several different countries. It varies in nature according to country of origin, the year of collection and the way in which it has been extracted and processed. The proportion of agarose to total polysaccharides can vary from 50 to 90% (Adrian and Assoumani, 1983). Agars contain small amounts of macro- and micro-elements; particularly calcium, sodium, potassium, and phosphate (Beruto et al., 1995; Debergh, 1983; Scherer et al., 1988), carbohydrates, traces of amino acids and vitamins (Day, 1942) that affect the osmotic and nutrient characteristics of a gel. They also contain phenolic substances (Scherer et al., 1988) and less pure grades may contain long chain fatty acids, inhibitory to the growth of some bacteria. As agar can be the most expensive component of plant media, there is interest in minimising its concentration. Concentrations of agar can be considered inadequate if they do not support explants or lead to hyperhydricity. Hyperhydricity decreases as the agar concentration is raised but there may be an accompanying reduction in the rate of growth. For example, Debergh et al. (1981) found that shoot cultures of Cynara scolymus were hyperhydric on medium containing 0.6% Difco ‘Bacto’ agar. No hyperhydricity occurred on medium containing 1.1% agar but shoot proliferation was reduced. Likewise, Hakkaart and Versluijs (1983) found that shoots of carnation were hyperhydric on medium containing 0.6% agar whereas growth was severely reduced on medium containing 1.2%. During studies to optimise the production of morphogenic callus from leaf discs of sugarbeet, Owens and Wozniak (1991) found large differences in the numbers of somatic embryos and shoots according to the gelling agent employed. They found that water availability, determined by gel matric potential, was the dominant factor involved. When they adjusted the concentrations of the gelling agents to give media of equal gel matric potential, somatic embryos and shoots were found in similar numbers on Bacto agar (0.7%), HGT agarose (0.46%), Phytagar (0.62%) and Gelrite (0.12%).


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Various brands and grades of agar are available commercially. These differ in the amounts of impurities they contain and their gelling capabilities. The gelling capacity of Difco brands of agar increased with increasing purity i.e. ‘Noble’ > ‘Purified’ > ‘Bacto’ (Debergh, 1983). After impurities of agar were removed by sealing agar in a semi-permeable bags and washing in deionized water, the water potentials of gels of three brands were substantially lower than unwashed gels (Beruto et al., 1995). A ten-fold difference in the regeneration rate of sugar cane was observed by Anders et al. (1988) on media gelled with the best and least effective of seven brands of agar. Scholten and Pierik (1998) investigated the different growth characteristics of seven different agar brands on the growth of axillary shoots, adventitious shoots and adventitious roots of rose, lily and cactus. They concluded that no single bioassay could identify ‘good or bad’ agars for a large group of plant species but Merk 1614, Daishin, MC29, and BD Purified gave the best results in most experiments. ‘Daishin’ showed no batch-to-batch variations. They found no relationship between price and quality of the brands of agar. Agarose. Agarose is the high gel strength moiety of agar. It consists of β-D(1→3) galactopyranose and 3,6-anhydro-α-L(1 → 4) galactopyranose polymer chains of 20-160 monosaccharide units alternatively linked to form double helices. There are also several different agaro-pectin products available, which have been extracted from agar and treated to remove most of the residual sulphate side groupings (Shillito et al., 1983). Because preparation involves additional processes, agarose is much more expensive than agar and its use is only warranted for valuable cultures, including protoplast and anther culture. Brands may differ widely in their suitability for these applications. Concentrations of 0.4-1.0% are used. Agarose derivatives are available which melt and gel at temperatures below 30°C, making them especially suitable for testing media ingredients that are heatlabile, or for embedding protoplasts. Low meltingpoint agarose is prepared by introducing hydroxyethyl groups into the agarose molecules (Shillito et al., 1983). Another advantage of agarose over agar lies in the removal of toxic components of agar during its preparation. Bolandi et al. (1999) preferred to embed protoplasts in agarose, rather than use liquid medium, because in agarose the semi-solid matrix applies a direct pressure on the plasma membrane of the protoplasts. They mixed protoplasts of sunflower with 0.5% agarose, pipetted 50 μl

droplets of the mixture into Petri dishes and covered them with a thin layer of culture medium. A similar method was used to culture protoplasts of Dioscorea by Tor et al. (1999). The use of droplets has the advantage that a high plating density can be achieved in the droplets, while exposing the protoplasts to a larger reservoir of culture medium in the liquid phase. Bishoi et al. (2000) initially cultured anthers of Basmati rice on liquid medium, then used 1.0% agarose to culture calli derived from microspores. 6.2.2. Gellan gum Gellan gum is a widely used gelling agent in plant tissue culture, that is marketed under various trade names including Gelrite, Phytagel and Kelcogel. It is an exopolysaccharide that encapsulates cells of the bacterium Sphingomonas paucimobilis (= Auromonas elodea = Pseudomonas elodea), from which it is obtained by industrial fermentation. The structure, physico-chemical properties and the rheology of solutions of gellan gum and related polysaccharides has been reviewed by Banik et al. (2000). Gellan gum consists of a linear repeating tetrasaccharide of D-glucose, D-glucuronic acid, D-glucose and Lrhamnose. Heating solutions of gellan gum in solutions that contain cations, such as K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, causes the polysaccharide to form a gel in which the polymers form a half-staggered parallel double helix. The commercial deacetylated and purified polysaccharide forms a firm non-elastic gel. The gel sets rapidly at a temperature, determined by the concentrations of the polysaccharide and the cation, which varies between 35-50 °C (Kang et al., 1982). The commercial product contains significant quantities of potassium, sodium, calcium and magnesium (Pasqualetto et al., 1988a,b; Scherer et al., 1988) but is said to be free of the organic impurities found in agar. It is unclear whether or not these cations remain fully available to plant cultures. Some researchers (Gawel et al., 1986; 1990; Trolinder and Goodin, 1987; Umbeck et al., 1987) add an extra 750 mg l–1 MgCl2 to a medium containing MS salts to aid the gelling of 1.6% Gelrite. In most other reports on the use of Gelrite, cations in the medium have been sufficient to produce a gel. Beruto et al. (1995) found that 0.12 % Gelrite and 0.7% Bacto agar have equivalent matric potential and support equivalent adventitious regeneration in leaf discs of sugarbeet. As gellan gum is used in lower concentration than agar, the cost per litre of medium is less. It produces a clear gel in which plant tissues can be more easily seen and microbial


Chapter 4

contamination more easily detected than in agar gels. It has proved to be a suitable gelling agent for tissue cultures of many herbaceous plants and there are reports of its successful use for callus culture, the direct and indirect formation of adventitious organs and somatic embryos, shoot culture of herbaceous and semi-woody species and the rooting of plantlets. In most cases the results have been as good as, and sometimes superior to, those obtainable on agarsolidified media. Anders et al. (1988) described the regeneration of greater numbers of plants from of sugar cane on Gelrite than on the most productive brand of agar, and Koetje et al. (1989) obtained more somatic embryos from callus cultures of rice on media solidified with Gelrite than with Bacto-agar. Shoot cultures, particularly of some woody species, are liable to become hyperhydric if Gelrite, like agar, is used at too low a concentration. There are sharp differences in the response of different species to concentration of Gelrite. Turner and Singha (1990) found the highest rate of shoot proliferation in Geum occurred on 0.2% and in Malus on 0.4%. Garin et al. (2000) obtained more mature somatic embryos of Pinus strobus on gellan gum at 1% concentration of than at 0.6%. Pasqualetto et al. (1986a,b) used mixtures of Gelrite (0.1-0.15%) and Sigma @ agar (0.2-0.3%) to prevent the hyperhydricity that occurred in shoot cultures of Malus domestica ‘Gala’ on media solidified with Gelrite alone. Nairn (1988) used a mixture of Gelrite (0.194%) and Difco ‘Bacto’ agar (0.024%) to prevent the hyperhydricity that occurred in shoot cultures of Pinus radiata on medium gelled with 0.2% Gelrite alone. 6.2.3. Alginates

Alginic acid is a binary linear heteropolymer 1,4β-D-mannuronic acid and 1,4-α-L-guluronic acid (Larkin et al., 1988). It is extracted from various species of brown algae. When the sodium salt is exposed to calcium ions, gelation occurs. Alginates are widely used for protoplast culture and to encapsulate artificial seed. Protoplasts embedded in beads or thin films of alginate can plated densely while yet exposed to a large pool of medium that dilutes inhibitors and toxic substances. Embedded protoplasts can be surrounded by nurse cells, either free in the surrounding medium or separated by filters or membranes. Alginate has the advantages over agarose that protoplasts do not have to be exposed to elevated temperatures when they are mixed with the gelling agent and the gel can be liquified by adding sodium citrate, releasing

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protoplasts or cell colonies for transfer to other media. The method of embedding protoplasts in beads as employed by Larkin et al. (1988) involved mixing the protoplast suspensions with an aqueous solution of sodium alginate and dropping it, through a needle, into a solution of calcium chloride. Beads containing the protoplasts were formed when the alginate made contact with the calcium ions. Beads with a final concentration of 1.5% sodium alginate were washed and cultured in liquid medium on an orbital shaker. Protoplasts may also be captured in thin layers of alginate (Dovzhenko et al., 1998). Synthetic seeds (synseeds, somatic seeds) encapsulated in alginate (Fig. 4.4), can be prepared from somatic embryos (Timbert et al., 1995), shoot tips (Maruyama et al., 1998), apical and axillary buds (Piccioni and Standardi, 1995), single nodes (Piccioni, 1997), and cell aggregates from hairy roots (Repunte et al.,1995). The uses of sythetic seeds include direct planting into soil, storage of tissues and transfer of materials between laboratories under sterile conditions. The methods of encapsulation of somatic embryos of carrot were described by Timbert et al. (1995). Torpedo-shaped embryos were mixed with a 1% sodium alginate solution. The mixture was dropped into a solution 100 mM calcium chloride in 10% sucrose. The beads (3-3.5 mm in diameter) were then rinsed in a 10% sucrose solution. 6.2.4. Starch

Sorvari (1986a,c) found that plantlets formed in higher frequencies in anther cultures of barley on a medium solidified with 5% corn starch or barley starch rather than with agar. Corn starch only formed a weak gel and it was necessary to place a polyester net on its surface to prevent the explants from sinking. Sorvari (1986b) found that it took 5-14 weeks for adventitious shoots to form on potato discs on agar-solidified medium but only 3 weeks on medium containing barley starch. Henderson and Kinnersley (1988) found that embryogenic carrot callus cultures grew slightly better on media gelled with 12% corn starch than on 0.9% Difco `Bacto’ agar. 6.2.5. ‘Kappa’--carrageenan

Carrageenan is a product of sea weeds of the genus Euchema and the kappa form has strong gelling properties. Like gellan gum, kappacarrageenan requires the presence of cations for gelation. In Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) medium at 0.6% w/v, the gel strength was slightly less than that of 0.2% Gelrite or 0.8% of extra pure agar (Ichi et al.,


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The Components of Plant Tissue Culture Media II

1986). Chauvin et al. (1999) found that regeneration from cultures of tulip, gladiolus and tobacco shoots was possible in the presence of 200 mg l–1 kanamycin, whereas in several other gelling agents a concentration of 100 mg l–1 inhibited regeneration. 6.2.6. Pectins

A mixture of pectin and agar can be a less expensive substitute for agar. For example, a semisolid medium consisting of 0.2% agar plus 0.8-1.0% pectin, was employed for shoot culture of strawberry and some other plants (Zimmerman, 1979). 6.2.7. Other gelling agents

Battachary et al. (1994) found sago (from Metroxylon sagu) and isubgol (from Plantago ovata) were satisfactory substitutes for agar at, respectively, one eighth and one tenth of the cost of Sigma purified agar A7921. 6.3. POROUS SUPPORTS

Aeration of the tissues on a porous substrate is usually better than it would be in agar or static liquid. Chin et al. (1988) used a buoyant polypropylene membrane floated on top of a liquid medium to culture cells and protoplasts of Asparagus. The membrane (Celgard 3500, Questar Corp., Charlotte, N.C.) has a pore size of 0.04 mm and is autoclavable. Conner and Meredith (1984) found that cells grew more rapidly on filter papers laid over polyurethane foam pads saturated with medium than on agar. Young et al. (1991) supported shoots of tomato over liquid culture medium on a floating microporous polypropylene membrane and entrained the growing shoots through polypropylene netting. They reported opportunities for the development of this method for mechanisation by mass handling. Membrane rafts were also used by Teng (1997) and Watad et al. (1995,1996). Cheng and Voqui (1977) and Cheng (1978) used polyester fleece to support cultures of Douglas fir that were irrigated with liquid media in Petri dishes. Plantlets that were regenerated from cotyledon explants were cultured on 3 mm-thick fabric. When a protoplast suspension was dispersed over 0.5 mmthick fabric, numerous colonies were produced in 12 days, whereas in the absence of the support, cell colonies failed to proliferate beyond the 20 cell stage. A major advantage in using this type of fabric support is that media can be changed simply and quickly without disturbing the tissues. The system has also been used for protoplast culture of other plants (e.g. by Russell and McCown, 1986).

Heller and Gautheret (1949) found that tissues could be satisfactorily cultured on pieces of ashless filter paper moistened by contact with liquid medium. Very small explants, such as meristem tips, that might be lost if placed in a rotated or agitated liquid medium, can be successfully cultured if placed on an M-shaped strip of filter paper (sometimes called a ‘Heller’ support). When the folded paper is placed in a tube of liquid medium, the side arms act as wicks (Goodwin, 1966). This method of support ensures excellent tissue aeration but the extra time required for preparation and insertion has meant that paper wicks are only used for special purposes such as the initial cultural stages of single small explants which are otherwise difficult to establish. Whether explants grow best on agar or on filter paper supports, varies from one species of plant to another. Davis et al. (1977) found that carnation shoot tips grew less well on filter paper bridges than on 0.6% agar but axillary bud explants of Leucospermum survived on bridges but not on agar. Paper was also used in the construction of plugs (marketed by Ilacon Ltd, Tonbridge, UK TN9 1NR) known as Sorbarods (Roberts and Smith, 1990). These are cylindrical (20 mm in length and 18 mm in diameter) and consist of cold-crimped cellulose, longitudinally folded, wrapped in cellulose paper. The plug has a porosity (total volume – volume of cellulose) of 94.2% and high capillarity, so that the culture medium is efficiently drawn up into the plug, leaving the sides of the plug in direct contact with air. Roots permeate the plugs and are protected by the cellulose during transfer to soil. Plantlets of chrysanthemum in Sorbarods formed longer stems, larger leaves, more roots, and developed greater fresh mass, dry weights and fresh to dry mass ratios than plantlets in agar-solidified medium (Roberts and Smith, 1990). The greater fresh to dry mass ratio indicates that contact with liquid medium led to greater hydration of tissues. This was subsequently controlled by the inclusion of a growth retardant, paclobutrazol (1 mg l–1), in the culture medium (Smith et al., 1990a). Other porous materials that have been used to support plant growth include rockwool (Woodward et al., 1991; Tanaka et al., 1991), polyurethane foam (Gutman and Shiryaeva, 1980; Scherer et al., 1988), vermiculite (Kirdmanee et al., 1995), a mixture of vermiculite and Gelrite (Jay-Allemand et al., 1992). Afreen-Zobayed et al. (2000) cultured sweet potato, on sugar-free medium in autotrophic conditions, on mixtures of paper pulp and vermiculite in various proportions. Optimal growth was obtained on a mixture containing 70% paper pulp. On this


Chapter 4

mixture, the fresh mass of plantlets was greater by a factor of 2.7 than on agar-solidified medium. Mixtures of paper pulp and vermiculite, in unspecified proportions, are prepared in a commercial product known as Florialite (Nisshinbo Industries, Inc., Tokyo). Afreen-Zobayed et al. (1999) found that growth rates of plantlets of sweet potato grown autotrophically on Florialite were greater, in ascending order, on agar, gellan gum, vermiculite, Sorbarods and Florialite (best). The dry mass of leaves and roots were greater by factors of 2.9 and 2.8, respectively, on Florialite than on an agar matrix. These authors observed that roots spread better in Florialite than in Sorbarods. They attributed this to the net-like orientation of fibers in Florialite that contrasted with the vertical orientation of fibres in Sorbarods. Ichimura and Oda (1995) found three substances that stimulated plant growth in extracts of paper pulp. Each was characterised by low molecular weight and high polarity. It is possible that these substances contribute to the superior growth observed on substrates containing paper pulp. 6.3.1. Opportunities for improved ventilation and photoautotrophy

When plantlets are cultured in vessels containing air at a relative humidity (RH) of less than 100%, transpiration occurs which is an important factor in reducing hyperhydricity (Gribble, 1999). Relative humidity in culture vessels can be reduced through ventilation, but gelled substrates are then unsuitable because the absorbance of water by the roots of a transpiring plant is impeded by the gel’s low hydraulic conductivity (Fujiwara and Kozai, 1995) and this increases as the gel dries. Thus a common feature of studies using ventilated vessels has been the use of liquid medium supported by porous materials. For example, when plantlets of chrysanthemum were grown in Sorbarods in a culture vessel with air 94% RH, a reduction in the tissue hydration was indicated by a significantly lower fresh to dry mass ratio than at 100% RH (Smith et al., 1990b) and increases in stem length and leaf area. In this

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investigation, the RH was reduced to 94% by gaseous diffusion through a gas-permeable membrane that covered holes drilled in the lid of the culture vessel. The use of such ventilated culture vessels can significantly improve plant growth by reducing hyperhydration and facilitating the movement of solutes to the leaves in the transpiration stream. It also provides opportunities for photoautotrophic growth in sugar-free media. When plantlets are cultured in closed vessels, carbon dioxide concentrations fall to low levels in the light period, as Kozai and Sekimoto (1988) demonstrated in cultures of strawberry plants. Photosynthesis requires an adequate supply of carbon dioxide and suitable lighting. Adequate concentrations of carbon dioxide for photoautotrophy can be maintained in ventilated culture vessels with (Afreen-Zobayed et al., 1999, 2000) or without (Horan et al., 1995) elevated levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere outside the culture vessel. Adequate lighting can be achieved under lights delivering a photosynthetic photon flux of 150 μmol m–2 s–1 in a culture room (AfreenZobayed et al., 1999, 2000) or in day-light in a greenhouse (Horan et al., 1995). The environmental requirements of photoautotrophy in vitro have been reviewed by Jeong et al. (1995) and its advantages have been described by Kozai et al. (1995). 6.4. IMMOBILISED CELLS

Yields of secondary metabolites are usually greater in differentiated, slow-growing cells than in fast growing, undifferentiated cells. By immobilising cells in a suitable matrix, their rate of growth can be slowed and the production of secondary products enhanced. Several ingenious methods of immobilisation have been employed. Examples include immobilization in spirally wound cotton (Choi et al. (1995), glass fibre fabric reinforced with a gelling solution of hybrid SiO2 precursors (Campostrini et al., 1996), loofa sponge and polyurethane foam (Liu et al., 1999) and alginate beads (Serp et al., 2000).

REFERENCES ADRIAN J. & ASSOUMANI M. 1983 Gums and hydrocolloids in nutrition. pp. 301-333 in Rechcigl M. (ed.) 1983 CRC Handbook of Nutritional Supplements Vol. II. Agricultural Use. CRC Press Inc. Baton Rouge. AFREEN-ZOBAYED F., ZOBAYED S.M.A., KUBOTA C., KOZAI T. & HASEGAWA O. 2000 A combination of vermiculite and paper pulp supporting material for the photoautotrophic micropropagation of sweet potato. Plant Sci. 157, 225-231.

AFREEN-ZOBAYED F., ZOBAYED S.M.A., KUBOTA C., KOZAI T. & HASEGAWA O. 1999 Supporting material affects the growth and development of in vitro sweet potato plantlets cultured photoautotrophically. In Vitro Cell. Dev. – Pl. 35, 470-474. AHLOOWALIA B.S. & MARETZKI A. 1983 Plant regeneration via somatic embryogenesis in sugarcane. Plant Cell Rep. 2, 21-25. ALBRECHT C. 1986 Optimization of tissue culture media. Comb. Proc. Int. Plant Prop. Soc. 1985, 35, 196-199.


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Chapter 5 Plant Growth Regulators I: Introduction; Auxins, their Analogues and Inhibitors 1. HORMONES, GROWTH SUBSTANCES AND GROWTH REGULATORS Some chemicals occurring naturally within plant tissues (i.e. endogenously), have a regulatory, rather than a nutritional role in growth and development. These compounds, which are generally active at very low concentrations, are known as plant hormones (or plant growth substances). Synthetic chemicals with similar physiological activities to plant growth substances, or compounds having an ability to modify plant growth by some other means, for example polyamines, are usually termed plant growth regulators. Some of the natural growth substances are prepared synthetically or through fermentation processes and can be purchased from chemical suppliers. When these chemicals have been added to plant tissue culture media, they are termed plant growth regulators in this book, to indicate the fact that they have been applied from outside the tissues (i.e. exogenously). There are several recognised classes of plant growth substance. Until relatively recently only five groups were recognised namely: • auxins • cytokinins • gibberellins • ethylene • abscisic acid Auxins and cytokinins are by far the most important for regulating growth and morphogenesis in plant tissue and organ cultures; in these classes, synthetic regulators have been discovered with a biological activity, which equals or exceeds that of the equivalent natural growth substances. No chemical alternatives to the natural gibberellins or abscisic acid are available, but some natural gibberellins are extracted from cultured fungi and are available for use as exogenous regulants. However, several classes of chemicals, which are highly effective in blocking the synthesis of gibberellins within the plant, are very effective

growth regulators. They are usually termed antigibberellins (or growth retardants). These however, can also affect the synthesis of other classes of hormone or growth regulator such as abscisic acid, sterols or brassinosteroids. Exogenous ethylene can be used as a growth regulant, but being a gas, it is difficult to administer and to control the available concentration, except in tightly sealed vessels, this is also true of other alkynes and alkenes which mimic ethylene action such as acetylene and propylene. However, some chemicals have been invented which are capable of releasing ethylene; effective compounds are taken up into plants as intact molecules, but then break down to release ethylene within the tissue of a plant. One of these ethylene-releasing chemicals – ‘ethephon’ (2-chlorethanephosphonic acid) is used as a growth regulator for tissue cultures. There are now also some very specific inhibitors both of ethylene biosynthesis and of its action. In the last decade it has become clear that there are not only five classes of plant hormones but significantly more. Some of these, such as brassinosteroids, jasmonic acid, oligosaccharins and systemin are already relatively well characterised while others - which are known to exist - such as the natural analogues of fusicoccin and the phytotropins still remain to be identified. In addition, it has become clear that elicitors and lipochito-oligosaccharides derived from micro-organisms must be considered as plant growth regulators and indeed, it appears that plants possess specific receptor proteins for such substances. Furthermore, it is now clear that sugars, such as glucose – generally thought of only in terms of their nutritional/energy providing roles – do interact with hormones and/or their transduction chains (see below).

2. AUXINS Auxins are very widely used in plant tissue culture and usually form an integral part of nutrient media. Auxins promote, mainly in combination with cytokinins, the growth of calli, cell suspensions and

organs, and also regulate the direction of morphogenesis. The word auxin has a Greek origin: auxein means to enlarge or to grow. At the cellular level, auxins control basic processes such as cell 175

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division and cell elongation. Since they are capable of initiating cell division they are involved in the formation of meristems giving rise to either unorganised tissue, or defined organs. In organised tissues, auxins are involved in the establishment and maintenance of polarity and in whole plants their most marked effect is the maintenance of apical dominance and mediation of tropisms (summarised in Friml, 2003). The choice of auxins and the concentration administered depends on: • the type of growth and/or development required; • the rate of uptake and of transport of the applied auxin to the target tissue; • the inactivation (oxidation and/or conjugation) of auxin in the medium and within the explant; • the natural levels and the endogenous synthesis within the explant; • the sensitivity of the plant tissue to auxin (and other hormones as well); • the interaction, if any, between applied auxins and the natural endogenous substances.

released again through the action of enzymes (see Section 2.2).

2.1. NATURALLY OCCURRING AND SYNTHETIC AUXINS

The most commonly detected natural auxin is IAA (indole-3-acetic acid) (1); but endogenous occurrence of 4-chloro-IAA (2) (Engvild, 1985) and of indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) (3) (Ludwig-Müller and Epstein, 1991) have also been demonstrated. Furthermore, the weak auxin phenylacetic acid (PAA) (4) occurs naturally in plants (Okamoto et al., 1967) and there are precursors and metabolites of IAA present in plant tissues, like indole-3-pyruvic acid, tryptamine (Cooney and Nonhebel, 1991) or tryptophol (Rayle and Purves, 1967; Percival et al., 1973). In addition, the intermediate of agrobacterial IAA biosynthesis, indole-3-acetamide (5), has been detected in plant tissues (Saotome et al., 1993). Most of the IAA produced within plants is conjugated to other compounds to form esters, amides or glycosyl esters. The most commonly occurring IAA-conjugates are indole- 3acetylaspartic acid (IAAsp) (6) and a range of IAA glucose esters (IAAGlu) (7). Conjugation seems to be a mechanism for storing IAA in cells, stabilising the level of free auxin in the plant, and metabolising its excess (Ljung et al., 2002; Normanly et al., 2004). Auxin in conjugated molecules is protected from oxidative breakdown and may be

IAA may be used as an auxin in plant tissue culture media, but it tends to be oxidised in culture media and is rapidly metabolised within plant tissues. However, this characteristic can be useful, because in some plants, callus induced by IAA (together with cytokinins) frequently gives rise to shoots or embryos as its effective concentration becomes diminished. IAA has also been used with other regulants to induce direct morphogenesis (including the rooting of microcuttings), and for meristem and shoot cultures (e.g., of Bougainvillea, Chaturvedi et al., 1978; Sharma et al., 1981; Citrullus, Barnes, 1979; and


Chapter 5

Sinningia, Haramaki, 1971; Grunewaldt, 1977). Also, in this case, decreasing IAA concentration may be important: in apple microcuttings high IAA at the beginning of culture induces root formation but, later on, the growth of roots is promoted by lower IAA concentrations (Guan et al.,1997). However, for many purposes, it is necessary or desirable to use one of the many synthetic analogues of IAA. These analogues have different structures but similar biological properties and are also called auxins. The synthetic auxins 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4D; Table 5.1) and naphthalene acetic acid (NAA; Table 5.1) are not oxidised, but they can also be converted to conjugates with glucose (see below).

The synthetic auxins (including selenienylated IAA and 2,4-D) most commonly used in tissue cultures are shown in Table 5.1. Use of these

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substances in tissue culture is described later in this chapter. Synthetic N-(indole-3-acetyl) amino acids (e.g., conjugates with glycine, alanine, valine, leucine etc.) may serve as an efficient source of IAA in tissue cultures (Magnus et al., 1992) but are only very infrequently used to this purpose. 2.2. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF AUXINS

Natural and synthetic auxins are low-molecularweight, organic substances, containing either an indole or an aromatic ring. They are crystalline and only slightly soluble in water, but readily soluble in organic solvents (ethanol, methanol, acetone, diethyl ether and dimethyl sulphoxide, DMSO) or, as weak acids, in alkaline watery solutions. With the exception of IAA they are stable and persist in the media for tissue cultures. IAA is less stable and is especially sensitive to the light (mainly UV) and to oxidants (see below). Both naturally occurring indolic auxins and their synthetic counterparts, in spite of their different structures, have similar physiological effects. For auxin activity, an aromatic ring is needed at a distance of 0.55 Ă… from a carboxyl group. Indeed, all active auxins are weak organic acids. The relative degree of activity of individual auxins in different growth processes is very variable. It differs not only from plant to plant, but also from organ to organ, tissue to tissue, cell to cell and, moreover, also with the age and physiological state of the plant (tissue) (Davies, 2004). Probably due to its high instability, IAA is usually less effective than synthetic auxins like 2,4-D or NAA.

3. METABOLISM OF AUXIN In general, the metabolism of auxin, as well as the metabolism of any other hormone, consists of both biosynthetic and hormone-molecule modifying reactions. Auxin biosynthesis is usually thought to be more intensive in meristematic regions and young growing organs such as rapidly growing leaves, apical buds, root tips, and developing inflorescences. 3.1. NATURAL LEVELS OF IAA

In intact plants, the highest level of IAA occurs predominantly in or near the apex and IAA is transported basipetally; thus, we can observe a decreasing IAA concentration from the top to the bottom. The above is especially true for monocotyledons, whereas in dicotyledons the highest concentration of IAA occurs in the subapical zone, which also grows most rapidly (Law and Davies,

1990). Auxin is also abundant in young leaves, floral organs and developing fruits and seeds. IAA concentrations are high in young, fast growing organs and decline with age and are affected by external factors, e.g. by light (wavelength, intensity and photoperiod). The level is not constant during the day: daily oscillations in IAA concentration in Chenopodium rubrum plants have been described. There are no significant changes in constant light, but an endogenous rhythm has been observed in constant darkness. Various diurnal fluctuations were observed in different photoperiodic regimes (Fig 5.1) (PavlovĂĄ and Krekule, 1984). Levels of naturally occurring auxin in explanted tissues are found to depend on the motherplant from which the explants are taken. The age of the motherplant, the conditions under which it has been


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growing and the season of the year at which explants are taken, can all be influential (Cassells, 1979). As stated above, the time of the day may also be important. The presence of an associated organised meristem can cause callus to grow more vigorously, or to be capable of organogenesis (Fakhrai et al., 1989). This suggests that meristematic cells are particularly active sites for the biosynthesis and/or the release of natural growth factors favouring cell growth (Clare and Collin, 1974).

3.2. AUXIN BIOSYNTHESIS

Traditionally, the indole amino acid, tryptophan (Trp), which is formed as well as the other aromatic compounds by the shikimic acid pathway, has been thought to be a precursor of the most important native auxin in plants, IAA. However, as described below, Trp-independent pathways have also been considered.

Fig. 5.1 The rhythm in free IAA concentration in Chenopodium rubrum plants under three different photoperiodic regimes (Pavlova and Krekule 1984).

There are several possibilities as to how plants may convert Trp into IAA: via indole-3-pyruvic acid (the so called “indolepyruvate pathway”), via indole3-acetaldoxime (the “indole-3-acetaldoxime pathway”) and via tryptamine (the “tryptamine pathway”; Fig 5.2). The most common IAA-biosynthetic pathway in plants appears to be the indolepyruvate one; it begins by the transamination of Trp catalysed by the enzyme tryptophan transaminase (or tryptophan amino transferase) (Forest and Wightman, 1972). Indolepyruvate is then converted into indole3-acetaldehyde (Gibson et al.,1972; Purves and Brown, 1978). IAA can originate from this aldehyde either by dehydrogenation (NAD-dependent indoleacetaldehyde dehydrogenase) or by oxidation

(indoleacetaldehyde oxidase) (Wightman and Cohen, 1968; Miyata et al., 1981). The indole-3-acetaldoxime pathway starts by formation of indole-3-acetaldoxime followed by its conversion to indole-3-acetonitrile and final hydrolysis (nitrilase) to IAA (Thimann and Mahadevan, 1964; Normanly et al., 1997). This pathway is typical for, e.g., Brassicaceae and Resedaceae. The tryptamine pathway was reported mainly in Poaceae and involves decarboxylation of Trp into tryptamine (tryptophan decarboxylase) followed by its conversion to indole-3-acetaldehyde. At this point this pathway joins with the indolepyruvate pathway. Since one of the enzymes converting indole-3-acetaldehyde into IAA, i.e., indoleacetaldehyde oxidase, shows sigmoidal


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kinetics, its regulatory role for both these pathways has been proposed (Kutacek, 1985). There is one more IAA biosynthetic pathway starting from Trp: it takes place in some plant pathogenic bacteria and consequently also in plants transformed by Agrobacterium. The first step in this pathway is the formation of indole-3-acetamide (Trp monooxygenase) and its subsequent hydrolysis to IAA (indole-3-acetamide hydrolase) (see Klee et al., 1987 for review). The fact that in labelling experiments the percentage of label in IAA is low in comparison with labelled Trp applied, and that some plants can synthesise IAA even if they are not able to produce Trp (to survive they have to be fed with Trp), led to the recent discovery that IAA can be formed by the non-tryptophan pathway (summarised in Slovin et al., 1999). The probable branch point for IAA and Trp “sub-pathways” lies still in the shikimic acid pathway, and is located upstream from Trp, either at the level of indole-3-glycerol phosphate or indole (Normanly et al., 1993). However, Eckardt in her review summarized evidence suggesting that the Trpindependent pathway might be an artifact (Eckardt 2001). Hence, all the above mentioned pathways exist in plants, some of them may function in parallel or in some proportion and/or sequence depending on the existing physiological conditions.

In contrast to conjugation reactions, auxin degradation is an irreversible process. There are two main ways of IAA degradation: oxidative decarboxylation and oxidation without decarboxylation. The oxidative decarboxylation may be catalysed by a non-specific activity traditionally called “IAAoxidase/peroxidase” and leads to the subsequent formation of degradation products such as indole-3methanol, indole-3-aldehyde, methylene oxindole and indole-3-carboxylic acid (Hinman and Lang, 1965; reviewed by Reinecke and Bandurski, 1987; Bandurski et al., 1995; Slovin et al., 1999). Oxidation without decarboxylation involves complex pathways resulting in the formation of oxindole-3-acetic and dioxindole-3-acetic acids and their derivatives. Similar pathways are functional also for degradation of some conjugates, e.g., indole3-aspartate (see Slovin et al., 1999, for review). The knowledge on the whole complex of auxin metabolism (including biosynthesis) has been recently summarised in Ljung et al., (2002), Zazimalova and Napier (2003), and Normanly et al., (2004). The synthetic auxins, 2,4-D and NAA are often converted, after uptake into plant tissues, to conjugates, mainly glucosyl esters (Barendse et al., 1987, Klems et al., 1998). This reversible conjugation may regulate levels of free active substances.

3.3. AUXIN CONJUGATION AND DEGRADATION

3.4. EFFECT OF SYNTHETIC AUXINS ON IAA LEVELS

Usually, the bulk of auxin molecules present in plants are in conjugated forms. Conjugates are compounds in which hormone molecules are bound in a covalent manner with other low-molecular substances, and therefore lose their physiological activity. Hormone-conjugation reactions are mostly reversible and thus may provide a very flexible tool for regulation of endogenous hormone levels. Auxin is known to form two main classes of conjugates: amides (peptides) and glycosyl esters. Amides originate via formation of peptide bonds between auxins (both native and synthetic) and amino acids, namely aspartate, glutamate, alanine, glycine and valine. Glycosyl esters of IAA involve compounds such as various isomers of o-indole-3acetyl-β-D-glucopyranose and indole-3-acetyl-myoinositol, indole-3-acetylglucosyl-rhamnose, etc. (summarised in Cohen and Bandurski, 1982; Slovin et al., 1999, Ljung et al., 2002, Normanly et al., 2004). Some of the auxin conjugates may also serve as transport forms of auxin.

The synthetic auxins, which are added exogenously to control the growth and organisation of cultured tissues, may affect endogenous IAA levels. This can be caused by inhibition of IAA oxidase. Callus cultures of Arabidopsis thaliana can be initiated and maintained on a medium containing 2,4-D, but progressively lose their morphogenic capacity the longer they are maintained on it, until after 6-8 months there is no regeneration at all. The loss in regenerative ability was found by Negrutiu et al., (1979) to be closely paralleled by a progressive decline in the activity of peroxidase enzymes through successive transfers of the callus. The decline was reversed each time the callus was removed from the presence of 2,4-D and grown on a shoot-inducing medium. Reduction in peroxidase levels would be expected to result in higher endogenous IAA concentrations, but the decrease in peroxidase enzymes appears in this case to have been associated with a decrease in natural auxin biosynthesis. Nakamura et al., (1998) found a correlation between


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decreased rhizogenic activity and the activity of a root-specific peroxidase in tobacco callus. On the other hand, in carrot cell culture, 2,4-D promoted

accumulation of tryptophan-derived (Michalczuk et al., 1992).

Table 5.1 Table of synthetic auxins used in tissue cultures

IAA


Chapter 5

In cultures of wild cherry, endogenous levels of IAA are also considerably reduced by the presence of 2,4-D, although the availability of tryptophan (the precursor of IAA biosynthesis) was increased (Sung, 1979). This suggests that 2,4-D interfered directly with IAA synthesis or hastened IAA conjugation/degradation. 2,4-D inhibition of IAA synthesis has been noted in sycamore suspension cultures (Elliott et al., 1978). Conversely, reducing the external 2,4-D and NAA concentration resulted in a significant increase in internal free IAA concentration in the auxin-dependent and cytokininautonomous tobacco cell strain VBI-0 (Zažímalová et al.,1995). Maeda and Thorpe (1979) suggested that indole-based synthetic auxins might protect IAA

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from natural destruction by competing with it for IAA oxidase enzymes. In carrot hypocotyl explants, neither 2,4-D nor NAA, both of which induced callus formation, had any effect on endogenous IAA concentration. This shows that in this case synthetic auxins induced morphogenesis themselves (Ribnicky et al., 1996). Inhibition of somatic embryos in the globular stage was observed during co-cultivation in growthregulator-free medium of carrot and Arabidopsis somatic embryo cultures. This was probably due to the high intracellular content of 2,4-D in Arabidopsis cultures created during preceding cultivation in 2,4D-containing medium and its release following transfer to growth-regulator-free medium (Meijer et al., 1999).

Fig. 5.2 Pathways of IAA biosynthesis.


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3.5. STABILITY IN CULTURE MEDIA

IAA and to some extent also IBA are heat labile and decompose during autoclaving. IAA is also unstable in culture media at room temperature. In the dark, there can be more than a ten-fold decrease in concentration over a four-week period in the absence of inocula (Campbell and Sutter, 1986; Nissen and Sutter, 1988). The rate of decrease of IAA is even more rapid in the light and is accelerated by the presence of MS salts (Dunlap et al., 1986). In liquid MS medium incubated at 25°C in a normal 16 h photoperiod, 10 μM (1.75 mg/l) IAA was reduced to less than the limit of detection (0.05 mg/l) in 14 days

(Nissen and Sutter, 1988). Because, for oxidative degradation, oxygen is required, in solid media the degradation of IAA is likely to be significantly less. IBA is more stable in solution than IAA: 75% remained unaltered after 30 days in the dark, and 40 % after 30 days in the light. Other auxins such as NAA and 2,4-D are not oxidized (Dunlap et al., 1986), but once absorbed within plant tissues, the rate of either degradation or conjugation of all auxins may be rapid, for they are then not only exposed to physical factors, but are also subjected to enzymatic conversion.

4. TRANSPORT OF AUXINS Auxins seem to be the only group of plant hormones exhibiting - on the level of the whole plant or its parts - active transport in a polar manner in addition to long-distance movement via vascular tissues (Hopkins, 1995). Auxins appear to be transported long distances extensively through the phloem (but probably not the xylem) of higher plants. The free IAA present in the phloem sap is probably synthesised and exported from the mature leaves. This would accord with Sheldrake’s hypothesis (Sheldrake, 1973) that the meristems are net importers rather than synthesisers of IAA in higher plants (reviewed by Baker, 2000) and seems to be in contradiction to the widely accepted idea that meristems are the sites of auxin biosynthesis. The phenomenon of polar auxin transport was demonstrated first in the late 1920s (Went, 1928). In contrast to the movement of auxin via vascular tissues, polar cell-to-cell auxin transport is localised predominantly in parenchyma cells in the sheath surrounding differentiated vascular tissue. The polarity of auxin transport was explained (Rubery and Sheldrake, 1974; Raven, 1975) by the different permeability of opposite parts of cells for dissociated and undissociated molecules of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA− and IAAH, respectively), and by an asymmetric localisation (basal in the stem cells) of a so-called auxin efflux carrier (translocating the IAAanion outside the cell). This idea was summarised by Goldsmith (1977) and named the “chemiosmotic polar diffusion theory”. Now, it is believed - on the basis of biochemical, physiological and molecular biological data - that at the level of the individual cell, both passive diffusion and an auxin-uptake (influx) carrier drive auxin translocation into the cell while an auxin efflux carrier drives auxin transport

out of the cell. The activity of both carriers, to different extents, can be inhibited by several synthetic compounds, mainly of the phytotropin type, e.g. 1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) (8) (reviews by Lomax et al., 1995; Bennett et al., 1998; Morris, 2000). Now several genes are known, coding for both putative carriers and for the NPA-binding site. Typical representatives of these genes, AUX1 (coding for the putative auxin uptake carrier), PIN gene family (coding for the putative auxin efflux carriers, expressed in different tissues and organs) and others have been identified in Arabidopsis thaliana (summarised in Galweiler et al., 1998; Morris, 2000; Friml and Palme, 2002; Morris et al., 2004). The effects of potential auxin transport inhibitors on tissue and organ culture are described below. Delbarre et al., (1996) have studied auxin accumulation at the cell level in detail. Using various radiolabelled auxins, the biochemical properties (kinetic characteristics and specificity) of both carriers (for uptake and efflux) were determined including data on interactions of carriers with potential inhibitors. On the basis of different behaviour of both auxin uptake and efflux carriers towards NAA and 2,4-D, Delbarre et al., (1996) proposed a simple method for measurement of the activity of these carriers: NAA can be used for determination of the efflux carrier, while 2,4-D can serve as a marker of uptake carrier activity. This approach has been used for identification of new auxin transport inhibitors of aryl and aryloxyalkylcarboxylic acid type (Imhoff et al., 2000). Based on studies of auxin transport inhibitors, the hypothesis arose that, unlike the auxin uptake carrier, the auxin efflux carrier has a rather complex structure. It seems to consist of at least two, probably


Chapter 5

three components: the carrier itself, the NPA-binding protein and a rapidly turned-over regulatory protein (Morris et al., 1991). Little is known about the mechanisms resulting in proposed asymmetric distribution of this multi-component system. There is

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some evidence that cytoskeleton (microfilaments in particular) and/or Golgi-mediated protein traffic may be involved in establishment and maintenance of this distribution (reviews by Morris 2000; Friml and Palme, 2002; Morris et al., 2004).

5. MODE OF ACTION OF AUXIN Plants - like other higher organisms - have to possess intraorganismal communication system(s) working over relatively long distances. As no nervous system is present, the main signalling systems are hormone-dependent (Libbenga and Mennes, 1995). Auxins are a component of such systems. Auxins and cytokinins impact at several levels in many different processes of plant development. At the level of isolated plant cells (grown in cell suspension culture) one can distinguish two main processes apparently controlled by auxins in collaboration with cytokinins, i.e., cell cycle and cell division on one hand, and cell elongation on the other. The auxin:cytokinin ratio represents an important signal in the formation of cell phenotype and also in the onset and maintenance of the process of cell division (Stickens et al., 1996; See chapter 10). The ability of auxins (together with cytokinins) to manage key events in plant morphogenesis was documented, among others, by Skoog and Miller’s (1957) discovery of the regulation of organogenesis in vitro by means of the auxin:cytokinin ratio in culture media (cf. Chapter 6). It has been further supported by recent investigations on the relationships between auxin and cytokinin levels and the morphogenetic response of various plants (e.g., Li et al.,1994; Leyser et al., 1996; Centeno et al., 1996). However, despite many reports on the physiological action of both individual phytohormones, the molecular mechanisms of their effect(s) on cell expansion, cell division, differentiation, organogenesis, and the mechanisms of their interactions have not yet been elucidated. Nevertheless, the main steps in auxin- (as well as other hormone-) signalling can be generally described as: 1. initial perception of the hormone signal, 2. the signal transduction cascade, and 3. the final physiological response. 5.1. AUXIN SIGNAL PERCEPTION

By analogy to animal systems each target plant cell is presumed to possess receptors, which are able to detect hormonal signals and then to initiate the chain of molecular events leading to the final

physiological response. Receptor-like auxin-binding proteins have been identified and characterised by various techniques (traditional ligand-binding studies, photoaffinity labelling and genetic approaches) as recently reviewed by Napier et al., (2002), Zazimalova and Napier (2003), Hagen et al., (2004). There are some candidates for true auxin receptors, especially ZmABP1, i.e. Zea mays Auxin-Binding Protein 1, the major auxin-binding protein from maize membranes. This protein exists in the form of a dimer of 22-kDa subunits. It has been purified by several methods and its primary structure was deduced from cDNA clones. Additionally, several other genes encoding this auxin-binding protein (ABP1) have been sequenced from other plants (Arabidopsis thaliana and other dicots including tobacco (reviewed in Napier et al., 2002). All homologues share a common primary amino acid sequence containing an N-terminal signal peptide for transit into the endoplasmic reticulum, one glycosylation site and the C-terminal KDEL (LysAsp-Glu-Leu) sequence for retention in the lumen of endoplasmic reticulum. The crystal structure of ABP1 and its interaction with auxin was described by Woo et al., (2002). Another membrane-associated ABP, showing specificity very similar to that of the maize ABP1, was detected in tobacco cells cultured in vitro (Vreughdenhil et al., 1981 and references therein, Zazimalova et al., 1995). Nevertheless, Jones’s (1994) statement: “There is not enough information to label any single ABP as the auxin receptor...” is still valid and the auxin-binding protein story seems to be “curiouser and curiouser” (Timpte, 2001). 5.2. AUXIN SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION PATHWAY(S)

There are several perception/transduction mechanisms known in animal and plant cells (Libbenga and Mennes, 1995; Walden and Lubenow, 1996). There is some indication that transduction of the auxin signal might be mediated by mechanisms based on a plasma membrane-located receptor, a heterotrimeric G protein and phospholipase A2- or Ccatalysed hydrolysis of specific membrane lipids (recent reviews by Millner, 2001; Fujisawa et al.,


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2001; Scherer, 2002). However, convincing evidence is still missing. Recent findings suggested the involvement of targeted protein degradation in auxin signalling. This mechanism is based on the regulation of the ubiquitin-conjugating pathway by auxin (Estelle, 1999). Ubiquitin is a small and highly-conserved protein which facilitates protein degradation. It seems to be a rather unexpected way to explain the mode of auxin action. On the other hand, if auxin controls the ubiquitin-mediated degradation of those proteins, which are unique for particular phases of the developmental programme (Fig 5.3) this may be well in agreement with a multifunctional regulatory role of auxin in plant development (Buchanan et al., 2000; Leyser, 2001; Kepinski and Leyser, 2002; Hellman and Estelle, 2002; Dharmasiri and Estelle, 2004). 5.3. AUXIN-REGULATED GENE EXPRESSION

Most auxin-controlled developmental processes involve modulation of gene expression in both positive (up-regulation) and negative (downregulation) manners (Theologis, 1986). Numerous auxin-responsive genes have been identified (Takahashi et al., 1995; Guilfoyle, 1999). Several families of genes have been identified in a variety of different plants and organs that were rapidly induced after auxin treatment, namely A ux/ IA A , GST (glutathione-S-transferase), SA UR (small-auxinupregulated RNAs), A CC (aminocyclopropane carboxylic acid) synthase, GH3 genes and many others (summarised in Guilfoyle, 1999). Fewer auxin-responsive down-regulated genes have been described and these were mostly identified in soybean hypocotyls (Baulcombe and Key, 1980). The main players in the control of transcription by auxin are two families of transcription factors: ARFs (auxin response factors), which can bind to the auxinresponse elements within auxin-responsive genes, and Aux/IAA proteins, repressors, the expression of which are auxin-regulated. ARFs can form mixed dimers with Aux/IAAs and in this form they cannot activate expression of relevant genes. At higher auxin concentrations, the ARF-Aux/IAA complexes dissociate and Aux/IAAs are ubiquitinated; ARFs then activate transcription (Ward and Estelle, 2001; Guilfoyle and Hagen, 2001; Kepinski and Leyser, 2002; Tiwari et al., 2004).

Fig. 5.3 The tentative scheme of auxin-regulated cell development (example: formation of tracheid). Auxin controls ubiquitin-mediated degradation of hypothetical proteins (E1-E5, i.e. enzymes, repressors, transcription factors, etc.) involved in promotion of particular developmental phases. Degradation of the proteins necessary for one stage results in the commencement of the next one. In this way auxin keeps the development progressing. ( Buchanan et al., 2000 – reproduced with permission).


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6. PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF AUXINS In most auxin effects, a bell-shaped concentration/activity curve can be observed. At low concentrations (0.1 - 10 µM) the effect usually increases with concentration, but concentrations higher than 10 µM are often inhibitory. This inhibitory effect is usually due to an increase in ethylene production at higher auxin concentrations (see Chapter 7). 6.1. AT THE CELLULAR LEVEL

A stimulatory effect on cell elongation can be demonstrated in segments of coleoptiles or stems at physiologically significant IAA concentrations. Auxin is in most cases active in the concentration range 0.1 – 10 µM. Activation of cell elongation by auxin is mediated by increased proton efflux (‘acidgrowth theory’, Rayle and Cleland, 1992, Hager et al., 1971) and/or changes in gene expression (see above). Both these theories were later combined into ‘dual-sites’ hypothesis (Vanderhoef, 1980). This hypothesis can explain the time-course of a typical biphasic auxin-induced elongation curve consisting of short-term (acid growth) and long-term (gene expression) responses (see also Cleland, 2004 for recent review). In nature, an increase in cell division is most obvious in the spring in trees, when young buds produce auxin, which stimulates cell division in the cambium (Sundberg et al., 1991, Funada et al., 2001). Auxin, together with cytokinins, is also involved in bud initiation and growth. Cell division seems to be regulated by the joint action of auxins and cytokinins (see Chapter 10), each of which appears to influence different phases of the cell cycle. Auxins exert an effect on DNA replication, while cytokinins seem to exert some control over the events leading to mitosis (Jouanneau, 1971,cf Chapter 6). Normal cell divisions require synchrony between the S phase and cell division, suggesting that auxin and cytokinin levels in cultures need to be carefully matched. Auxin starvation resulted in G2-arrest in tobacco cell

suspension (Koens et al., 1995). Activation of cell division is also coupled with activation of cdc 2, the main cell cycle regulating kinase (John et al., 1993). Cells are thought not to enter mitosis unless cytokinin is present. 6.2. AT THE TISSUE AND WHOLE PLANT LEVELS

Auxins stimulate differentiation of vascular bundles and, as already discussed, they take part in differentiation of buds and roots (Aloni, 2004). Auxin is gradually canalised by a positive feedback mechanism where increasing conductivity of auxin conducting cells leads to canals of cells efficiently transporting auxin (Sachs, 2000). Polar transport of auxin (see above) is fundamental for the establishment and maintenance of polarity of the plant and its organs. Inhibition of polar auxin transport leads to many abnormalities and in embryos it can lead to death (Liu et al., 1993). Auxins are known for their ability to promote adventitious root formation. This action is definitely also coupled with stimulation of cell division – increased expression of cyclin B1 and cdc2 was observed well before the first cell division (Hemerly et al., 1993). Early stages of lateral root formation are also regulated by polar auxin transport (Casimiro et al., 2001). IBA is by far the most commonly used auxin to obtain root initiation in conventional cuttings. It has been shown that IBA is readily converted to IAA, but it probably also has an effect on its own (van der Krieken et al., 1992). Polar transport of auxin is the decisive force of apical dominance (Cline, 1994). Removal of the tip, the main auxin source, or inhibition of auxin transport leads to the outgrowth of axillary buds. Also dominance of fruits is mediated by auxin transport. Uneven distribution of auxin is considered to cause differential growth rates in different sides (upper/lower or irradiated/shaded) of coleoptile or root and their bending in gravitropic or phototropic reactions (Friml, 2003).

7. AUXIN EFFECTS IN TISSUE CULTURE In tissue culture, depending on other hormones present in the medium, changes in auxin concentrations may change the type of growth, e.g., stimulation of root formation may switch to callus induction etc. In this respect, each tissue culture system is unique, and the effects of different

concentrations of auxins and other hormones must be tested for each case individually and only to some extent can the results can be transferred to other cultures.


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7.1. INDUCTION OF CALLUS GROWTH

An auxin is generally required for the induction of callus from explants. Applied auxins seem to be capable of fundamentally altering the genetically programmed physiology of whole plant tissues, which had previously determined their differentiated state. Cells, which respond to auxin, revert to a dedifferentiated state and begin to divide. How auxin brings about this reprogramming is understood only to a very limited extent. Lo Schiavo et al., (1989) found that auxins cause DNA to become more methylated than usual and suggested that this might be necessary for the re-programming of differentiated cells. Thus, tissue-specific programmes specifically associated with differentiation would be eradicated by hypermethylation, with perhaps a small fraction of the cells reaching an ultimate state of dedifferentiation in which they become capable of morphogenesis, or embryogenesis (Terzi and Lo Schiavo, 1990). A high rate of DNA methylation was found in the early somatic embryo stage in cultures of Cucurbita pepo L (Leljak-Levanic et al., 2004). Irvine et al., (1983) reported having tested 79 potential regulants for their ability to initiate callus from immature sugarcane leaf tissue. From the effective compounds, 96% had structures known to be associated with auxin activity. The auxin most frequently employed to initiate callus cultures is 2,4D. However, since cultures maintained on 2,4-D may become genetically variable, some investigators prefer NAA or IAA, or a transfer of callus to a medium containing one of these alternative compounds once it has been initiated by 2,4-D. For callus induction from broadleaved trees, 2,4D is generally used at levels between 5 - 15 µM. To induce callus growth from explants of dicotyledonous plants, a cytokinin is usually added to the medium in addition to an auxin. The presence of a cytokinin may not be necessary to obtain callus from explants of monocotyledons and in these plants a somewhat higher auxin concentration, for example 2,4-D in the range 10 - 50 µM is typically used. The combined use of auxin and cytokinin in tissue cultures is considered separately in a later section. Auxins promote cell dispersion in suspension cultures while cytokinins tend to cause cell aggregation. The relatively high levels of auxin added to liquid media to obtain dispersion will prevent morphogenesis, but might induce embryogenesis if the cells are still competent. Whereas cytokinins tend to promote the formation of chlorophyll in callus and suspension cultures, auxins can be

inhibitory. Some reduction of chlorophyll formation in the presence of 2,4-D was noted in callus cultures of pea, tomato and potato by Hildebrandt et al., (1963) and Oxalis dispar callus was found to turn green only when the auxin content in the medium was reduced to one tenth of that normally used to promote callus growth (i.e., 2,4-D reduced from 5 to 0.5 μM, or NAA from 50 to 5 μM). Compared to callus subcultured to media entirely free of auxin, even a low level of auxin delayed the appearance of chlorophyll and shortened the period over which it accumulated (Sunderland and Wells, 1968). Other workers have made similar observations. Increasing the concentration of IAA led to a progressive reduction in chloroplast development within chicory callus (Wozny et al., 1973), but in other tests IAA or NAA have been reckoned to be less inhibitory to chlorophyll formation than 2,4-D (Davey et al., 1971). 7.2. ORGAN CULTURES

An auxin is almost invariably required to promote the initial growth of meristem and shoot tip explants. A low concentration of auxin is often beneficial in conjunction with high levels of cytokinin at Stage II when shoot multiplication is required, although in some cases cytokinin alone is sufficient. It is important to choose an auxin at a concentration that will promote growth without inducing callus formation. The induction of rhizogenesis usually requires an adjustment in the levels of auxins and cytokinins. Rhizogenesis is usually achieved by treatment with auxin alone. Also, development of lateral roots is stimulated by auxin as was demonstrated in Panax ginseng, where IBA was shown to be more effective than NAA (Kim et al., 2003). Exogenous cytokinins are commonly inhibitory (Reid and Howell, 1995). Auxin-induced root formation is thought to require, or induce, the promotion of polyamine synthesis (Friedman et al., 1985). Sometimes tissues, organs or strains of cells arise that are able to grow without the addition of any auxin to the medium. They are said to be auxin autonomous or auxin habituated (see Section on habituation below) 7.3. EMBRYOGENESIS

The process of somatic embryogenesis is often initiated in media containing high levels of auxins (especially 2,4-D), but embryos usually do not develop further until the auxin concentration is reduced. Sharp et al., (1980) proposed that auxin


Chapter 5

induces an embryogenic determination in a proportion of the cells in callus or suspension cultures but at the same time causes these induced cells to cease further development into embryos. It was suggested that division of the pro-embryogenic cells and their development into embryos is only resumed at lower auxin concentrations. There are, however, many recorded exceptions to this general observation, where somatic embryos are induced even in cultures grown on media devoid of auxins. It is possible that in these instances, embryogenesis has been induced by endogenous auxin, the concentration of which has then been subsequently reduced by metabolism to permit embryo formation. In alfalfa, low 2,4-D concentration gives rise to callus from leaf explants, while higher 2,4-D levels induce formation of embryo-like structures (Fehér et al., 2002). Withdrawal of auxin from the inducing medium is associated with cell death and extracellular acidification in cultures of Norway spruce (Bozhkov et al., 2002). The discovery that embryo formation in carrot can be regulated by pH (see Chapter 4) may imply that at least some of the regulatory effects of auxins on the formation and maintenance of embryogenic cultures can be ascribed to their capacity to reduce intracellular pH. Embryo formation coincides with the withdrawal of auxin and a rise in cellular pH. Formation of cellular pH gradients may be important in the formation of embryogenic cells in alfalfa (Pasternak et al., 2002). However, somatic embryogenesis in carrot has also been found to be induced by an excess of hypochlorite ions (Kiyosue et al., 1989), subjecting tissues to high osmotic potential (0.7 mM sucrose or 0.6 M mannitol in Ishikawa et al., 1988; or 0.3 M NaCl in Kiyosue et al., 1989), and by exposure to heavy metal ions, especially by 0.5-1.0 mM Cd2+, Ni2+ and Co2+ (Kiyosue et al., 1990). Thus it cannot be assumed that pH is the only controlling factor: a common physiological mechanism by which such different stimuli can induce embryogenesis has yet to be demonstrated. In the induction of somatic embryogenesis from immature cotyledons of Glycine max, Lazzeri et al., (1988) discovered a highly significant interaction between the concentration of auxin and sucrose in the medium. The number of embryos obtained was reduced if the concentration ratio of auxin: sucrose was high, or vice versa. In the study of somatic embryogenesis in Phaseolus vulgaris induced by 2,4-D, it was shown that there was an inverse relationship between 2,4-D

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concentration in the medium and endogenous IAA level in the globular structures (Dobrev et al., 2001). Using an immunocytochemical approach to visualize IAA it was shown in sunflower somatic embryos that an endogenous auxin pulse induced by the application of exogenous auxin is needed as one of the first signals inducing embryogenesis (Thomas et al., 2002). 7.4. EXAMPLES OF THE USE OF DIFFERENT SYNTHETIC AUXINS IN TISSUE CULTURES

Together with cytokinins, 2,4-D is used primarily for callus induction and the formation and maintenance of suspension cultures, being replaced by NAA and IBA when morphogenesis is required. NAA and IBA are favoured auxins for shoot culture. 2,4,5 trichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,5-T; Table 5.1) is used only rarely in tissue cultures, and then almost exclusively for the induction of callus and indirect embryogenesis in monocotyledons such as Avena, Oryza, and Panicum. Heyser et al., (1983) found that in Triticum aestivum, some varieties produced embryogenic callus with 2,4-D, while others responded only to 2,4,5-T. 3,6-dichloroanisic acid (dicamba; Table 5.1) is often effective in inducing the formation of embryogenic callus in monocotyledons, for example Dactylis glomerata (40 µM) (Gray and Conger, 1985); Musa (90.5 µM) (Jarret et al., 1985b); and rice (4.5-18.1 µM) (Zimny and Lőrz, 1986). The use of 9.1 µM dicamba permitted the formation of wheat scutellar callus, which produced more somatic embryos in conjunction with 2.6-4.7 µM kinetin, than that induced by the optimum rate of 2,4-D (3.6 µM) (Carman et al., 1988). This is probably because dicamba is metabolised quickly in wheat (Chang and Van den Born, 1971), possibly more quickly than 2,4D. 4-amino-3,5,6–trichloropicolinic acid (picloram; Table 5.1) is sometimes used to induce and/or maintain callus or suspension cultures of broadleaved trees, or to induce the formation of embryogenic callus, where it may be more effective than 2,4-D (Beyl and Sharma, 1983). The concentration required (e.g., 0.06-4.0 µM) is generally less than that necessary for other auxins. Mok and Mok (1977) found that the growth rate and yield of callus from different species and varieties of Phaseolus, were greater in the presence of picloram than with 2,4-D. Picloram was active at lower concentrations and over a wider range of genotypes. In only a very few instances has this auxin been used for meristem or single node culture and then at very low concentrations (e.g., 0.012-0.4 µM) in combination with a cytokinin.


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A comparison of the effectiveness of various synthetic auxins was performed on regeneration of wheat, barley and triticale and it was shown that in barley, dicamba or dicamba + 2,4-D were most effective; in triticale, picloram; and in wheat, dicamba or picloram + 2,4-D (Przetakiewicz et al., 2003). Also seleniated auxins, i.e. the newly described 2,4-dichlorophenylselenoacetic acid (Table 5.1) (Tadino et al., 2003) as well as 3(benzo[β]selenyl)acetic acid) (BSSA; Table 5.1) induce somatic embryogenesis in Panax ginseng (Kevers et al., 2002). At high concentrations most synthetic auxins are phytotoxic to field-grown broad-leafed plants. 2,4-D, 2,4,5-T, MCPA, dicamba and picloram have been used commercially as selective herbicides. This detrimental effect was reported also for high levels of IAA and is probably due to a dramatic increase in ethylene production. There are many other chemicals with auxin-like activity besides the ones we have listed, which have seldom been used in plant tissue cultures. An unusual auxin 2-chloro-3(2,3-dichlorophenyl) propionitrile (CDPPN) (9), which is related to orthonil (PRB-8) (10), was found by Nemeth (1981) to produce up to 90% more shoots in apple shoot cultures than the same concentration of IBA (5 μM).

effective for root induction and a mixture of a synthetic auxin and IAA has been found by many workers to be more effective than the synthetic compound on its own. A mixture of 2,4-D (or 2,4,5T) and either IAA or L-tryptophan was found to promote embryogenic callus formation in wheat, pearl millet and some varieties of rice (Nabors et al., 1983). This observation was confirmed by Carman et al., (1988), who found that adding 0.2 mM L-tryptophan to 3.62 µM 2,4-D, consistently enhanced the formation of somatic embryos from scutellum callus of wheat genotypes. There was a decrease in embryo formation when tryptophan was combined with dicamba. As mentioned above, mixtures of auxins are also more effective in inducing regeneration of wheat, barley and triticale (Przetakiewicz et al., 2003).

7.6. AUXIN UPTAKE AND METABOLISM IN TISSUE CULTURES

As might also be expected, L-tryptophan can also act as an auxin replacement in some plants. In these cases it may stimulate growth or induce morphogenesis (e.g., callus growth of Nicotiana glauca x N. langsdorfii hybrids - Cheng, 1972; the formation of embryogenic callus in some rice cultivars - Siriwardana and Nabors, 1983). 7.5. MIXTURES OF AUXINS

Some investigators have employed mixtures of many different auxins (e.g., Blackmon et al., 1981b), but as the effect of individual compounds can vary in different genotypes, most researchers prefer to use only one, or at most two compounds. However, a mixture of more than one auxin can be particularly

It is not quite correct to talk about uptake, because what we can measure, is in fact accumulation, i.e., the amount of a regulator in a tissue, which was taken up from the medium and not yet metabolized. IAA and synthetic auxins such as NAA and 2,4-D are rapidly taken up into cultured tissues from media with a pH less than 5-6. The compounds are subsequently absorbed into cells as whole molecules (via uptake carrier or diffusion, see above), but dissociation then causes them to be retained within the cell, because the plasmalemma is impermeable to auxin anions (Norris and Bukovak, 1972; Raven, 1979; Edwards and Goldsmith, 1980; Minocha and Nissen, 1985; Minocha, 1987). IAA and NAA anions can be exported only by the efflux carrier (see above). Besides uptake through the tissue surface, in cultures using segments, diffusion through the cut surface


Chapter 5

must be taken into account. In apple microcuttings, applied auxin is taken up predominantly via the cut surface and not via the epidermis (Guan and De Klerk, 2000). The rate of uptake of NAA into tobacco pedicel explants was proportional to the concentration in the medium and its presence is necessary for 4 d only (Smulders et al., 1988). Total 2,4-D uptake (14C-labelled) was found to be higher in easy-to-root juvenile clones of Sequoiadendron giganteum than in difficult-to-root mature stem cuttings (Berthon et al., 1991). An unequal distribution of free 2,4-D between apical and basal ends of cuttings was found in both types of shoots; the accumulation was higher in the basal parts. The rate of metabolic conjugation of 2,4-D was higher in the basal part and in the mature clone. 2,4-D uptake and metabolism have also been studied in embryogenic and non-embryogenic maize lines. During the first 24h, uptake was very active in both lines, while after 5 days the embryogenic line contained less 2,4-D. The embryogenic line also metabolised 2,4-D more actively than the nonembryogenic one (Bronsema et al., 1996). Another comparison of 2,4-D uptake, distribution and metabolism was performed with explants of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) hypocotyls and cotyledons. Cotyledon explants take up more 2,4-D, have a more pronounced basipetal gradient of 2,4-D level and conjugate 2,4-D more actively than hypocotyl explants (Fig. 5.4; Klemš et al., 1998).

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adventitious shoot regeneration in sugar beet as well (Zhang et al., 2004).

7.7. EFFECT OF AUXIN TRANSPORT INHIBITORS ON SHOOT CULTURES

Polar transport of auxin can be inhibited by NPA (8) or 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid (TIBA) (11). In the literature, these compounds are often referred to as ‘anti-auxins’, but it is more appropiate to use this term only for compounds that compete with auxin for the auxin receptors. 2,4,6-Trichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,6-T) (12) and p-chlorophenoxyisobutyric acid (PCIB) (13) are probably genuine anti-auxins. Other compounds with anti-auxin effects are ß-NAA , phenylpropionic acid (14), and 2-(o-chlorophenoxy)2- methylpropionic acid (15). Application of two drops of a 2μM solution of TIBA to the apices of cultured rose shoots had the same effect as manually tipping the shoots, and increased the number of axillary shoots subsequently produced. Adding 6 μM TIBA to the medium for Rosa hybrida shoot cultures increased lateral shoot formation during the first two passages (Voyiatzi and Voyiatzi, 1988). TIBA or β-NAA improved

7.8. EFFECTS OF ANTI-AUXINS AND AUXIN TRANSPORT INHIBITORS IN ADVENTIOUS ORGAN FORMATION

Anti-auxins have been reported to promote or modify morphogenesis and in many instances they do appear to have negated the effect of exogenous or endogenous auxin. NPA prevented the growth of tobacco callus when incorporated into the medium at 200 μM, but 2 - 20 μM promoted growth in conjunction with IAA. The compound seemed to reduce auxin activity or enhance that of cytokinin, because callus cultured with 200 μM naptalam plus 12 μM IAA and 2.5 μM kinetin (see Chapter 6)


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initiated buds only when NPA was present (Feng and Linck, 1970). TIBA alone improved callus formation and quality in cultures of pepper (Kaparakis and Alderson, 2003).

level of endogenous auxin for shoot buds to be produced either directly or from associated callus. Placing explants of tomato stems on a medium containing 12 μM cytokinin, zeatin, and 0.5 - 5 μM TIBA but no auxin, caused a marked increase in shoot bud formation, probably because the TIBA prevented endogenous auxin moving to sites of potential shoot bud formation. In Pelargonium, callus that formed on MS medium plus zeatin, gave rise to numerous green xylem-containing nodules. These could be induced to develop into shoot buds when TIBA was added to the medium. In the absence of TIBA, the microscopic bud initials of Pelargonium seemed to release natural auxin in sufficient concentration to prevent further shoot development. Callus of Colocasia esculenta produced normal shoots when 50 μM TIBA was added to the medium whereas shoots produced with combinations of auxin and cytokinin had an abnormal morphology (Nyman and Arditti, 1984). However, although barley callus developed adventitious shoots on a medium with 2,4,5-T, it produced roots on a medium containing TIBA (Jelaska et al., 1984). Also, rooting induced by auxins may be influenced by antiauxins and auxin transport inhibitors. Regeneration of roots on tomato hypocotyl cuttings is suppressed by TIBA (Tyburski and Tretyn, 2004). Similarly, NPA inhibited root formation and growth in cultures of oak shoot segments (Vidal et al., 2003). 7.9. EFFECTS OF ANTI-AUXINS AND AUXIN TRANSPORT INHIBITORS ON EMBRYOGENESIS

Fig. 5.4 The total 14C-activity (open columns) and the 14C-activity associated with free 2,4-D (solid columns) taken up after 2,5,8 and 20 hours incubation of cucumber cotyledon and hypocotyls explants on induction medium with 14C 2,4-D (Klems et al.,1998).

PCIB (13) counteracted the inhibitory effect of 2,4-D on adventitious bud formation on sections of Chondrilla juncea roots (Kefford and Caso, 1972) and, together with the cytokinin benzyladenine, it promoted the formation of adventitious shoots from Solanum melongena callus, when combinations of IAA and BAP were ineffective. Fiola et al., (1978) thought this might be because PCIB overcame excessive endogenous IAA in the tissue. Similar effects were shown by de Klerk et al.,on rooting of apple microcuttings (Fig. 5.5). The work of Cassells (1979) and Cassells et al., (1982) similarly suggested that explants of some species may have a too high

The effect of auxin transport inhibitors and antiauxins on somatic embryogenesis or embryo growth has been equivocal. In anther cultures of Hordeum (Clapham, 1973) and Zea mays (Genovesi and Collins, 1982), TIBA was more effective than normal auxins in inducing callus formation and embryogenesis. 2,4,6-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,6-T) (12) has also been reported to enhance somatic embryo formation in callus cultures (Newcomb and Wetherell, 1970; Smith and Street, 1974), but Stange (1979) found that PCIB (13) inhibited meristematic activity, and Fujimura and Komamine (1979) discovered that 2,4,6-T and PCIB inhibited embryogenesis in carrot suspensions. They took particular care to wash residual auxin from cell clusters and thought that the stimulatory effects of anti-auxins noted by others, were due to their failure to take this precaution. PCIB is able to inhibit cell proliferation in embryogenic culture of Nordmanns fir and to promote development of embryos (Find et al., 2002),


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embryos

(Find

et

al

Fig. 5.5 The effect of IAA and PCIB on rooting of apple microcuttings (de Klerk et al.,unpublished).

whereas in culture of Elutherococcus senticosus, TIBA suppressed embryo formation while cell division was not affected (Choi et al., 2001). Auxin polar transport was reported to be essential for bilateral symmetry during early plant embryogenesis. Three transport inhibitors (TIBA, trans-cinnamic acid (Table 5.2) and 9hydroxyfluorene-9-carboxylic acid (16) induced formation of fused cotyledons in in vitro culture of early globular embryos of Indian mustard (Liu et al., 1993). Also the symmetry of zygotic embryos is affected by auxin polar transport. Application of TIBA to wheat zygotic embryos cultivated in vitro caused abnormal symmetry, i.e. malformed embryos. The relative position of the shoot apical meristem was anomalous and no root meristem differentiated (Fischer and Neuhaus, 1996). In contrast, PCIB, which is considered to compete with auxin for the auxin receptor but to have no effect on auxin transport, did not affect embryo symmetry. Ă&#x;-NAA, phenylpropionic acid, and 2-(o-chlorophenoxy)-2methylpropionic acid, together with TIBA, prevented the re-callusing of indirectly formed Sapindus

trifoliatus embryos, but did not permit embryo germination. Germination only occurred when 5methyl-tryptophan (17) was added to the medium. The compound seemed to act as an anti-auxin (Desai et al., 1986).


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8. THE GROWTH REGULATORY EFFECTS OF PHENOLS Compounds that carry one or more hydroxyl groups on an aromatic ring are termed phenolic compounds (for examples see Table 5.2). There are many papers on the growth regulating properties of phenolic compounds in tissue cultures. The documented effects of adding phenols to culture media are mainly an enhancement of callus growth, more effective adventitious shoot formation, the improved rooting of shoots, and a greater rate of shoot proliferation in certain shoot cultures. Most plant responses have involved a synergism with auxins, particularly IAA, so that a mode of action that is dependent on the regulation of internal IAA levels has seemed probable. Many mono-, di- and trihydroxyphenols and their more complex derivatives found naturally in plant cells are strong reducing agents and can serve as substrates for oxidative enzymes. This has led to two hypotheses as to their growth regulatory activity: 1. When added exogenously, hydroxyphenols act as alternative substrates for oxidative enzymes, and may protect auxin from oxidative breakdown (Stonier, 1971; Stonier et al., 1970; James and Thurbon, 1981b. Lee and Skoog (1965) and Grambow and Langenbeck-Schwich (1983) reported that the substitution pattern of phenols affects the rate of IAA oxidation. Some monophenolics increase the rate, while some 3-substituted phenols depress it. Phenols were found to react with hydrogen peroxide produced during IAA degradation, thereby protecting the cell from its toxic effects. Relatively large amounts of natural inhibitors of IAA oxidase have been reported to be present in meristematic and juvenile tissues, but not in normal mature differentiated cells until they are wounded (Stonier and Yoneda, 1967; Stonier, 1969). The normal process of auxin (IAA) inactivation has also been reported to be inhibited in the callus produced following crown-gall infection, which is capable of autonomous growth in culture (Lipetz and Galston, 1959; Platt, 1954; Stonier, 1969; Bouillenne and Gaspar, 1970), and in auxinhabituated callus (Weis, 1967). Growing tobacco cells on media that favour the induction of auxin habituation (see Syono and Furuya, 1974) caused an increase in an inhibitor of auxin destruction (Syono, 1979). But some workers (e.g., Basu et al., 1969; Hammerschlag, 1982) have questioned whether the stimulatory effect of phenols in promoting rooting is not due to some other function than that of preventing IAA destruction. Shoots of a non-rooting mutant of

tobacco, rac, contain high levels of auxin protectors, namely chlorogenic acid and total soluble phenols (Faivre-Rampant et al., 2000). Lee (1980) found that, in maize, some phenolic compounds can alter the relative proportions of free and bound IAA. On the other hand, enhancement of quercetin (Table 5.2) glucosylation by 2,4-D was described in Vitis cell cultures (Kokubo et al., 2001). 2. Morphogenic activity is induced by the products formed when compounds such as phloroglucinol (18) and phloridzin (19) (see below) are oxidised. Gur et al., (1988) advanced this hypothesis when they found that phloroglucinol only promoted rooting in apple clones with sufficient polyphenol oxidase activity to cause significant oxidation of the compound. Of significance to this proposal is the fact that phloroglucinol and phloridzin can inhibit vitrification, apparently by serving as precursors of lignin synthesis It should be noted however that phenols may have other, unexpected roles. Thus, some phenolic compounds such as, or similar to, quercitin may act as true plant regulators – the phytotropins. Similarly, salicylic acid (Table 5.2) is now emerging as an important component of plant responses to biotic stress (see Chapter 7, Section 8).


Chapter 5 Table 5.2 Structures of Phenolic Compounds in Plants

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8.1. CORRELATIONS WITH ENDOGENOUS LEVELS

8.2. ROOT FORMATION

The natural rate of formation of some phenolic compounds has been observed to depend on the rate of growth of cultured tissues (Barz, 1977) and on auxin/cytokinin levels in the medium (Sargent and Skoog, 1960; Skoog and Montaldi, 1961). Their presence has frequently been correlated with the morphogenetic capacity of tissues (Tryon, 1956; Hackett, 1970; Kefeli and Kadyrov, 1971). A rise in the content of endogenous phenolics, including monoferuloyl, monocaffeoyl and mono-p-cumaroyl tartaric acids, was observed during root formation in Vitis vinifera in vitro (Mato et al., 1988). A correlation between flavonoid accumulation and root formation was also described in Eucalyptus gunii (Curir et al., 1990). Additionally, a correlation between level of endogenous derivatives of cinnamic and benzoic acids with embryogenesis was reported in Medicago falcata (Cvikrovรก et al., 1994). Rawal and Mehta (1982) found that shoot formation from haploid tobacco callus occurred as the content of natural phenolic substances declined, while cellular differentiation occurred with increasing phenolic accumulation. Juvenile tissues naturally have high levels of auxin protectors (Stonier, 1971; 1972). Also, the level of aromatic amines, like tyramine or phenetylamine, seems to be correlated to morphogenetic events (Martin-Tanguy and Carre, 1993, Cvikrovรก et al., 1996). On the other hand, a decreased content of phenolic acids (mainly derivatives of cinnamic acid (Table 5.2) found in alfalfa (Medicago falcata L.) cell suspension culture after treatment with an inhibitor of phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL), 2-aminoindan-2-phosphonic acid (AIP) (20), was connected with a decreased level of IAA, lower IAA-oxidase activity in later stages of the culture and with slower growth of the culture (Hrubcovรก et al., 2000). In embryonic cultures of sessile oak, inhibiton of phenylpropanoid synthesis by AIP led to increased number of well developed somatic embryos (Cvikrovรก et al., 2003).

Some observations on natural levels of auxin protectors might suggest that their low levels are coupled with root initiation, but high levels with root growth. For example, shoots of apple grown in vitro were found to have low phenol contents at the root induction phase, but high contents as roots were growing (Druart et al., 1982). In Sequoiadendron giganteum, phenolic compounds were found to decrease in concentration when shoots were moved to a root induction medium. The activity of peroxidases in the induction medium increased during 7-11 days and then decreased, roots appearing as phenols were decreasing (Monteuuis et al., 1987). In each of these plants, peroxidase activity was inversely correlated with phenol content. In chestnut, rhizogenesis occurred during an increase in the level of auxin protectors, whose basipetal transport was inhibited by applied IBA (Mato and Vieitez, 1986). The best time to explant shoot tips from adult chestnut material to a rootinducing medium, was during one of the first two peaks of growth of shoots, which coincided with the occurrence of maximum quantitites of natural phenolics (Chevre and Salesses, 1987). 4-chlororesorcinol (21), a polyphenol oxidase inhibitor (i.e.inhibiting the conversion of monophenols and dihydric phenols to polyphenols) has been found to improve the rooting and subsequent growth of cuttings (Gad et al., 1988). In shoot cuttings of Cedrus deodara adventitious rooting was stimulated both by IBA and by coumarin (Table 5.2) (Nandi et al., 2002).


Chapter 5 8.3. EFFECT OF PHLOROGLUCINOL

Workers at East Malling Research Station discovered that in the genera Malus and Prunus, 1 mM phloroglucinol added to culture media containing growth substances, was able to enhance growth and the rate of axillary shoot production from shoot cultures (Jones, 1976; Jones, 1979). James and Wakerell (1982) found that the compound was without effect on the apple variety ‘M26’, but promotory on ‘M9’, while Whiteley and Abbott (1977) reported that the growth of shoot cultures of Malus ‘Golden Delicious’, ‘Egremont Russet’ and ‘Bramley’ was completely inhibited by 0.1-10 mM phloroglucinol. Hutchinson (1985) found that 1 mM phloroglucinol more than doubled the number of shoots produced by the apple cultivar ‘Northern Spy’ during the first two subcultures: there was no increase in shoot number by the fourth subculture. Phloroglucinol and its analogues have proved to be effective in other plants of the Rosaceae. For example, added to the medium at 500 μM, phloroglucinol (and catechol – see below) increased adventitious shoot formation from Rubus callus (Compton and Preece, 1988). However stimulatory effects have also been reported on plants of some other families (e.g., on shoot growth and shoot proliferation of Cinchona (Rubiaceae) (Hunter, 1979; Krikorian et al., 1982) and Ficus carica (Moraceae) (Pontikis and Melas, 1986). Vitrification is prevented by phloro-glucinol in an even wider range of plants. Adding phloridzin (19) and phloroglucinol to the medium, increased the number of somatic embryos produced from embryogenic callus of oil palm (Hanower and Hanower, 1984). Rooting may be stimulated by phloroglucinol when added to rooting media together with auxin. This effect has been especially noted in several apple cultivars (Jones et al., 1977, 1979; James and Thurbon, 1979, 1981 a,b; Jones and Hatfield, 1976; Zimmerman and Broome, 1981; Zimmerman, 1984). Welander and Huntrieser (1981) found that IBA plus 0.1 mM phoroglucinol promoted the rooting of adult shoots: 4.9 mM IBA plus 1 mM phloroglucinol induced the best rooting of juvenile shoots. Phloroglucinol and its analogues (see below) have been shown to promote rooting of Prunus (Chancel et al., 1980), strawberry and Rubus genotypes in conjunction with IBA (but not NAA) (James, 1979; Sobczykiewicz, 1987). A promotive effect of phloroglucinol on rooting was also described in plantlet regeneration of Ficus carica from leaves (Yakushiji et al., 2003), in micro-shoots of Decalepis hamiltonii (Reddy et al., 2001) and in nodular callus

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of mangosteen (Te-chato and Lim, 1999). Interestingly, phloroglucinol is able to suppress accumulation of phenolic substances in the callus of water chestnut, enabling plant regeneration from the callus (Hoque and Arima, 2002). The structurally-related glycoside, phloridzin (19), has the same effect as phloroglucinol (Jones, 1976) but it is heat labile and more expensive (Krikorian et al., 1982). Phloridzin is metabolised into phloroglucinol and phloretic acid (22). Phloretic acid was also found by Jones and Hatfield (1976) to increase the proportion of apple shoots that could be rooted, but it was less active than phloroglucinol. Phloroglucinol had occasional inhibitory effects, e.g., on the rooting of sour cherry shoots grown in vitro (Snir, 1983) and in sentag shoots (Kooi et al., 1999). It has been suggested that phloroglucinol acts as a bactericide, increasing shoot regeneration only in shoot cultures carrying concealed bacterial infections. The stimulatory effect of the compound is, however, now thought to be largely independent of this effect (Jones and Hopgood, 1979; Jones and James, 1979). Most probably, the compound and its homologues act as auxin synergists (Hess, 1969), or auxin protectors (see above). 8.4. THE EFFECT OF CATECHOL

Catechol (Table 5.2) is another strong reducing agent that has been reported to regulate the rate of IAA oxidation in plant tissues. Hackett (1970) found that although apices of juvenile Hedera shoots would root in an irradiance of 53 - 70 μmol.m-2.s-1 when treated with 25-50 μM NAA, IAA had very little effect. However, 60 μM IAA together with 50 μM catechol resulted in a rooting response that was almost equal to that produced by the optimum NAA level, suggesting that catechol protected IAA from light-induced degradation At low irradiance (7 μmol.m-2.s-1), IAA alone produced almost as many roots as IAA + catechol in high lighting. The rooting response of adult shoot tips in low light was very similar to that of juvenile tips in high light. Catechol (and phloroglucinol, 500 μM), increased the number of adventitious shoots formed from leaf callus of tobacco (Compton and Preece, 1988). Catechol was much less effective than phloroglucinol in promoting the rooting of apple shoots (Jones and Hatfield, 1976) but promoted the rooting of etiolated Populus robusta cuttings in conjunction with IAA and sucrose (Pal and Nanda, 1981). This last test was not conducted under sterile conditions so that


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catechol could have acted as an antiseptic. Poor rooting is a feature of contaminated cultures (Lang and Schwartz, 1981). 8.5. OTHER PHENOLIC COMPOUNDS

Like catechol, chlorogenic acid (Table 5.2) is a natural constituent of plants. It is a strong reducing agent, which has been noted to stimulate callus growth of Prunus avium stem segments (Feucht and Johal, 1977; Feucht and Schmid, 1980) and to promote the growth of olive callus (Lavee and Avidan, 1982). Together with 10 - 100 μM pcoumaric acid (Table 5.2), chlorogenic acid has been added routinely to media containing NAA and IBA to promote rooting of Beta vulgaris (Margara, 1977) and Brassica (Margara and Leydecker, 1978) shoots in vitro. Hammerschlag (1982) was able to root 100% of Prunus cerasifera shoots in the light when chlorogenic acid and IAA were present in the medium, but only 30% formed roots in response to IAA alone. Shoots kept in darkness all rooted in response to IAA alone. Many natural coumarins are found in plants, but their biochemical or physiological roles are not well understood. Compounds of this kind have been found to affect a wide variety of processes, low levels sometimes exerting a stimulatory role, but higher levels are often inhibitory. This is particularly noticeable in the effect of coumarins on the activity of many classes of enzymes. Scopoletin (Table 5.2) has been reported to either increase or decrease IAA oxidase activity, according to concentration (Imbert and Wilson, 1970) and in tobacco callus it can inhibit IAA degradation (Skoog and Montaldi, 1961), perhaps by acting as a substrate for peroxidase enzymes. Coumarin and related compounds, have been found to both stimulate and decrease protein synthesis, respiration and photophosphorylation and decrease carbohydrate metabolism (Brown, 1981), but increased growth in conjunction with IAA has been reported (Neumann, 1960). Adding 90-150 μM coumarin (and no other regulant) to Murashige and Tucker (1969) medium induced the formation of roots and shoots from stem sections of Citrus `Swingle Citrumelo’ seedlings (Grosser and Chandler, 1986). Tobacco pith callus grown on the medium of Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) with l2 μM IAA and 12

μM kinetin is wholly unorganised, but if grown on the same medium supplemented with 600 μM Ltyrosine (23), 80 μM adenine sulphate and 2.7 mM NaH2PO4.H2O, adventitious shoots are formed (Thorpe and Murashige, 1968; 1970: Murashige, 1961). Tyrosine is a substrate for the enzyme phenylalanine ammonia lyase which converts it to pcoumaric acid. Perhaps the stimulation of adventitious shoot formation by tyrosine is therefore related to its conversion to phenolic acids that then protect, or interact with, auxin? Auxin requiring callus of tobacco has been found to accumulate more p-coumaric and p-ferulic acid (Table 5.2) than callus, which is auxin-habituated (i.e., auxin autotrophic) (Zador et al., 1985).

Other compounds, which have been suspected to be naturally-occurring inhibitors of IAA oxidase, may increase callus growth in certain circumstances. They include the quinone, juglone (Compton and Preece, 1988), some diphenolic flavonoids with antioxidant properties such as naringenin (Phillips, 1961, 1962), quercitin and its glycoside quercitrin (Furuya et al., 1962; Thimann, 1963; Feucht and Nachit, 1978), catechin and flavandiols (Feucht and Nachit, 1977; Feucht and Schmid, 1980) and chemicals of the `β-inhibitor complex’ (BennettClark and Kefford, 1953). Examples of the latter are coumarin (see above), scopoletin (and its glucoside scopolin) (Schaeffer et al., 1967), and various phenolic acids such as caffeic acid (Table 5.2), chlorogenic acid (see above), and sinapic acid (Thimann, 1963). The phenolic vitamin riboflavin might be also of importance for plant development. It was shown to participate in the mechanism of colonization of alfalfa roots by Sinorhizobium meliloti (Yang et al., 2002), to promote induction of embryogenic callus in Zoysia japonica (Asano et al., 1996) and to protect auxin from oxidation (Brennan, 1996).


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9. AUXIN –ETHYLENE INTERACTIONS Higher auxin concentrations almost invariably increase ethylene production (see review by Kende, 1993). Ethylene accumulated in the tissue culture vessels may then inhibit the growth and

development of many tissue culture grown plants (see Chapter 7). Conversely, ethylene may effect auxin transport and metabolism.

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Chapter 6 Plant Growth Regulators II: Cytokinins, their Analogues and Antagonists 1. BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS complicated by the fact that environmental factors e.g. light, water status, wounding, pathogens - may modify responses and indeed hormone levels themselves. The reason for this appears to be that hormones (and growth regulators) and environmental factors share many components in their transduction chains (i.e. the very early events which occur after the signal - abiotic or biotic - is perceived by the plant tissue). These transduction chains interact to produce an integrated response. Unsurprisingly therefore, it is difficult to predict how any hormone (or growth regulator or inhibitor) will affect any given plant system.

Hormones in plants differ from most of those in animals by having pleiotropic effects; that is, they are involved in the control of a wide range of developmental processes. At the same time the effect of a hormone on any developmental process depends on the species. For example, ethylene inhibits growth in dicotyledons and most monocotyledons but is promotory in deepwater rice and other hydrophytes. Moreover, two or more hormones can interact synergistically or antagonistically in many circumstances. Equally, any given hormone may affect the biosynthesis or metabolism of another, thus affecting endogenous levels. The issue is further

2. PROPERTIES AND DISCOVERY OF CYTOKININS resumed even if pieces of the newly-formed tissue were subcultured onto a fresh medium. Cell division and callus growth did continue however, if either coconut milk or yeast extract were added to the medium and so attempts were made to isolate the active principle.

2.1. BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY

Cytokinins comprise a separate class of growth substances and growth regulators. They produce various effects when applied to intact plants. They particularly stimulate protein synthesis and participate in cell cycle control. It is perhaps for this reason that they can promote the maturation of chloroplasts and delay the senescence of detached leaves. Cytokinin application to a single site in the plant (e.g. to one leaf) causes the treated organ to become an active sink for amino acids, which then migrate to the organ from surrounding sites. The effect of cytokinins is most noticeable in tissue cultures where they are used, often together with auxins, to stimulate cell division and control morphogenesis. Added to shoot culture media, these compounds overcome apical dominance and release lateral buds from dormancy.

As chromatography of ethanol - soluble fractions of yeast extract indicated that the substance was a purine, other sources of naturally-occurring purines were examined for their ability to promote continued callus growth. Extracts from aged herring sperm DNA yielded a compound with the same adsorption peak and chemical behaviour as the one discovered from the yeast extract. It was also isolated in a crystalline form from samples of DNA autoclaved under acidic conditions. The new growth factor was named `kinetin' because it stimulated cell division in

2.2. DISCOVERY

As in the case of auxins, there are both naturallyoccurring compounds and their synthetic analogues. The first cytokinin to be discovered, kinetin (1), was isolated in Professor Skoog's laboratory at the University of Wisconsin, following experiments to promote continuing growth of the callus which formed on tobacco stem sections on nutrient media. Cells of the explants initially proliferated quickly but although the addition of IAA increased the amount of callus produced, growth soon stopped and was not 205

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cells that otherwise might have become multinuclear (Miller et al., 1955a,b; Miller, 1961a,b). It was identified as 6-furfuryl aminopurine. The general

term cytokinin was later proposed to cover all compounds having a similar activity (Skoog et al., 1965).

3. NATURALLY-OCCURRING CYTOKININS Although kinetin is not yet accepted as a naturallyoccurring cytokinin, and thought to have arisen in the original isolates by structural rearrangement (Hecht, 1980), many natural cytokinins that are structurallyrelated to kinetin have been identified, either as free bases, as glucosides, ribosides, or nucleotides (Entsch

et al., 1980). Such compounds used in plant tissue work are: trans-zeatin (2) (4-hydroxy-3-methyltrans-2-butenylaminopurine), iP (3) (N6 - Δ2isopentenyladenine) and dihydrozeatin (4) (6-(4hydroxy-3-methyl-trans-2- butenyl)aminopurine).

Because of the presence of a double bond in the side chain, the zeatin molecule has two configurations: the form which occurs predominantly in nature is the trans-isomer. Large amounts of cis-zeatin (5) were, however, identified in Cicer seeds (Emery et al., 1998). Seaweed preparations are today widely used to modify plant growth both in the field and under in vitro situations. Recent work has shown that seaweeds are rich sources of natural cis-zeatin (Stirk et al., 2003). These results indicate that the cisisomer is of much wider occurrence and significance than originally thought. Synthetic preparations of zeatin often consist of mixed cis- and trans-isomers

but the cis- form has much lower cytokinin activity (Van Staden and Drewes, 1991). This low activity of zeatin-cis-isomers can be explained in terms of the existence of cis-trans-isomerase (Mok et al., 1992; Bassil et al, 1993) having high affinity to convert ciszeatin to the highly active trans-isomer. Besides occurring as a free base, zeatin also occurs naturally as glucosidic conjugates. Dihydrozeatin, a natural metabolite of zeatin, has cytokinin activity; it is resistant to oxidation due to its saturated side chain, and is sometimes considered as a storage form of zeatin. Zeatin riboside (6) is highly active as a cytokinin, and has been used in some experimental


Chapter 6

tissue culture work. The riboside of iP [N6-(Δ2isopentenyl)adenosine], or its 2-methylthioanalogue, can occur in t-RNAs (see below). In Actinidia cultures, iP is converted to zeatin (Einset, 1986a,b). Despite the occurrence of endogenous cytokinins in whole plants, many tissues and small organs isolated in vitro are unable to synthesize sufficient of these substances to sustain growth. This is particularly the case with dicotyledonous tissues where a low level of cytokinin is frequently required to be added to the culture medium. The dependence of some callus cultures on cytokinin for cell division has been used as the basis of a sensitive bio-assay for cytokinins (Miller, 1963; Linsmaier and Skoog, 1965; Letham, 1967). However, cytokinin-independent callus and cell strains of broad-leafed plants are commonly found, and from some of them, zeatin and iP have been isolated (Dyson and Hall, 1972; Einset and Skoog, 1973). Zeatin and zeatin riboside have been obtained from monocotyledonous callus grown in the absence of either auxin or cytokinin (Kemp and Stoltz, 1979). Presumably in tissues that are able to grow without cytokinin being added to the medium, the cells can produce sufficient natural cytokinin for cell division to proceed. 3.1 BIOSYNTHESIS

Cytokinins occur as free molecules in plants, but are also found in the t-RNAs of the cytoplasm and chloroplast. In whole plants, roots appear to be major sites of natural cytokinin biosynthesis, but some production does take place in other actively growing tissues, (Van Staden and Davey, 1979; Chen et al., 1985). The root apex, and particularly the cells of its ‘quiescent centre’, could be important sites of synthesis (Short and Torrey, 1972a; Torrey, 1972). It has been suggested that the slow rate of cell division in the root quiescent centre could be the result of a supra-optimal cytokinin concentration. Some experimental evidence that the root tip is a primary site of cytokinin synthesis was obtained by Ochatt and Power (1988) in the roots which developed from the callus of Prunus cerasus. Roots only differentiated some distance from the tip, leaving a lateralroot-free zone, but were formed along the entire length of the root, right up to the tip when the root tip was removed. It was thought that cytokinins might have been present in supra-optimal amounts for rooting, until the tip was removed. Isolated roots can be cultured without the addition of a cytokinin to the growth medium. Skoog and Tsui (1948) found that although roots, initiated from

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tobacco calluses, were able to grow indefinitely in White's basic medium without growth substances, shoot buds were incapable of continued growth unless they developed either directly from roots, or from callus immediately adjoining the origin of the adventitious roots. Similar observations have been made by Koda and Okazawa (1980) with asparagus, and by Bollmark et al. (1988) with pea cuttings. CK biosynthesis has been dogged by unproven assumptions and mis-conceptions since these compounds were first discovered in plants. As a result of the circumstances that led to their discovery and because of their impact on both cell division and protein synthesis, CKs were always thought to be closely associated with nucleic acids. For over a decade efforts focussed solely on the possibility that CKs were derived from t-RNA and it was only in the late 1970s that a direct route of CK biosynthesis, independent of t-RNA, was proposed. However, many of the original ideas concerning CK biosynthesis continued to plague this branch of CK research. Whilst significant advances have been made in the last three years, there is still much to be learnt, particularly concerning the nature of the substrates for the key enzyme for CK biosynthesis, i.e. isopentenyl transferase (IPT) (see Fig. 6.1). The continued use of genomics integrated with traditional biochemical and genetic approaches should allow the elucidation of the ‘elusive’ isoprenoid CK biosynthetic pathway. However, it must be emphasised that the use of any of these techniques alone will be insufficient and result in an incomplete picture of CK biosynthesis. It is of prime importance to establish the universality of the IPT gene in plants, which should become increasingly easier as more plant genomes are mapped, and by applying techniques similar to those used by Zubko et al. (2002) and Sun et al., (2003). Of equal importance is the determination of the origin of the side chain and the nature of the reaction products. By utilising the methods of Åstot et al. (2000) in plants where native genes are overexpressed, together with an inhibitor of the methylerythritol phosphate (MEP) pathway for formation of dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP), one of the substrates for IPT, this area of uncertainty should be resolved. The recently discovered predominance of zeatin cis-isomers in certain plant species also requires explanation and relates to the possibility that these cis-isomers may be synthesised via a direct route, independent of t-RNA degradation. Finally, the most ignored area of CK biosynthesis deserves some attention, i.e. the


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biosynthesis of the aromatic CKs. These derivatives presumably play an important role in many plant species, yet research into this species of CK is minimal at the most. A starting point would be to examine the incorporation of label from previously proposed side chain precursors in cell free extracts, as was achieved with isoprenoic CKs, and possibly to identify mutants in which aromatic CKs are overproduced (Taylor et al., 2003). One way in which the origin of the side chain could be resolved would be to over-express key genes involved in the MEP and acetate/mevalonate (MVA) pathways in callus tissue and then to assess whether shoot formation occurs in the absence of exogenously

applied CK as achieved by Kakimoto (2001) and Sun et al. (2003), and then to determine the CK profile by GC-MS (Taylor et al., 2003). A similar strategy has been employed in Arabidopsis to ascertain if GA biosynthesis is plastid-localised (EstĂŠvez et al., 2001). Alternatively, chloroplasts could be isolated and fed labelled pyruvate or GA-3-P and CKs analysed to assess if any have incorporated label. This could be confirmed by feeding label in the presence of fos-midomycin, an inhibitor of the plastid biosynthetic pathway, which should result in a decrease in incorporation into CKs. Of utmost importance is the unequivocal demonstration of incorporation of label from the MEP or acetate/MVA pathways into CKs.

Scheme of cytokinin biosynthesis in plants (according to Buchanan et al., 2000, and Haberer and Kieber, 2002, modified). MEP, methylerythritol phosphate; MVA, mevalonic acid; DMAPP, dimethylallyl diphosphate; iPDP, N6-('2-isopentenyl)adenosine-5' diphosphate; iPTP, N6-('2-isopentenyl)adenosine-5' -triphosphate; iPMP, N 6-(' 2-isopentenyl)adenosine-5' -monophosphate; iPA, N6-('2-isopentenyl)adenosine; iP, N6-('2-isopentenyl)adenine; Z, zeatin; ZDP, zeatin riboside-5' -diphosphate; ZTP, zeatin riboside5' -triphosphate; ZMP, zeatin riboside-5' -monophosphate; ZR, zeatin riboside; cis-Z, cis-zeatin; DHZDP, dihydrozeatin riboside-5' diphosphate; DHZTP, dihydrozeatin riboside-5' -triphosphate; DHZMP, dihydrozeatin riboside-5' -monophosphate; DHZR, dihydrozeatin riboside; DHZ, dihydrozeatin.

Cytokinins produced in roots of plants are normally transported in the xylem to other regions. The bleeding sap of plants is rich in cytokinins and has been shown to promote growth in vitro (Skene, 1972b; Zimmer and Pieper, 1975; 1976). The cytokinin produced by shoot tissues is only a small proportion of that formed by root apices. That

synthesised in shoot apices is insufficient to sustain their prolonged growth in vitro. Cytokinin nucleotides (compounds composed of Dribose, phosphoric acid, and N6-substituted adenine) are characteristic of natural cytokinins. They are found in suspension cultured cells, but whether they arise from the degradation of t-RNA or from de novo


Chapter 6

synthesis, is not clear. That they might be a source of cytokinins in cultures is suggested by the finding that their maximum concentration in Pimpinella anisum

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suspensions coincided with the peak occurrence of isopentenyladenine, and iso-pentenyladenosine in the cells (Ernst and Oesterholt, 1985).

4. SYNTHETIC CYTOKININ ANALOGUES 4.1. SUBSTITUTED PURINES

Although used in research, the natural cytokinins iP and zeatin are not used by commercial laboratories routinely, because of their cost. Fortunately, several chemical analogues of natural cytokinins apart from kinetin have been prepared which are found to be highly active as cytokinins. Although they are chiefly N6-substituted adenine derivatives, some other slightly less structurally-related compounds also possess cytokinin activity, for example 4alkylaminopteridines (Iwamura et al., 1980), and 6benzyloxypurines. Some of these analogues are reported to be more active than kinetin or benzyladenine (BA), and are particularly effective in promoting morphogenesis (Wilcox et al., 1978, 1981). The 1-deaza analogue of zeatin riboside (Rogozinska et al., 1973; Rodaway and Lutz, 1985; Kaminek et al., 1987) also has cytokinin activity. Today it is widely accepted that derivatives of BA (7a), such as the topolins (7b,c) are aromatic, naturally occurring cytokinins. It is essential that they be treated as such in tissue culture research and experimental design. Only a few of these compounds are available in chemical catalogues. They are expensive and therefore only of interest for research purposes. Synthetic cytokinins most commonly used in micropropagation work are the compounds kinetin (1) and benzylaminopurine (BA) (7a). It is now accepted that BA-derivatives e.g 2hydroxy benzyladenosine (8) are naturally occurring (Horgan et al., 1973; Ernst et al., 1983). The synthetic cytokinin PBA (or SD8339) (9) 6-(benzylamino)-9-(2- tetrahydropyranyl )-9H-purine, which is a product of Shell Research Ltd., has high physiological activity, but seems only to have been used experimentally, and not in commercial micropropagation. Several compounds with cytokinin or anticytokinin activity have fungicidal properties (Hecht, 1980). The fungicide benomyl (10), which has a structure broadly similar to adenine-based cytokinins, has the ability to stimulate the growth of soybean and radish callus cultures (Skene, 1972a). In both species it was much less efficient than kinetin. Benomyl can be damaging to cultures. It was phytotoxic to orchid protocorms at 0.2 mg/l in an

agar medium, but stimulated growth at lower levels (Gupta and Hadley, 1977).


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1988; and directly in Rhododendron - Imel and Preece, 1988, and Malus - Elobeidy and Korban, 1988). TDZ can also be highly effective for inducing axillary shoot formation in shoot cultures (e.g. in Rorippa - Gilby and Wainwright, 1989; Rhododendron - Fellman et al., 1987; and Malus domestica - Fasolo et al, 1988a, b). Although many shoots can be formed, they may not elongate sufficiently. 4.2. THE PHENYLUREAS

A common way of adding a natural cytokinin to media is by the use of organic supplements such as yeast extract or coconut milk. Coconut milk contains several physiologically-active substances (see Chapter 4); amongst which have been found the natural cytokinin zeatin, and 1,3-diphenylurea (11) (Shantz and Steward, 1955). The latter compound, and many other substituted ureas, have cytokinin activity and can promote the growth of dormant buds (Kefford et al., 1966), and induce cell division in cytokinin-dependent callus tissues (Bruce et al. 1965; Bruce and Zwar, 1966). Diphenylureas are not commonly used in tissue cultures, but there are a few reports. Butenko et al. (1972) found 2 mg/l 1,3diphenylurea facilitated organogenesis in sugar beet callus cultures. Some N-pyridyl-N′-phenylureas are more active than N6-substituted purines such as BA and zeatin in promoting callus growth and morphogenesis in tobacco and several other kinds of plants (Okamoto et al., 1978; Takahashi et al., 1978; Kamada and Harada, 1979; Ohyama and Oka, 1982). Two of the most active of the compounds in this series are 2Cl-4PU (12) (or CPPU) N-(2-chloro-4pyridyl)-N′-́ phenylurea, and 2,6Cl-4PU (13) ( N(2,6-dichloro-4-pyridyl)-N′-phenylurea). The thiadiazole-substituted phenylurea: thidiazuron (TDZ) (14) (N-phenyl-N′-1,2,3-thiadiazol-5-ylurea) which was registered as a cotton defoliant (Arndt et al., 1976) and given the product name ‘Dropp’, has high cytokinin activity (Mok et al., 1982). In some plants, it is more effective than adenine-based compounds for inducing adventitious shoot regeneration (e.g. indirectly in Vitis vinifera cvs. - Reisch and Martens,

Effective shoot proliferation in the otherwise difficult-to-propagate Acer fremanii (Kerns and Meyer, 1986), and in Pyrus communis (Singha and Bhatia, 1988), was achieved using mixtures of BA and TDZ (respectively 1 μM + 0.01 μM for Acer and 5 μM + 0.4 mM for Pyrus). In both cases there was a significant interaction between the two compounds. Fellman et al. (1987) also found that 0.5 μM 2Cl-4PU was effective for inducing Rhododendron shoot proliferation: shoot elongation was inhibited at higher levels.

5. MODE OF ACTION Cytokinins play multiple roles in the control of plant development; however, the mode of their action at the molecular level is uncertain. Some are present in t-RNA molecules, but it is not yet clear whether incorporation into t-RNA is necessary before typical

cytokinin effects can become apparent. In some circumstances, cytokinins activate RNA synthesis, stimulate protein synthesis and the activities of some enzymes (Kulaeva, 1980). Cytokinin treatment also results in an increase of the polyribosome content in


Chapter 6

cultured soybean cells (Tepfer and Fosket, 1978). Although some workers have recorded a low level of incorporation of a synthetic cytokinin analogue into tRNA (Burrows et al., 1971; Peaud-Lenoel and Jouanneau, 1980), this could not be correlated with the observed physiological action of the compound.

The action of cytokinins is light-dependent. In blue, far-red and white light, the proliferation of shoots of Prunus by BA was strongly dependent on the rate of photon fluence, but the rate of fluence of a red light source was not critical. Baraldi et al. (1988) suggested that shoot proliferation by this cytokinin was promoted by a low energy phytochrome response. In conditions which do not induce shoot proliferation, viz. dark, or low fluence far-red light, BA inhibits shoot elongation. Promotion of axillary shoot growth by BA, and its inhibition of shoot elongation, therefore seem to be two independent processes. Cytokinins, together with auxins, take part in the regulation of the cell cycle in plant cells. They probably induce D-type cyclin CycD3 and thus stimulate the cell cycle progression from the G1 to the S phase, and possibly also G2/M transition via induction of expression of the gene CDC2 for histonH1-kinase and stimulation of its dephosphorylation by Cdc25 (reviews by John et al., 1993, Frank and Schm체lling, 1999, Pasternak et al., 2000; den Boer and Murray, 2000). Interestingly, C 2 -, N 6 -, and N 9 trisubstituted derivatives of cytokinins (olomoucine (15), roscovitine (16) and bohemine (17) are able to

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inhibit cyclin-dependent kinases of type 1 and 2 in both human and plant cells and consequently are able to block the cell cycle in the G1/S and G2/M transitions (Vesely et al., 1994; De Azevedo et al., 1997; Havlicek et al., 1997; Binarova et al., 1998; Planchais et al., 2000). Recently, some histidine kinases, homologous to bacterial two-component sensor kinases, have been identified as candidates for cytokinin receptors. This finding implies that the downstream signalling cascade is similar to the phosphorelay mechanism seen with ethylene receptors (see Chapter 7). The main representatives of possible CK receptors are CKI1 (Kakimoto, 1996) and CRE1/AHK4/WOL (M채honen et al., 2000; Inoue et al., 2001; Suzuki et al., 2001). After perception of the cytokinin signal the downstream cascade begins by the phosphotransfer between histidine and aspartate residues within the kinase, resulting then in the phosphorylation of AHP proteins. These activated AHPs are translocated from the cytosol into the nucleus where they activate so-called B-type ARR proteins, leading to derepression of target genes involved in regulation of cell division, shoot formation and delay of senescence. Activated B-type ARR proteins also increase the transcription of Atype ARRs which provide a feed-back control of the whole system (reviewed by Hwang and Sheen, 2001; Deruere and Kieber, 2002; Haberer and Kieber, 2002; Schm체lling, 2002). The recent discoveries of candidate CK receptors of the histidine kinase type and downstream elements of a CK signalling pathway represent a real breakthrough in our understanding of the molecular mechanism of cytokinin signalling. However, the final output of the signalling cascade, starting at the plasma membrane and leading to regulation of gene expression, is still unclear. 5.1. ANTI-AUXIN EFFECT

Some aminopurines with cytokinin properties act as reductants in a photochemical reaction with riboflavin, and are oxidised thereby to adenine (Rothwell and Wright, 1967). Part of the biological effects produced by cytokinins could be due to their inhibition of the oxidation of IAA. Kinetin (0.04-1 mg/l) alters the activity, distribution, and composition of IAA oxidase isoenzymes within tobacco callus cells (Lee, 1974). Noting that callus which was induced to form shoots by the addition of cytokinin was more compact than non-shoot-forming callus, Kirkham and Holder (1981) investigated the effect of kinetin on callus water potential; the cytokinin made cell walls


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more rigid, so that the turgor potential of cells was increased. The water potential of the cells was therefore increased (made less negative), and they became less liable to take up water from the surrounding medium. This was directly opposite to the effect of the auxin PCPA. 5.2. CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM

Apart from a possible effect on levels of endogenous auxin, cytokinins appear to be implicated in sugar metabolism. Both decreases and increases in the specific activity of enzymes of the glycolytic and oxidative pentose phosphate pathways have been reported. A medium containing adenine sulphate in addition to kinetin, which is conducive to shoot formation in Nicotiana tabacum, was noted by Scott et al. (1964) to cause a marked increase in the activities of two enzymes of the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase), compared to their activities in a non-shoot-forming medium. Conditions favouring bud formation, including the availability of cytokinins, seem to enhance starch metabolism in tobacco callus (Thorpe and Meier, 1972). Callus, which produces shoots had high specific activities of enzymes involved in both starch accumulation and breakdown (Thorpe and Meier, 1974). Cytokinins reduce the oxygen uptake of cells (Neumann, 1968) and inhibit the alternative cyanide-resistant respiration pathway, which exists in

many plants (Miller, 1979; 1980; 1982: Musgrave and Siedow, 1985). 5.3. THE PHENYLUREA COMPOUNDS

It is generally assumed that phenyl urea compounds with cytokinin activity act at the same sites as the purine-based cytokinins, i.e. that they are active in their own right. This hypothesis was put forward by Kurosaki et al. (1981), who suggested that there were structural similarities between the two classes of compound. It was further supported by computer modelling of possible interactions between active cytokinins and putative cytokinin receptor molecules (Fox, 1992). An alternative hypothesis is that the phenylureas may stimulate the accumulation, or biosynthesis, of natural purine-based cytokinins, or alter the metabolism of these compounds (see below). The phenylureas are potent inhibitors of cytokinin oxidase (Horgan, 1987a). The activity of thidiazuron as a defoliant seems to be associated with its capacity to induce ethylene production in treated leaves (Suttle, 1984). Thidiazuron-induced leaf drop can be inhibited by AVG (see Chapter 7), which prevents ethylene biosynthesis (Elstner et al., 1983), or treatments which prevent ethylene action (Suttle, 1985). How this relates to the marked cytokinin activity of the compound is unclear but may relate to the effects of cytokinins on ethylene biosynthesis (See Chapter 7).

6. UPTAKE AND METABOLISM The uptake of cytokinins into cultured tissues is rapid (Marino, 1986; Mariano, 1988). The metabolism of cytokinins is rather complex and generally consists of conversions among cytokinin bases, ribosides and ribotides, and conjugation and degradation reactions (Van Staden and Crouch, 1996; Zazimalová et al., 1999). A naturally-occurring enzyme, cytokinin oxidase, degrades cytokinins such as zeatin and isopentenyladenine which have a Δ2 -double bond, by cleaving the side chain (Fig. 6.2) (Horgan, 1987a; Chatfield and Armstrong, 1988); cytokinins with saturated (dihydrozeatin) and/or bulky (aromatic cytokinins, o-glucosides) side-chains, as well as cytokinin nucleotides, are not substrates for this enzyme. Rapid degradation of zeatin and iP by the enzyme could explain the ineffectiveness of these compounds on plants, such as Gerbera. In several different kinds of plant tissue, the activity of

cytokinin oxidase is enhanced by exogenous application of cytokinins (Palmer and Palni, 1987; Motyka and Kaminek, 1990) suggesting that treating plants with synthetic cytokinins could decrease the level of the natural endogenous compounds. In some other reports treating plant tissues with synthetic homologues caused at least a temporary increase in levels of natural zeatin, and zeatin riboside (Thomas and Katterman, 1986; Hansen et al., 1987; Vankova et al., 1992). In ipt gene-transformed tobacco plants (coding for isopentenyltransferase - the ‘front’ enzyme of cytokinin biosynthesis in Agrobacterium) the derepression of the gene leads to an increase of endogenous cytokinins, which is immediately followed by an increase in cytokinin oxidase activity (Motyka et al., 1996). This finding supports the hypothesis that cytokinin oxidase is a substrateinducible enzyme, which plays an important role in maintenance of cytokinin homeostasis in plant cells.


Chapter 6

In some plants, an enzyme other than cytokinin oxidase is thought to be responsible for the degradation of kinetin and benzyladenine to adenine (Forsyth and Van Staden, 1987); a considerable amount of side chain cleavage was found in the shoots from Gerbera shoot cultures (Blakesley and Lenton, 1987). In other plants BA is not broken down in this way. In Gerbera callus virtually no side

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chain cleavage was detected after 90 h of culture with BA (Blakesley and Lenton, loc. cit.), and adenine or adenosine were not produced from BA in soybean callus (Van Staden and Mooney, 1988). In Prunus domestica shoot cultures, at least some of the applied BA is broken down to CO2 over 21 days (Mariano, 1988).

Fig. 6.2 Cytokinin degradation.

In Gerbera callus, free zeatin becomes conjugated with ribose or ribose phosphate within 10 h to produce the physiogically-active compounds, zeatin9-riboside and zeatin-9-ribotide, but these conjugates then disappear during the next 30h and adenosine and other products of side- chain cleavage accumulate (Blakesley and Lenton, 1987). In various plants, BA is initially converted to several metabolites, which are probably, mono-, di-

and tri-ribotides, the 3-, 7- and 9-glucosides, a 9riboside, a 9-ribotide, and a 9-riboside-glucoside (Blakesley and Lenton, 1987; Horgan, 1987b; Van der Krieken et al., 1988). The formation of these conjugates does not necessarily mean that BA is inactivated, as one or more of the conjugates may still have cytokinin activity (Van der Krieken et al., 1988; Van Staden and Drewes, 1992), or may act as storage products.

7. EFFECTS IN TISSUE CULTURES AND PLANT ORGANS 7.1. STIMULATION OF CELL DIVISION

In tissue cultures (as well as in intact plants and plant organs), cytokinins appear to be necessary for plant cell division (cf. ‘Mode of Action’ above). In their absence, metaphase, but not prophase of mitosis, is considerably protracted, and it has been suggested that cytokinins might be required to regulate the synthesis of proteins involved in the formation and function of the mitotic spindle apparatus (Jouanneau, 1970, 1975). In cultures where cytokinin is limiting, division of cell nuclei becomes arrested at one stage of the cell cycle. Subculture of the tissue onto a medium containing a cytokinin can then cause the cells to divide synchronously after a lag period (Jouanneau, 1971). Callus tissues in which cell division proceeds without the addition of cytokinin to the culture medium (e.g. Oxalis dispar - Sunderland and Wells, 1968), are thought to be able to produce their own natural growth substances. Three natural cytokinins could be isolated, for example, from a cytokinin-independent strain of tobacco callus (Skoog

et al., 1973). In semi-synchronised cytokininindependent tobacco cell suspension culture the individual onset of cell division during the exponential growth phase correlated with peaks of endogenous iP, zeatin and their ribosides (Zazimalová et al., 1996). In synchronised BY-2 tobacco cell suspension the maximum of endogenous cytokinins (largely zeatin) preceded G2/M transition (Redig et al., 1996, Laureys et al., 1998) Callus proliferation from the tissues of most dicotyledonous plants is usually thought to require the presence of both an auxin and a cytokinin in the growth medium, but Nitsch and Bui-Dang-Ha (1967) found that proliferation of tobacco pith explants would take place if a synthetic cytokinin and an auxin were supplied sequentially in that order. Thus, when grown for one day on a basal medium containing 0.2 mg/l kinetin, before being transferred for 20 days to the same basal medium but with 1.8 mg/l IAA, more callus was produced than when the same quantities of auxin and cytokinin were available together. By


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contrast, there was practically no growth at all if IAA was provided for only one day, and kinetin for the rest of the time. The sequential promotion of growth was not apparent however, when natural cytokinins were employed. Nitsch (1968) interpreted these results to indicate that cytokinins act during the pretreatment phase at the DNA level (even though no cell divisions occur during this period) and that natural cytokinins were degraded too rapidly to be effective, except when present in the medium continuously. Direct mutual regulatory effects between auxin and cytokinin was observed at Nicotiana plumbaginifolia at the gene level (Dominov et al., 1992). Dicotyledonous callus, or suspension cultures requiring auxin (e.g. 1 mg/l IAA) but not cytokinin for growth, can be cultured for long periods without auxin when a high concentration of cytokinin (e.g. 0.1-1 mg/l kinetin) is added to the medium. At this level the cytokinin appears to increase the natural auxin content of the tissues but not to cause auxinhabituation, because after a prolonged period of culture, removal of the cytokinin again causes the cells to become auxin-dependent (Syono and Furuya, 1972). In transformed tissue the expression of the gene coding for iso-pentenyltransferase resulted in an increase of endogenous cytokinins and a parallel decrease of endogenous IAA (Akiyoshi et al., 1983); similarly, the application of synthetic auxin NAA led to a decrease of endogenous iP and zeatin in tobacco cells (Vanková et al. 1992). In contrast to this, reduction of the auxin concentration in the cultivation medium resulted in a very significant increase of endogenous cytokinins, namely iP and zeatin (Zazimalová et al., 1996). It is apparent that not only auxins and cytokinins per se, but the levels of both hormones and particularly the proportion of one to the other (cf. Skoog-Miller model of plant morphogenesis, 1957, see auxin-cytokinin interaction, below) are determinants for cell cycle, cell division and differentiation control. 7.2. ADVENTITIOUS SHOOT FORMATION

Cytokinins are very effective in promoting direct or indirect shoot initiation. As mentioned in the previous section, they are used for this purpose in combination with auxins. A balance between auxin and cytokinin normally gives the most effective organogenesis. Leaf segments of Crassula argentea form callus in response to wounding, which then gives rise to roots and later, shoots. Paterson and Rost (1981) found that if cytokinin was added to the medium,

shoots were formed from a superficial meristem, and roots were afterwards produced from inside the callus. The normal sequence of organogenesis was therefore reversed. 7.3. EMBRYOGENESIS

A low concentration of cytokinin (typically 0.52.5 μM) is often added to media for the induction of embryogenic callus, especially in broad-leafed plants (see Chapter 10). There is, however, some evidence to suggest that cytokinins may inhibit embryogenesis in monocotyledons: 0.001 μM exogenous cytokinin was sufficient to prevent it in Dactylis glomerata. The presence of endogenous cytokinin may also be responsible for the inability to obtain embryogenesis in some genotypes. Leaf sections of non- embryogenic strains of this grass contained less natural cytokinin than those which were capable of producing embryogenic callus (Wenck et al., 1988). Carman and Campbell (1988) were able to induce embryogenesis in a non-responsive strain of wheat by detaching wheat spikes from the plant some while before culturing immature embryo explants. This was thought to decrease the supply of natural cytokinins from the roots. If zeatin was added to the medium, embryogenesis was suppressed. 7.4. USE IN SHOOT CULTURES

7.4.1. Axillary shoot proliferation

To encourage the growth of axillary buds, and reduce apical dominance in shoot cultures of broadleafed plants, one or more cytokinins are usually incorporated into the medium at Stage II. A successful treatment induces the growth of several small shoots from each explant over a 4-6 week period. Levels of cytokinin, which are too high, cause many small shoots to be produced, which typically fail to elongate; they may also cause the leaves of some species to have an unusual shape, and/or induce shoots to become hyperhydric. 7.4.2. Adventitious shoot bud formation

The formation of adventitious shoots, whether directly from explanted tissues, or indirectly from callus, is regulated by an interaction between auxins and cytokinins. 7.4.3. Inhibition of root formation

High concentrations of cytokinin (0.5-10 mg/l) generally inhibit or delay root formation (Schraudolf and Reinert, 1959; Harris and Hart, 1964; Ben-Jaacov et al., 1991) and also prevent root growth and the promotive effects of auxins on root initiation


Chapter 6

(Humphries, 1960). For this reason cytokinins are usually omitted from shoot culture media at Stage III when shoots are to be rooted to provide plantlets (see Chapter 2). Sometimes more than one subculture to a cytokinin-free medium may be required until the level of cytokinin within the tissues has been sufficiently reduced. Despite these observations, there are reports that cytokinins can sometimes induce or promote root growth (Fries, 1960), or adventitious root formation, in the absence of auxins (Nemeth, 1979). In nearly all cases only low rates of cytokinin have been effective, for example, shoots of sugar beet were rooted on MS medium containing 0.5 mg/l kinetin and no auxin (Konwar and Coutts, 1990). Boxus and Terzi (1988) advocated the addition of 0.5 mg/l kinetin and auxin to the rooting medium for strawberries and several woody plants, finding that at this concentration, the cytokinin had a bacteriostatic effect and rooting was not impaired. Rosa hybrida ‘White Dream’ required the addition of 1 mg/l BA to IBA for root induction and development. 7.5. SPECIFICITY OF ACTION

The effect of cytokinins on tissue or organ cultures can vary according to the particular compound used, the type of culture, the variety of plant from which it was derived and whether the explant is derived from juvenile or mature tissues. In Corylus avellana, 5 mg/l BA gave the best rate of shoot multiplication from juvenile explants, but 10 mg/l zeatin was required for nodal sections of plants in the adult phase (Messeguer and Mel, 1987). A requirement for a particular cytokinin is sometimes noted for the induction of embryogenesis (e.g. Fujimura and Komamine, 1975), and for the promotion of direct or indirect adventitious shoot formation; for example, cultures of Browallia viscosa required iP for the initiation of adventitious shoots. Kinetin, BA and zeatin were ineffective (Welsh and Sink, 1981). 7.6. CYTOKININ SPECIFICITY IN SHOOT CULTURES

Most demonstrations of a requirement for a particular cytokinin, have been made with shoot cultures; they are dispersed over many species. BA promoted axillary bud proliferation of Castanea in the experiments of Vieitez and Vieitez (1980b), whereas kinetin was without effect. Zeatin tended to promote the growth of main shoots and gave only a slight increase in the proportion of lateral buds sprouting. Similarly iP and kinetin produced only single shoots from Prunus shoot cultures: to obtain

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multiple shoots, it was necessary to use BA (Martinelli, 1985). Elliott (1970) found kinetin to be incapable of promoting the growth of rose shoot tips. On the other hand, only 0.5-5 mg/l kinetin (together with gibberellic acid) induced the proliferation of potato shoots, and BA and iP were not effective. In some cultures, cytokinins tend to produce short rosetted shoots, or shoots which grow only slowly after formation: BA and kinetin gave shoot rosettes in Brassica campestris shoot cultures, whereas axillary shoots induced by iP elongated satisfactorily (Paek et al., 1987): iP and BA produced many shoots of Elaeagnus angustifolia, but unlike those produced on 5 μM kinetin, they failed to grow afterwards (Bertrand and Lalonde, 1985). BA gives a high rate of shoot proliferation in Gerbera, but the best shoot quality is obtained using 5-10 mg/l kinetin (Pierik et al., 1982; Hempel et al., 1985). Fonnesbech et al. (1979) discovered that the natural cytokinins iP and zeatin were better able to promote the growth and survival of shoot cultures of Asparagus plumosus than kinetin or BA, although best results were obtained with PBA. A similar situation is found in plants of the family Ericaceae, where the natural compounds, zeatin and iP, are more effective than other cytokinins for shoot proliferation. iP is most commonly selected because of its lower cost, but in some species, mixtures of the two compounds may give better results than either compound alone (Eccher and Noe, 1989). In shoot cultures of Gynura sarmentosa, BA, kinetin and iP promoted the formation of buds when used separately, but each in turn produced some abnormality in the shoots obtained. Much faster growth of healthy shoots was obtained by adding all three compounds simultaneously (Cailloux, 1978). A mixture of more than one cytokinin has also been found to give more effective shoot multiplication in some other species (e.g. Corylus avellana, Anderson, 1984; Cucumis melo, Kathal et al., 1988). Plant abnormalities associated with cytokinin use are mentioned in Chapter 13. 7.7. PHENYLUREAS

In some tests, phenylureas are much more effective cytokinins than the adenine-based compounds. 4PU-Cl was, for example, 100 times more active than BA in the tobacco callus assay (Read et al., 1986) and produced more shoots in azalea shoot cultures than zeatin or iP. In many azalea (Rhododendron) cultivars, thidiazuron


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produced many shoots but these were of poor quality because they were stunted and hyperhydric. Better results were obtained with a mixture of iP and thidiazuron, but there was a tendency for adventitious shoots to be produced, which is not desirable during micropropagation (Briggs et al., 1988). Thidiazuron was adopted for the micropropagation of woody plants in the family Oleaceae (Einset and Alexander, 1985). 7.8. THE EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE

Maintaining in vitro cultures at abnormally high temperatures is reported to reduce the efficacy of cytokinins, but may enhance auxin activity. Heide (1965) observed that the ability of cytokinin-dips to either promote direct bud formation or inhibit direct root formation, was less when Begonia leaf cuttings

were kept at 27oC after treatment, rather than at 15oC. On a modified MS medium containing kinetin, growth and axillary shoot proliferation of Asparagus plumosus shoot tips was initially rapid at 24oC but stopped after four weeks. The shoot tips grew more slowly at 17oC but their growth was continuous. There was almost no growth at all at either 9oC or 30oC (Fonnesbech et al., 1977). The most effective cytokinin for A. plumosus was subsequently found to be PBA. The requirement for this cytokinin increased with temperature. At 17oC , the optimum dose was 0.2 mg/l, at 21oC the optimum was between 0.2 and 2 mg/l, but at 24oC it was 2 mg/l. The best temperature for survival, growth and development was 21oC (Fonnesbech et al., 1979).

8. ADENINE A possible growth regulatory effect caused by adenine (18) was first noted by Bonner and HaagenSmit (1939) and Bonner et al. (1939), who found that the compound promoted an expansion in the area of leaf discs floated on sugar solutions. Other regulatory properties of the compound were later demonstrated by Skoog and Tsui (1948), Jacquiot (1951) and Miller and Skoog (1953), who discovered that it could induce bud formation in both tobacco stem segments and elm and tobacco callus in vitro. The activity of adenine is much less than that of the true cytokinins, and 25-100 times the concentration (e.g. 600 mM vs. 20 mM kinetin - Khanna and Chopra, 1977) may be required to produce similar results. Despite the subsequent discovery of cytokinin activity in adenine derivatives, adenine itself is still often used in cultures from which plant regeneration is required. It seems sometimes to improve growth (Nwankwo and Krikorian, 1983), or to bring about or reinforce responses normally attributed to cytokinin action. It is not active in the soybean callus bioassay. Benefits are often only noticed when adenine is administered together with a cytokinin such as kinetin, or BA. Adenosine and adenylic acid can sometimes act in the same way as adenine (Skoog and Tsui, 1948; Nitsch et al., 1967) but they are generally even less effective. Adenine is known as Vitamin B4. In some papers on tissue culture it is listed amongst the vitamin components of a medium.

8.1. EMBRYOGENESIS AND CAULOGENESIS

Halperin and Wetherell (1964) noted that 2 mg/l adenine or 0.2 mg/l kinetin could be used instead of coconut milk in various media for stimulating embryogenesis in carrot callus. Since then, adenine has been added to media in amounts ranging from 2 to 405 mg/l (but more usually 40-80 mg/l) to promote somatic embryo formation in other callus cultures (Nag and Johri, 1969; Danilina, 1972; Pareek and Chandra, 1978b; Phillips and Collins, 1980; Reynolds et al., 1980). In the presence of other recognised cytokinins, adenine frequently promotes adventitious shoot formation, indirectly from callus (Plummer and Leopold, 1957; Earle and Torrey, 1965; Thorpe and Murashige, 1968; Beach and Smith, 1979; Xiang-can et al., 1989), or directly from explants (Ziv et al., 1970; Start and Cumming, 1976; Seabrook et al., 1976; Nickerson, 1978; Rao and Bapat, 1978). It inhibits root initiation (Doerschug and Miller, 1967) but has been reported to stimulate the growth of preformed roots of Citrus embryoids (Kochba et al., 1974) and lupin seedlings (Fries, 1960) in a similar fashion to low levels of cytokinin. 8.2. SHOOT CULTURES

Adenine has been used only to a limited extent in meristem or shoot cultures, but has been employed occasionally to enhance the growth of isolated meristem tips (Kassanis, 1957; Elliott, 1970) and as an aid (or occasionally as an essential component) to induce the proliferation of axillary shoots in shoot


Chapter 6

cultures (Anderson, 1975; Hennen and Sheehan, 1978; Harris and Stevenson, 1979; Pyott and Converse, 1981; Huang, 1984). Whether improved shoot multiplication will result from adding adenine to the medium can be unpredictable. In peach shoot cultures, a benefit depended on the cultivar being cultured and the nature and rate of the cytokinin used. A stimulation occurred with some rates of BA, but with others its addition resulted in a decreased rate of propagation (Chiariotti and Antonelli, 1988).

Although the rate of Brassica campestris shoot multiplication was not increased, adding 326-434 ÎźM adenine sulphate to a medium containing kinetin and IBA, caused shoot weight to be increased. Leaves were dark green and the cultures more healthy than previously (Paek et al., 1987). 8.3. MODE OF ACTION

The mode of action of adenine has not been fully explained. Beneficial effects from adenine addition are found in media containing both ammonium nitrate and cytokinins (Ziv et al., 1970; Elliott, 1970; Seabrook et al., 1976; Nickerson, 1978; Pyott and Converse, 1981). Adenine is therefore unlikely to be simply acting as an alternative source of reduced nitrogen, and if it enhances natural cytokinin biosynthesis, the compounds produced must be more effective in causing the required physiological response than cytokinins added to the growth medium. Such a situation was described by Beach and Smith (1979) with callus of red and crimson clover. On Gamborg et al. (1968) B5 medium, plant regeneration was most effectively achieved when 20 mg/l thiamine, 2.0 mg/l NAA and 2 mg/l adenine were included. Kinetin, iP and BA were all tested as cytokinins and failed to produce shoot buds.

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However, in many cultures, adenine acts more as a synergist of cytokinins such as kinetin and zeatin (Nitsch et al., 1967). A typical result is that of Start and Cumming (1976), who found that when 125 mg/l adenine was added to a medium in conjunction with 5 mg/l BA and 0.1 mg/l NAA, it regularly increased direct shoot initiation from African violet leaf sections, whereas in the basal medium with only adenine sulphate, shoot formation was delayed and roots alone were formed. Both natural and synthetic purine-based cytokinins are degraded in plant tissues to adenine and related nucleotides (Terrine et al., 1972; Entsch et al., 1980; Biondi et al., 1984; McGaw et al., 1984; Forsyth and Van Staden, 1987). Thus one possible method whereby adenine may enhance the growth of cultured plants, could be that an excess of the compound retards the degradation of cytokinins by feed-back inhibition, or by competing for the enzyme systems involved in cytokinin metabolism. Another hypothesis is that, even though adenine is itself a product of cytokinin metabolism, it may act as a substrate for the synthesis of natural cytokinin growth substances. It has been shown that adenine can serve as a precursor for zeatin synthesis, but the rate of incorporation is low (McGaw et al., 1984; Dickinson et al., 1986). 8.4. INHIBITORY EFFECTS

The addition of adenine does not always lead to beneficial results; for instance, adenine sulphate in the concentration range 30-300 mg/l was inhibitory for the formation of shoots from cultured tuber discs of potato (Jarret et al., 1980). The addition of adenine sulphate to shoot cultures of carnation caused axillary shoot formation to be inconsistent; as a smaller number of shoots was produced from each shoot tip, and the main shoots often grew well, Davis et al. (1977) thought that the compound tended to enhance apical dominance. Where adenine is promotory, an excess can have the same consequences as an excess of cytokinin; Nickerson (1978) found that 80 mg/l adenine, enhanced adventitious bud formation in cotyledons and hypocotyl sections of lowbush blueberry, but needed to be withdrawn to promote shoot elongation.


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9. CYTOKININ ANTAGONISTS kinetin-requiring soybean callus. Compounds which reversibly inhibit the growth of cytokinin-dependent and cytokinin-requiring callus cultures were described by Hecht et al. (1971), Skoog et al. (1973, 1975) and Gregorini and Laloue (1980). These authors found that the growth inhibitory effects of compounds such as 7-(3-methylbutylamino)-3-methyl-H-pyrazolo[4,3d]-pyrimidine (22) and 4-cyclohexylamino)-2methylthio-H-pyrrolo[2,3d]pyrimidine (23) were reversed by BA. Cell death by cytotoxicity was expressed only when the tobacco cells divided. Nondividing cells in stationary phase were insensitive to either compound which suggests that a specific biochemical event in the cell cycle was affected. Cytokinin-autonomous callus is rendered cytokininrequiring by these chemicals.

Certain chemical analogues of RNA bases can antagonise the action of cytokinins. Blaydes (1966) found that 2,6-diaminopurine (19), 8-azaguanine (20) and 8-azaadenine (21) inhibited the growth of

Other highly active antagonists of cytokininpromoted cell division are 4-(cyclobutylamino)-2methylpyrrolo [2,3-d] pyrimidine (24) (Iwamura et al., 1979) and its 2-methylthio analogue (25) (Hecht, 1980), and 4-cyclopentylaminopteridine (26) (Iwamura et al., 1980). Although the compounds mentioned above inhibit cytokinin-promoted cell division, they have not, in all cases, been shown to antagonise other physiological processes normally promoted by cytokinin (such as the stimulation of lateral bud growth, or the initiation of shoot buds in callus tissues). However, Tanimoto and Harada (1982) used a cytokinin antagonist (4-cyclopentylamino-2-methylpyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidine), to overcome the stimulation of adventitious bud formation in Torenia stem segments by both BA and the phenylurea, 2Cl-4PU. Some compounds which act as anticytokinins in preventing growth of tobacco callus, have been found to promote bud formation in


Chapter 6

conjunction with an auxin (Skoog et al., 1975; Iwamura et al., 1979). This has led to speculation that there may be separate receptor sites for individual cytokinin-dependent functions (Hecht, 1980).

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Anticytokinin activity also exists in compounds structurally related to octopamine (27), such as tyramine (28) and dopamine (29) (Christou and Barton, 1989).

10. AUXIN-CYTOKININ INTERACTION Skoog and Miller (1957) found that shoot formation could be induced predictably from tobacco callus using relatively low levels of auxin and a high level of cytokinin in the growth medium. Since this discovery, many aspects of cellular differentiation and organogenesis in tissue and organ cultures have been found to be controlled by an interaction between cytokinin and auxin concentrations. The balance between the two sorts of regulant that is usually required to initiate growth or differentiation in tissue cultures, is illustrated in Fig. 6.3. Relative proportions of auxins and cytokinins do not always produce the typical results shown in the figure. For example: • axillary shoot proliferation in some species may be promoted by the presence of an auxin together with cytokinin; • tissues from monocotyledons can often be induced to form callus by culture in high levels of auxin alone, and cytokinins may be non-essential or unimportant; • organogenesis in monocotyledons is often promoted by transferring the culture to a medium without auxin, by reducing the concentrations of a highly active auxin such as 2,4-D, or replacing 2,4-D with another auxin (e.g. IAA or NAA). A balance between auxin and cytokinin growth regulators is most often required for the formation of adventitious shoot and root meristems. The requisite concentration of each type of regulant differs greatly according to the kind of plant being cultured, the cultural conditions and the compounds used; interactions between the two classes of regulant are often complex, and more than one combination of substances is likely to produce optimum results. 10.1. CONTOUR DIAGRAMS

Results of growth regulator interactions can be difficult to express graphically without resorting to three dimensional graphs. Two dimensional alternatives

are island diagrams (Negrutiu et al., 1978), or contour diagrams (Frett and Smagula, 1983). The latter are a particularly effective means of presentation and can be used to summarize the results of experiments in which several different concentrations of an auxin and a cytokinin (or other combinations of regulants) have been combined. The position of contour lines can be estimated from results, but are most accurately plotted using equations derived from multiple regression. For such statistical analysis to be possible, a properly designed experiment must have been conducted (Beretta and Eccher, 1987). Fig. 6.4, drawn from results of Saunders and Bingham (1975), shows how combinations of kinetin and 2,4-D (in conjunction with a constant rate of NAA), influenced the percentage of Medicago sativa calluses producing adventitious shoots. A further example of a contour diagram is given in Chapter 7. 10.2. PRETREATMENTS

Similar effects to those produced by having auxin and cytokinin together in the medium, can often be produced by pretreatment with one regulant, followed by transfer to a second medium containing another. For example, preculturing peach leaf pieces on a medium containing 2,4-D, increased the callus production obtained when explants were placed on a medium with NAA and BA. If preculture with 2,4-D was followed by subculture to a medium with BA alone, callus was produced which gave rise to roots (Hammerschlag, 1988). Despite the frequent need for both an auxin and a cytokinin in tissues cultures, the nature of the interactions between the two types of regulant is seldom commented upon and there is much still to be learned. Although both auxin and cytokinin are usually required for growth or morphogenesis, auxin can inhibit cytokinin accumulation (Hansen et al., 1985) while cytokinins can inhibit at least some of the action of auxin (see above).


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Fig. 6.3 The relative concentrations of auxin and cytokinin typically required for growth and morphogenesis. 10.3 GROWTH REGULATORS AND THE CELL CYCLE

Cell division seems to be regulated by the joint action of auxins and cytokinins, each of which appears to influence different phases of the cell cycle. Auxins exert an effect on DNA replication, while cytokinin seem to exert some control over the events leading to mitosis (Jouanneau, 1971; John et al., 1993; Pasternak et al., 2000, cf. Mode of action, above). Therefore auxins might be considered as ‘inducers’ of the cell cycle while cytokinins might behave more as its ‘promoters’ (Wood et al., 1990). Normal cell divisions require synchrony between the S phase and cell division, suggesting that auxin and cytokinin levels in cultures need to be carefully matched. Late replication of DNA in cell cultures has been advanced as one cause of chromosome rearrangement (Lee and Phillips, 1988). Cells are thought not to enter mitosis unless cytokinin is present. Where callus or suspension cultures are initiated on media which only contain an auxin, reliance is presumably being placed on endogenous cytokinins for completion of the cell cycle?

Fig. 6.4 A contour diagram drawn from the results of Saunders and Bingham (1975). The diagram shows the percentage of alfalfa calluses producing adventitious shoots when incubated on media containing various combinations of auxin and cytokinin.


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SKOOG F. & MILLER C.O. 1957 Chemical regulation of growth and organ formation in plant tissues cultured in vitro. Symp. Soc. Exp. Biol. 11, 118-131. SKOOG F. & TSUI C. 1948 Chemical control of growth and bud formation in tobacco stem segments and callus cultured in vitro. Am. J. Bot. 35, 782-787. SKOOG F., SCHMITZ R.Y., BOCK R.M. & HECHT S.M. 1973 Cytokinin antagonists: synthesis and physiological effects of 7substituted 3-methyepyrazolo (4;3-d) pyrimidines. Phytochemistry 12, 25-37. SKOOG F., SCHMITZ R.Y., HECHT S.M. & FRYE R.B. 1975 Anticytokinin activity of substituted pyrrolo 2,3-d pyrimidines. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 72, 3508-3512. SKOOG F., STRONG F.M. & MILLER C.O. 1965 Cytokinins. Science 148, 532-533. SOMERS D.A., GEGENBACH B.G., BIESBOER D.D., HACKETT W.P. & GREEN C.E. (ed.) 1986 Abstracts VI Int. Cong. Plant Tissue and Cell Culture. Internat. Assoc. Plant Tiss. Cult. Minneapolis, Minn. START N.G. & CUMMING B.G. 1976 In vitro propagation of Saintpaulia ionantha Wendl. HortScience 11, 204-206. STIRK W.A., STRNAD M., NOVAK O. & VAN STADEN J. 2003 Cytokinins in macroalgae. Plant Growth Regul. 41, 13-24. SUN J., NIU Q-W., TARKOWSKI P., ZHENG B., TARKOWSKA D., SANDBERG G., CHUA N-H. & ZUO J. 2003 The Arabidopsis AtlPT8/PGA22 gene encodes an isopentenyl transferase that is involved in de novo cytokinin biosynthesis. Plant Physiol. 131, 167-176 SUNDERLAND N. & WELLS B. 1968 Plastid structure and development in green callus tissues of Oxalis dispar. Ann. Bot. 32, 327-346. SUTTLE J.C. 1984 Effect of the defoliant thidiazuron on ethylene evolution from mung bean hypocotyl segments. Plant Physiol. 75, 902-907. SUTTLE J.C. 1985 Involvement of ethylene in the action of the defoliant thidiazuron. Plant Physiol. 78, 272-276. SUZUKI T., MIWA K., ISHIKAWA K., YAMADA H., AIBA H., MIZUNO T. 2001 The Arabidopsis sensor kinase, AHK4, can respond to cytokinin. Plant Cell Physiol. 42, 107-113 SYONO K. & FURUYA T. 1972 Effects of cytokinins on the auxin content of tobacco calluses. Plant Cell Physiol. 13, 843-856. TAKAHASHI S., SHUDO K., OKAMOTO T., YAMADA K. & ISOGAI Y. 1978 Cytokinin activity of N-phenyl-N΄-(4-pyridyl) urea derivatives. Phytochemistry 17, 1201-1207. TANIMOTO S. & HARADA H. 1982 Effects of cytokinin and anticytokinin on the initial stage of adventitious bud differentiation in the epidermis of Torenia stem segments. Plant Cell Physiol. 23, 1371-1376. TAYLOR N.J., STIRK W.A. & VAN STADEN J. 2003 The elusive cytokinin biosynthetic pathway. S. Afr. J. Bot. 69, 269-281. TEPFER D.A & FOSKET D.E. 1978 Hormone mediated translational control of protein synthesis in cultured cells of Glycine max. Dev. Biol. 62, 486-497. TERRINE C., DOREE M., GUERN J. & HALL R.H. 1972 Uptake of cytokinins by Acer pseudoplatanus cells: enzymes of the adenosine deamininase type as possible regulators of the cytokinin level inside the cell. pp. 467-475 in Carr D.J. (ed.) 1972 (q.v.) THOMAS J.C. & KATTERMAN F.R. 1986 Cytokinin activity induced by thidiazuron. Plant Physiol. 81, 681-683.


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THORPE T.A. & MEIER D.D. 1972 Starch metabolism, repiration and shoot formation in tobacco callus cultures. Physiol. Plant. 27, 365-369. THORPE T.A. & MEIER D.D. 1974 Starch metabolism in shootforming tobacco callus. J. Exp. Bot. 25, 288-294. THORPE T.A. & MURASHIGE T. 1968 Starch accumulation in shoot-forming tobacco callus cultures. Science 160, 421-422. TORREY J.G. 1972 On the initiation of organisation in the root apex. pp. 1-13 in Miller and Kuehnert (eds.) 1972 (q.v.). VAN DER KRIEKEN W.M., CROES A.F., BARENDSE G.W.M. & WULLEMS G.J. 1988 Uptake and metabolism of benzyladenine in the early stage of flower bud development in vitro in tobacco. Physiol. Plant. 74, 113-118. VAN STADEN J. & CROUCH N.R. 1996 Benzyladenine and derivatives - their significance and interconversion in plants. Plant Growth Regul. 19, 153-175 VAN STADEN J. & DAVEY J.E. 1979 The synthesis, transport and metabolism of endogenous cytokinins. Plant Cell Environ. 2, 93-106. VAN STADEN J. & DREWES F.E. 1991 The biological activity of cytokinin derivatives in the soybean callus bioassay. Plant Growth Regul. 10, 109-115. VAN STADEN J. & DREWES F.E. 1992 The stability and metabolism of benzyladenine glucosides in soybean callus. J. Plant Physiol. 140, 92-95. VAN STADEN J. & MOONEY P.A. 1988 The effect of cytokinin preconditioning on the metabolism of adenine derivatives in soybean callus. J. Plant Physiol. 133, 466-469. VANKOVÁ R., GAUDINOVÁ A., KAMÍNEK M. & EDER J. 1992 The effect of interaction of synthetic cytokinin and auxin on production of natural cytokinins by immobilized tobacco cells. pp. 47-51 in Kamínek M., Mok D.W.S., Zazímalová E., (eds). Physiology and Biochemistry of Cytokinins in Plants. SPB Academic Publishing, The Hague, The Netherlands,. VESELY J., HAVLICEK L., STRNAD M., BLOW J.J., DONELLA-DEANA A., PINNA L., LETHAM D.S., KATO J., DETIVAUD L. LECLERC S. & MEIJER L. 1994 Inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinases by purine analogues. Eur. J. Biochem. 224, 771-786.

VIEITEZ A.M. & VIEITEZ M.L. 1980b Culture of chestnut shoots from buds in vitro. Plant Physiol. 55, 83-84. WELSH J. & SINK K.C. 1981 Morphogenic responses of Browallia leaf sections and callus. Ann. Bot. 48 583-590. WENCK A.R., CONGER B.V., TRIGIANO R.N. & SAMS C.E. 1988 Inhibition of somatic embryogenesis in Orchardgrass by endogenous cytokinins. Plant Physiol. 88, 990-992. WILCOX E.J., SELBY C. & WAIN R.L. 1978 Studies on plant growth-regulating substances. L. The cytokinin activity of some substituted benzyloxypurines. Ann. Appl. Biol. 88, 439-444. WILCOX E.J., SELBY C. & WAIN R.L. 1981 The cytokinin activities of 6-α-alkylbenzyloxy-purines. Ann. Appl. Biol. 97, 221-226. WOOD H.N., STERNER R., ALVES L.M. & BASILE D.V. 1990 Auxin-phorbol ester: an example of a two-stage initiationpromotion system mediating cell proliferation in plants. In Vitro Cell. Dev. Biol.-Plant 26, 1125-1127. XIANG-CAN Z., JONES D.A. & KERR A. 1989 Regeneration of shoots on root explants of flax. Ann. Bot. 63, 297-299. ZAZÍMALOVÁ E., BREZINOVÁ A., HOLIK, J. & OPATRNY, Z. 1996 Partial auxin deprivation affects endogenous cytokinins in an auxin-dependent, cytokinin-independent tobacco cell strain. Plant Cell Rep. 16, 76-79 ZAZÍMALOVÁ E., BREZINOVÁ, A., MOTYKA, V. & KAMÍNEK, M. 1999 Control of cytokinin biosynthesis and metabolism pp. 141-160 in Hooykaas P, Hall M.A., Libbenga K.R., (eds) 1999. Biochemistry and Molecular Biology of Plant Hormones, Ser. New comprehensive biochemistry, Elsevier. ZIMMER K. & PIEPER W. 1975 Weitere untersuchungen zur kultur in vitro von Aechmea. Gartenbauwiss. 40, 129-132. ZIMMER K. & PIEPER W. 1976 Methods and problems of clonal propagation of bromeliads in vitro. Acta Hortic. 64, 25-29. ZIV M., HALEVY H. & SHILO R. 1970 Organs and plantlets regeneration of gladiolus through tissue culture. Ann. Bot. 34, 671-676. ZUBKO E., ADAMS C.J., MACHÁČKOVÁ I., MALBECK J., SCOLLEN C. & MEYER, P. 2002 Activation tagging identifies a gene from Petunia hybrida responsble for the production of active cytokinins in plants. Plant J. 29, 797-808.


Chapter 7 Plant Growth Regulators III: Gibberellins, Ethylene, Abscisic Acid, their Analogues and Inhibitors; Miscellaneous Compounds 1. GIBBERELLINS 1.1. NATURAL OCCURRENCE AND PHYSIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY

some only in higher plants; nor are the various gibberellins equally active, some are precursors and some catabolites of active gibberellins. GA1 (1) is the most active gibberellin in the promotion of cell elongation. Very few gibberellins are available commercially and GA3 (2) or a mixture of GA4 (3) and GA7 (4) have been used most frequently in plant culture.

More than 100 members of this group of plant hormones are now known. They all share gibbane ring structures and are either dicarboxylic (C20) or monocarboxylic (C19), they have all been assigned ‘gibberellin numbers’ (GAx) and are usually referred to by these rather than by conventional chemical nomenclature. No plant appears to possess all of the gibberellins, some have only been found in fungi and B

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oxygenases then convert this to the common precursor GA12 aldehyde which - in a series of steps involving hydroxylases and oxidases - yields the active gibberellins (see Hedden, 1999). Very little is known about the early steps in gibberellin signal transduction. It is clear however that later steps involve selective gene transcription and de novo protein synthesis.

Gibberellins are involved in a wide range of developmental responses. These include promotion of elongation in stems and grass leaves, due in part to activation of the intercalary meristem. Another important role of gibberellins is the induction of hydrolytic enzymes such as α-amylase and protease in the seeds of grasses and cereals, hence facilitating endosperm mobilisation. Other roles in some plants include the promotion of seed germination, bolting of rosette plants, sex determination, fruit development and the control of juvenility.

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Because very little is known about the mode of action of gibberellins it is doubtful that the action of any of the substances known to affect developmental responses involving these growth regulators is due to effects early in signal transduction. On the other hand, much is known about a wide range of synthetic

1.1.1. Biosynthesis and mode of action

The biosynthetic pathway(s) for gibberellins are very complex (Fig. 7.1). All start from isopentenyl diphosphate which in response to soluble cyclases produces ent-kaurene(in plastids). Membrane mon227

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Fig. 7.1 Pathways of gibberellin biosynthesis


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substances, often called 'antigibberellins', which act by blocking biosynthetic pathways. These were in general developed to achieve desirable agricultural outcomes - for example dwarfing of cereals to prevent lodging.These substances fall into four categories (see Rademacher, 2000). A number of quaternary ammonium, phosphonium and sulphonium salts act by inhibiting the cyclisation process. Examples of this type are chlormequat chloride (CCC) (5) and AMO 1618 (6). Certain heterocyclic nitrogen-containing compounds such as ancymidol (7), paclobutrazol (8), uniconazole-P (9) and tetcyclasis (10) appear to act by inhibiting ent-kaurene oxidase.

A further group of inhibitors are the acylcyclohexanedione derivatives, for example prohexadione (11) and daminozide (12), which affect the later steps of gibberellin biosynthesis involving hydroxylases. While the inhibitors may be useful tools, it should be noted that none are absolutely specific and may affect other biosynthetic pathways such as those for sterols and abscisic acid. Lastly, the inhibitor, 16,17-dihydro GA5 (13) and related structures appear to act by mimicking the natural substrates. B

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1.2. EFFECTS OF GIBBERELLINS ON TISSUE CULTURES

Plant tissue cultures can generally be induced to grow and differentiate without gibberellins, although GA3 acid may become an essential ingredient of media for culturing cells at low densities (Stuart and Street, 1971). When GA3 is added to culture media, it often produces effects, which are of a similar nature to those of auxins. High concentrations of GA3 (e.g. greater than ca. 5 ÎźM; 1-8 mg/l) induce the growth of undifferentiated callus cells (Schroeder and Spector, 1957; Murashige, 1964; Mehra and Mehra, 1972; Altman and Goren, 1974; Beasley, 1977; Gautam et al., 1983), and can promote the growth of callus in combination with auxin and low concentrations of cytokinin (Engelke et al., 1973). Growth of Solanum xanthocarpum callus was, however, reported to be inhibited by 2 mg/l GA3 (Rao and Narayanaswamy, 1968). GA3 can also enhance the growth of cells in suspension cultures [e.g. cotton, (Davidonis, 1990)]. A growth factor, which is probably a gibberellin, is produced by the germinating embyros of some plant species and must be transmitted to the B

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endosperm before this tissue will proliferate to form callus in culture (Brown et al., 1970; Johri and Bhojwani, 1977). Where the presence of both auxin and cytokinin in a growth medium leads to rapid callusing of the cut surfaces of an explant, the further addition of a small amount of GA3 (e.g. 0.1 mg/l), or the replacement of auxin by GA3, usually inhibits callus growth (Sangwan et al., 1976; Kartha et al., 1977). B

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medium (in conjuction with IBA and BAP) enhanced the formation of vegetative shoots from inflorescence segments of sugarbeet (Coumans-Gilles et al., 1981; Coumans et al., 1982). The combination of GA3 and cytokinin is generally less satisfactory for the induction of shoots than that of auxin and cytokinin, and tissues may have to be transferred to a medium lacking GA3 for further bud development to occur (Kartha et al., 1974a). Shoots formed in the presence of GA3 may be pale and abnormal (see Chapter 13). GA3 can also prevent direct shoot regeneration, for example in: • Begonia leaf discs (Schraudolf and Reinert, 1959: Schott and Schraudolf, 1967: Bigot and Nitsch, 1968; Heide, 1969; Chlyah, 1972) • Heloniopsis leaf segments (Kato and Hongo,1974) • Sugarbeet floral axillary buds (Coumans-Gilles et al., 1981) Some of the differences in the inhibition or promotion of adventitious shoot formation by GA3 might be due to the fact that the compound inhibits meristemoid initiation, but is required for shoot development once meristemoids are formed (Jarret and Hasegawa, 1981). The timing and duration of treatments will therefore strongly influence the results observed. Many more established plants could be obtained if petiole explants of Begonia hiemalis were placed into liquid culture after adventitious shoots had been initiated on an agar medium. The further addition of 30-60 μM (10-20 mg/l) GA3 increased the number of suitable shoots per explant, but a smaller proportion of the shoots rooted, and their establishment ex vitro was not satisfactory (Simmonds and Werry, 1987). B

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1.2.1. Morphogenesis

When GA3 is added to plant tissue culture media, it often diminishes or prevents the formation of adventitious roots, shoots or somatic embryos. Thus, the prior treatment of callus (Murashige, 1964; Sankhla et al., 1994) or explants (Heide, 1969) with GA3, or the addition of GA3 to the medium together with auxin and cytokinin at concentrations which would normally promote morphogenesis, is usually inhibitory [e.g. to shoot formation from callus (Murashige, 1961; Rubluo et al., 1984) or embryogenesis (see later)]. B

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1.2.2. Adventitious shoot formation

In tobacco callus, GA3 was particularly inhibitory to shoot formation if present at the time of meristemoid formation, and more repressive during dark incubation than in the light (Thorpe and Meier, 1973). The inhibition has been shown not to be irreversible, but to persist through at least two subcultures on a GA3-free medium. Gibberellins other than GA3 had the same effect (Murashige, 1964). However, the addition of 1.5-3.0 μM GA3 to the medium (which also contained 2-iP and IBA) supporting Apios americana internode explants, increased the number of shoots formed from primary callus on each explant, but the number of explants which produced shoots was less (Wickremesinhe et al., 1990). In some plants, GA3 alone can induce adventitious shoot formation, e.g. from Ranunculus scleratus callus (Konar and Konar, 1973). The compound can also act as a replacement for auxin in the induction of shoot formation (Sekioka and Tanaka, 1981); a precise gibberellin/cytokinin ratio (instead of auxin/cytokinin) may then be required (Pillai and Hildebrandt, 1969; Engelke et al., 1973). Alternatively, gibberellin may simply increase the number of organs formed; shoot regeneration from Rosa hybrida callus could be induced by 1-5 mg/l BAP (depending on cv.), but adding 0.3-1 mg/l GA3 increased the number of shoots produced (Valles and Boxus, 1987 a,b). Adding 5-50 μM GA3 to the B

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1.2.3. Rhizogenesis

Normally GA3 inhibits root formation, and the local application of relatively high concentrations (110 mg/l) of the compound to the base of cuttings prevents root formation (Brian, 1959), especially if auxins are applied at the same time. Varga and Humphries (1974) showed that although root formation from the base of the petioles of detached Phaseolus leaves was inhibited by topical application, it was promoted when GA3 was applied to leaf laminae. Promotion was especially pronounced when tryptophan (a biochemical precursor of IAA) was placed on the leaf surface at the same time as the GA3. This, and other evidence, led to their suggesting that promotion of root formation was in B

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this case due to the gibberellin causing the leaf to produce increased natural auxin, which was transported to the base of the petiole. GA3 can slightly stimulate root initiation from tomato leaf discs kept in darkness, and Coleman and Greyson (1977a, b) concluded that this is because natural auxin biosynthesis is increased. Nanda et al., (1972) found that root formation on cuttings of Ipomoea fistula was stimulated if they were dipped into GA3 before being placed in compost. Anand et al., (1972) obtained similar results, but found that pre-treatment with IBA was more effective. GA3 also improved the rooting of shoots from Coffea arabica shoot cultures if a 25-50 mg/l solution was applied directly to shoots at the time they were excised for rooting (Sondahl et al., 1985). The inhibition of rooting caused by GA3 is generally magnified in the presence of auxin, and Coleman and Greyson (1977b) proposed that this might be due to an excessive total auxin concentration. This view is supported by results of Rücker (1982) who found that GA3 was also able to promote direct root formation on leaf fragments of Digitalis when applied with low levels of IAA, but was inhibitory when the concentration of IAA was increased. In some plants however, pre-treating plant material with GA3 enhances root formation when cuttings are afterwards placed on a root-inducing medium. Rooting can sometimes also be promoted by GA3 if it is applied to cuttings in the absence of an auxin, and the plant material (or at least the rooting zone) is subsequently kept in darkness. As in caulogenesis, it has been proposed that the effect of gibberellic acid on root formation is dependent on time of application. If GA3 was applied to Pinus radiata cuttings when they were first cut, it inhibited rooting. It did however strongly enhance rooting when given just as there was the first sign of observable root formation, but shortly afterwards it was again inhibitory (Smith and Thorpe, 1975). There are, however, examples of root formation occurring in the presence of gibberellic acid and synthetic auxins: • The number of roots formed by tomato leaf disc explants treated with 20 mM indole-3-lactic acid was further increased by adding 100 μM GA3 (Coleman and Greyson, 1977b); • The inhibition of direct root and shoot formation on isolated leaves of Begonia rex by 1-10 mg/l GA3 B

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was overcome by adding 2,4-D at an equivalent concentration (Schraudolf and Reinert, 1959); • Direct root formation from Helianthus tuberosus rhizome pieces was stimulated when 0.35-3500 mg/l GA3 was added to NAA (0.2 mg/l) and the explants were kept in the dark, whereas in the light GA3 was inhibitory (Gautheret, 1969). Six other gibberellins also gave similar results (Tizio et al., 1970). • GA3 was able to promote rooting of Prunus shoot cultures at 26ºC in conjunction with the auxin IBA; below this temperature it had no effect (Rosati et al., 1980). By adding 1 mg/l GA3 to the growth medium, Nemeth (1979) increased the root formation, which was unusually induced on in vitro shoots of Prunus myrobalan by the cytokinin BAP. GA3 in combination with indolebutyric acid and benzyladenine promoted rhizogenesis from callus of Pinus taeda (Tang and Fan, 1999) 1.2.4. Embryogenesis and embryo development

Although occasionally reported to be promotory (Evans et al., 1976; Lakshmi Sita et al., 1979; Komai et al., 1996), GA3 has generally been found to inhibit somatic embryo formation (Fujimura and Komamine, 1975; Tisserat and Murashige, 1977b, c; Kochba et al., 1978; Spiegel-Roy and Kochba, 1980, Hutchinson et al., 1997,Tokuji and Kuriyama, 2003, Cheong and Pooler, 2004). Indeed, the addition of inhibitors of gibberellin biosynthesis increased the number of somatic embryos produced from Citrus sinensis callus (Spiegel-Roy and Saad, 1986), although paclobutrazol (an antigibberellin, see above) had little effect in Pennisetum purpureum (Rajasekaran et al., 1987). GA3 has also been shown to antagonise the effect of ABA in promoting embryogenesis (Emons et al., 1993) The growth (‘germination’) of preformed somatic embryos of several different species can be stimulated by the incorporation of GA3 (ca. 0.3-1 mg/l) into the second (post-initiation) medium (e.g. in Citrus - Ranga Swamy, 1959, 1961; Kochba et al., 1972, 1974; Button and Kochba, 1977; grapevine Mullins and Srinivasan, 1976; maize and Guinea grass - Lu and Vasil, 1981, 1982; Lu et al., 1982; Das et al., 1995; Hordwickia binata - Ghosh and Sen, 1991; Dioscorea alata – Twyford and Mantell, 1996; Kebebew et al., 1998; Canhoto et al., 1999). In some plants, embryo root growth is especially promoted, in others (e.g. Santalum album - Bapat and Rao, 1979; Panax ginseng - Chang and Hsing, 1980 a,b; Shoyama et al., 1988) shoot regeneration is


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stimulated. These results accord with the observations of Noma et al., (1982) that levels of polar gibberellins (GA3 is of this type) were high in undifferentiated carrot cells and in a nonembryogenic strain. When somatic embryos were initiated they contained low levels of polar gibberellins and metabolised these compounds rapidly. In Citrus and Duboisia (Nwankwo and Krikorian, 1983), once embryos have started to grow, plantlets need to be transferred to a medium lacking gibberellin, otherwise shoots are weak and spindly. The growth of soybean somatic embryos was promoted by antigibberellins (Gamborg et al., 1983). 1.2.5. Cellular differentiation

GA3 has little effect on cellular differentiation in vitro beyond mediating the action of auxin. In intact plants, xylem formation is observed to be stimulated by treatment with GA3 or with auxin and GA3 combined (Wareing, 1958; Bostrack and Struckmeyer, 1967; Dorley and Leyton, 1968). Auxin is now thought to be mainly responsible for the initial differentiation of phloem and xylem elements in tissue cultures (Aloni, 1980), even though some promotion by GA3 has been reported (Gautheret, 1961; Roberts and Fosket, 1966; Roberts, 1969; Dalessandro, 1973; Phillips and Dodds, 1977). In the cactus Opuntia polyacantha, axillary meristems became leafy shoots on media with 5-10 mg/l of the cytokinin BAP, but produced spines with 20-100 mg/l GA3. When 5-50 mg/l NAA was used, roots arose from bud trace procambium (Mauseth and Halperin, 1975). 1.2.6. Enzyme activity

Gibberellins influence the biosynthesis or activity of enzymes and can consequently affect the production of secondary plant products in vitro, e.g. the synthesis of amaranthine (Laloraya et al., 1976) and anthocyanin (Heinzmann and Seitz, 1977; Mizukami et al., 1988), which are inhibited by the presence of GA3 in the medium. The failure of carrot cells to produce anthocyanin in these circumstances is apparently due to the absence of a p-coumaric acid:CoA ligase isoenzyme (Heinzmann et al., 1977). 1.3. USE IN MERISTEM, SHOOT AND NODE CULTURES

Although GA3 tends to prevent the formation of organised root and shoot meristems in callus cultures, it may assist the further growth and development of preformed organs. The growth of shoots in meristem and shoot cultures may also be enhanced by its addition.

1.3.1. Meristem cultures

A small amount of GA3 (typically 0.03-0.1 mg/l) is often added to media for meristem cultures. It may not always be beneficial or absolutely necessary, and there are conflicting results. Mellor and Stace-Smith (1969), for example, found the substance to be without any appreciable effect on meristem tip cultures of potato, but other investigators (e.g. Morel et al., 1968; Pennazio and Redolfi, 1973; Novรกk et al., 1980) have reported that the addition of low concentrations of GA3 (e.g. 0.03 mg/l) to media containing auxin and cytokinin, or cytokinin alone, has improved the growth of meristem tips, inhibited callus proliferation, sometimes encouraged the tips to root more freely, and (Marani and Pisi, 1977) increased the proportion of meristems that developed into shoots. Similar effects have been noted in meristem cultures of some other plants (e.g. cassava Kartha et al., 1974b; Rey and Mroginski, 1978). In some cases there are strong varietal differences; in meristem cultures of sweet potato, GA3 promoted multiple shoot growth and elongation in cv. Mae de Familia but not in cv. Covacao Alado (Dagnino et al., 1991) GA3 does not assist in the establishment of the shoot apices of all plants. It was found to be inhibitory to growth of meristems tips of some kinds of geraniums (Theiler, 1977) and flax (Lane, 1979), and in rose, apices grew rapidly and formed abnormal attenuated leaves, but no roots or new leaves were initiated (Jacobs et al., 1969, 1970; Elliott, 1970). As mentioned previously, GA3 frequently inhibits root formation, especially in the presence of auxin. When the compound is used to stimulate the growth of isolated meristems or shoot tips therefore, it may prevent eventual root development (Murashige, 1961; Vine and Jones, 1969; Putz, 1971). Plantlets formed on media containing GA3 may need to be moved to a medium containing auxin, but no gibberellin, before they can be rooted (Quak, 1977). 1.3.2. Shoot and node cultures

GA3 is added to the medium, together with auxin and cytokinin, for Stages I and II of shoot cultures of certain plants. In some genera it is effective when auxins are not. At Stage I its presence can improve establishment, for example, De Fossard and de Fossard (1988) found that the addition of GA3 to the medium was useful to initiate growth in cultures from adult parts of trees of the family Myrtaceae, although thereafter it had a deleterious effect.


Chapter 7

1.3.3. Shoot multiplication

At Stage II, GA3 can enhance growth and/or increase the rate of shoot proliferation; adding 1.5 mM GA3 to a medium containing 2-iP and IBA increased the number of shoots produced from seedling and tuber-shoot internodes of Apios americana, but reduced the number of explants which produced shoots (Wickremesinhe et al., 1990). Addition of GA3 with benzyladenine caused high frequency bud break and shoot multiplication in apical shoot buds and nodal explants of Morus cathayana (Pattnaik and Chand, 1997). Similar results have been obtained with Ocimum basilicum (Sahoo et al., 1997). The benefits of using GA3 at Stage II often vary between closely related plant genotypes. Thus GA3 was antagonistic to shoot proliferation in ‘McIntosh’ apple shoot cultures (Lane, 1978), but was essential for ‘Ottawa 3’ apple rootstock, where without the addition of 5 mg/l GA3, shoots had short internodes and small deformed leaves. Valles and Boxus (1987a,b) found that the addition of some GA3 (0.1-1.0 mg/l depending on genotype) to a medium containing 1-5 mg/l BAP was essential to obtain shoot multiplication of some Rosa hybrida cultivars, and an improved rate of proliferation in others. Cultivar ‘Goldy’ did not proliferate at all unless 1 mg/l GA3 was present. Adding 0.7 mg/l GA3 to 2.3 mg/l BAP increased the rate of proliferation in Camellia saluensis and C. japonica shoot cultures (Beretta and Eccher, 1987). Substituting IAA (0.2 mg/l) for GA3 in Camellia caused only an increase in shoot length; there was no shoot proliferation. Shoot cultures of the salt-tolerant plant Atriplex canescens were found to remain stunted without the application of GA3 (Wochok and Sluis, 1980). Addition of the growth regulator to the agar medium was ineffective and so filter-sterilised solution was flooded onto the plates on which the explants were growing and then decanted away after a few seconds, leaving a residue. This treatment had the effect of first promoting the multiplication of adventitious shoots, and then afterwards stimulating their elongation. Similarly, a combination of GA3 (0.010.1 mg/l) and kinetin (0.5-5 mg/l) with no auxin has been found to provide a highly effective growth regulator treatment for the rapid increase of potato shoots in shaken liquid cultures (Goodwin et al., 1980). Without the addition of 1 mg/l GA3 to 1 mg/l IBA and 0.2 mg/l BAP at the multiplication stage, shoot

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cultures of Humulus lupulus produced masses of callus at the basal ends of shoots (Vine and Jones, 1969). Necrosis in Rosa hybrida shoot cultures was prevented by adding 0.1 mg/l GA3 to the proliferation medium (Valles and Boxus, 1987). 1.3.4. Shoot elongation

Shoots are occasionally treated with GA3 to increase the length of shoots during multiplication; or prior to rooting, when it is usually applied at a special elongation stage (Stage IIIa), after shoot multiplication and before shoots are harvested (see Chapter 12). Treatment may be beneficial where a high level of cytokinin has resulted in many short shoots (e.g. in rose - Valles and Boxus, 1987 a,b). Some examples of successful use are (mg/l): • Malus domestica, 0.1 (Jones et al., 1977, 1979) ; 5.0 (Pua et al., 1983) • Malus prunifolia, 0.1 (Aldwinckle and Gustafson, 1981) • Rubus caesius, 0.1 (Babic and Neskovic, 1984) • Simmondsia chinensis, 2.0 (Jacoboni and Standardi, 1987) • Fragaria ananassa, 0.1 (Boxus, 1974a, b; Boxus et al., 1977) • Ficus benjamina, 0.5 (Delamomarco and Picazo, 1994) • Acacia sinuata, 0.35 (Vengadesan et al., 2000, 2003) 1.3.5. Apical integrity

Cytokinin treatments, used to promote axillary shoot proliferation, can cause shoots to develop with more than one apical meristem (see Chapter 10). In strawberry, GA3 may help to preserve the integrity of apical buds during shoot culture. Anderson et al., (1982) showed that 0.1 mg/l GA3 largely eliminated the formation of abnormal multi-apexed plants, which was caused by combinations of BAP and IBA favourable to rapid shoot proliferation. 1.3.6. Detrimental effects

In most plants, the use of gibberellin in shoot culture media is detrimental, producing elongated shoots with narrow leaves. Such was the effect on Duboisia myoporoides shoots when 0.1-0.3 mg/l GA3 was introduced into MS medium containing 3 mg/l BAP and 1 mg/l IAA (Kukreja and Mathur, 1985). In tree species of the Myrtaceae, adding GA3 to Stage II cultures caused too much shoot elongation, the formation of narrow leaves, and the production of callus at the base of axillary branches (De Fossard


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and De Fossard, 1988). GA3 inhibited bud formation in Thuja plicata shoot cultures (Coleman and Thorpe, 1977) and caused shoot tip explants of Acer freemanii to develop massive basal callus (Kerns and Meyer, 1986). Shoots treated with GA3 may be difficult to root. 1.3.7. Stage IV treatments

Plantlets of some woody species may become dormant after being transplanted to soil and fail to grow properly unless subjected to a period of cold, or treated with GA3. Biosynthesis of gibberellins is often promoted by cold treatment of plant material. Cold treatment of cultured shoots is necessary to promote bulb formation in Tulipa, but can be replaced by soaking shoots in 1 mg/l GA3 for 15 h (Wright et al., 1982; Rice et al., 1983). 1.4. ‘ANTIGIBBERELLINS’ AND GROWTH RETARDANTS

As exogenous GA3 is frequently inhibitory to in vitro growth and development, chemicals capable of blocking the biosynthesis or action of endogenous gibberellin may have promotory effects on cultures in which natural gibberellin levels are supra-optimal. Although chemicals with both of these kinds of activity are conveniently called anti-gibberellins, those which interfere with gibberellin biosynthesis (which is by far the majority) should not strictly be grouped under this heading, because their effects on plants can usually be reversed by applications of a gibberellin such as GA3. The nature of these compounds and their mode of action has been described earlier in this chapter. 1.4.1. Onium compounds

The most commonly used of these substances are chlormequat chloride (CCC) and Amo1618. CCC can stimulate embryogenesis in species such as Citrus where the process is inhibited by GA3 (Kochba et al., 1978; Spiegel-Roy and Kochba, 1980). In Ranunculus sceleratus, direct shoot formation from hypocotyl segments (which was stimulated by GA3) was reduced by CCC (Konar and Konar, 1973). Some workers have added small amounts (0.1mg/l) of CCC to their culture medium in the belief that this improves morphogenesis (Blackmon et al., 1981a,b; Blackmon and Reynolds, 1982; Reynolds et al., 1980). De Langhe and De Bruijne, (1976) showed that in tomato, pretreating plants with CCC before explants were removed, stimulated shoot formation in culture. The treatment also changed the auxin/cytokinin balance necessary to achieve shoot formation.

1.4.2. Heterocyclic compounds

Most work with these compounds has centred on paclobutrazol and to a lesser extent ancymidol and uniconazole. All the members are potent inhibitors of gibberellin biosynthesis but they also interfere with the synthesis of abscisic acid and sterols (Davis et al., 1988; Yates et al., 1993). Like other gibberellins they can stimulate embryogenesis where it is inhibited by GA3 (Spiegel-Roy and Saad, 1986; Hutchinson et al., 1997). They have also been shown to be effective in promoting shoot formation and rhizogenesis in a number of systems (Helianthus annuus - Fiore et al., 1997; Populus tremula Vinocur et al., 2000; carnations - Sankhla et al., 1994). Ancymidol has been shown to enhance tuber formation in single node sections from potato plantlets (Levy et al., 1993) and microtuber formation on propagated plantlets (Alchanatis et al., 1994). There is also some evidence that these compounds can improve acclimatization and tolerance to desiccation in plantlets or rooted shoots (Gavidia et al., 1997; Panaia et al., 2000). 1.4.3. Acylhexanediones

Most work in the past has used daminozide - for example in stimulating embryogenesis (Kochba et al., 1978; Spiegel-Roy and Kochba, 1980; Moore, 1985) and decreasing shoot elongation (Stimart, 1986). The newer members of this group - such as prohexadione (11)- have mainly been investigated in the context of intact plants. However, prohexadione does appear to have effects on a greater range of species than daminozide - for example in terms of the retardation of shoot growth (Brown et al., 1997). In hypocotyl explants of Albizzia julibrissin, prohexadione was much more effective than either paclobutrazol or uniconazole in promoting adventitious shoot formation (Sankhla et al., 1993). However, the effects of these inhibitors, like those of many others, are not entirely predictable. Thus, stem elongation and flowering of Matthiola incanum was promoted both by GAs and by acylhexanediones (Hisamatsu et al., 2000) and in intact epicotyls of Vigna sinensis, LAB 198 999 (another acylhexanedione) inhibited elongation, whereas in debladed seedlings and explants, promotion was observed (Martinez-Garcia and Garcia-Martinez, 1992). The gibberellin analogues such as 16,17-dihydro GA5 do not seem to have attracted much attention from workers in the field, probably because of difficulties in obtaining supplies of the compounds. B

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Chapter 7

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2. ABSCISIC ACID 2.1. OCCURRENCE AND ACTIVITY OF ABSCISIC ACID

Abscisic acid (ABA) (14) is another naturallyoccurring growth substance. It is a 15-carbon acid; four stereoisomers exist, differing in the orientation of the carboxyl group and the attachment of the sidechain to the ring. The naturally-occurring form is S-(+)-ABA. Commercially available abscisic acid is a mixture of isomers. ABA appears to be produced as a cleavage product of certain carotenoids xanthophylls - yielding xanthoxin, which is converted to ABA aldehyde and hence to ABA (Zeevart, 1999)(Fig. 7.2). It has long been known that dehydration of plant tissue leads to increased biosynthesis of ABA (Wright and Hiron, 1969); however, it is now well-established that a number of other environmental factors - low (Vernieri et al., 1991) and high temperatures (Daie and Campbell, 1981), salinity (Kefu et al., 1991) and flooding (Jackson, 1991) - can also produce the same effect.

ABA catabolism is complex involving either oxidation/reduction - to phaseic acid and dihydrophaseic acid - or conjugation to produce the glucose ester or glucoside (Zeevart, 1999). Biosynthesis occurs in plastids (especially chloroplasts) (Milborrow, 1974). The herbicide ‘fluridone’ (15), which inhibits the natural production of carotenoids (Bartels and Watson, 1978), can prevent ABA biosynthesis (Moore and Smith, 1984). Norflurazon (16) produces the same effect. Abscisic acid is found ubiquitously in plants and is the most commonly identified of a number of other structurally related natural compounds, which have plant growth regulatory activity. It has often been regarded as being a plant growth inhibitor, partly because of its early history, which involved studies on bud dormancy and abscission. However, ABA has many roles in plants, such as the regulation of

stomatal closure, control of water and ion uptake by roots, and of leaf abscission and senescence and hence, like other hormones has multifaceted effects. In tissue cultures, it sometimes promotes morphogenesis or growth. The quantity present in plant cultures can be determined by gas chromatography mass spectrometry or ELISA, following purification by high-pressure liquid chromatography (Ryu et al., 1988). Uptake of ABA into tissues appears to be by simple diffusion of the undissociated molecule, the anions being trapped upon entry into cells. It is decreased at pH levels above 5.5 (Minocha and Nissen, 1985; Patel et al., 1986).

The early stages of ABA action probably follow the same types of mechanism as those for other hormones that is, transduction chains leading to changed transcription and translation patterns, or effects on transmembrane ion pumps (as in the case of stomata) (see Assman and Armstrong, 1999; Busk et al., 1999). More specifically, ABA has been shown to control the expression of genes specific to embryo development and maturation. Thus, using ABA-deficient and ABA-insensitive Arabidopsis mutants ABA has been shown to control genes for both LEA (late embryogenesis abundant) and storage proteins (see Dodeman et al., 1997).


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Fig. 7.2 Biosynthesis of abscisic acid.


Chapter 7

At another level, some of the effects of ABA lie in the hormone antagonising or modifying the effects of other hormones, notably cytokinins and gibberellins, but also auxins. For example, Charriere et al., (1999) have suggested that the effect of ABA on morphogenesis in zygotic embryos of Helianthus annuus is indirect and due to a modification of auxin levels. C

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2.2. ABA IN TISSUE CULTURES

2.2.1. Effects On Callus Growth

ABA has usually been found to be inhibitory to callus growth. Sankhla and Sankhla (1968) reported that 1 mg/l was markedly inhibitory to Ipomoea callus, but generally, concentrations between 5 and 50 mg/l appear to be necessary to cause a 50% growth inhibition of cell growth (Li et al., 1970; Gamborg and LaRue, 1971; Taylor and Burden, 1972). However, several independent instances have been cited where ABA has been capable of stimulating callus growth, for example: • On hypocotyl explants of Cryptomeria (a gymnosperm tree), 1 mg/l ABA in the culture medium had the same effect as 10 mg/l of the cytokinin BAP in stimulating internal callus or adventitious bud formation (Isikawa, 1974). • On explants consisting of pieces of Citrus leaf and stem, 0.3-2.6 mg/l ABA (1-10 μM) stimulated callus formation specifically on the abscission zone between the petiole and the stem (Altman and Goren, 1971). • In soybean, ABA stimulated callus growth when 0.05 or 0.5 mg/l kinetin was present in the medium. At lower kinetin levels ABA had no effect or was inhibitory (Blumenfeld and Gazit, 1970); • Haploid tobacco callus was increased in growth by 0.1 mg/l ABA. At 10 mg/l the regulator was completely inhibitory (Kochhar, 1980). • In excised hypocotyls of carrot ABA in the culture medium promoted callus induction and proliferation in the tissue (Jimenez and Bangerth, 2001). These responses are usually only obtained with relatively low ABA concentrations: higher rates bring about corresponding decreases in the weight of callus produced (Torrizo and Zapata, 1986). This probably indicates that the concentrations inhibiting callus growth (which have been most commonly used) are unphysiological.

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2.2.2. Effects on morphogenesis

Adventitious shoots and roots. ABA has been observed to influence morphogenesis in a number of plants. The first report was by Heide (1968) who found that shoot bud formation on isolated Begonia cheimantha leaves (not in aseptic culture) was enhanced when the leaves were treated with abscisic acid, and inhibited when either auxin or gibberellin was applied. Seasonal variation in the capacity of Begonia leaves to produce shoot buds was thought to be associated with variation in endogenous ABA levels. Shepard (1980) found that adding ABA to the growth medium (0.05-0.2 mg/l, depending on variety), caused morphogenesis to occur more rapidly than it otherwise would from potato callus. Natural ABA levels have been noted to correspond to the maturation state of tissues (Tanimoto et al., 1985). Adding 100 mg/l ABA to the medium, on which internode segments of Torenia were cultured, stimulated the production of flower buds on previously vegetative explants. The greatest amount of flowering occurred when the ABA within the tissues (i.e. the sum of endogenous and exogenous sources) was between 16 and 20 mg/g. Hooker and Thorpe (1998) using cultured tomato roots observed that ABA at concentrations of 0.2 mg/l and above inhibited lateral root initiation and emergence, whereas its putative biosynthesis inhibitor fluridone (15) enhanced the formation of lateral roots. Hartung and Abou-Mandour (1996) observed that regenerates of Ruta graveolens only survive transplant shock if pretreated with 2.5 mg/l ABA, which they attributed to a stimulatory effect on lateral root and root hair formation. Embryogenesis. ABA is essential for the normal growth of somatic embryos and only in its presence do they closely resemble zygotic embryos in their development and structure. Manipulation of endogenous and/or exogenous ABA levels increases the frequency of embryos reaching maturity and can assist the handling of the large populations of somatic embryos which can be required for mass propagation (Ammirato, 1988). The slight check to embryo development caused by 0.03 mg/l ABA was found by Ammirato (1973, 1974) to be associated with the elimination of abnormal forms of embryos (such as embryos with fused or multiple cotyledons, mature leaves in place of cotyledons, or other accessory structures) that were formed in caraway (Carum) suspension cultures, especially in the light. ABA treatment also prevented


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the formation of accessory embryos in this tissue, which were otherwise developed on somatic embryos already in existence. The effectiveness of ABA in decreasing the proportion of abnormal embryos and assisting and synchronising embryo maturation (conversion) has since been confirmed in other species (e.g. Kamada and Harada, 1981; Dunstan et al., 1988; Krogstrup et al., 1988; Capuana and Debergh, 1997; Castillo et al., 1998; Cvikrova et al., 1998; Bela and Shetty, 1999; Fernando and Gamage, 2000). There are also reports of low concentrations of ABA stimulating somatic embryo initiation or embryo growth: • Embryogenesis was stimulated in growth regulator habituated Citrus sinensis (Shamouti orange) callus by 0.01-1 mg/l ABA (Kochba et al., 1978; Spiegel-Roy and Kochba, 1980). • Embryoids were only developed from suspension cultures of Pennisetum when cells were transferred to a medium containing 0.01-0.02 mg/l ABA (Vasil and Vasil, 1981). • The addition of 0.1-50 mg/l ABA to media containing 2,4-D, adenine and kinetin, increased the number of embryos which grew from the globular stage to the heart-shaped stage in soybean suspension and callus cultures (Phillips and Collins, 1981). • Adding 0.02-10 mg/l ABA to the medium increased the proportion of Pennisetum purpureum leaf explants which produced embryogenic callus, especially from tissues treated with fluridone (0.0220 mg/l) in which, without ABA, embryogenesis was inhibited (Rajasekaran et al., 1987) • Transfer of embryo suspensor masses of Abies fraseri to media containing 50-80 μm ABA resulted in the formation of cotyledon stage embryos (Guevin and Kirby, 1997) • ABA and polyethylene glycol are instrumental in the functional development of somatic embryos from conifers (Stassolla et al., 2002) Several authors have noticed a growth-inhibiting action of exogenous ABA on embryogenesis and on the growth of both somatic and zygotic embryos, but these reports are rare and often describe the effects of high concentrations of the regulant. Although 0.0022.6 mg/l ABA had little effect during the development of early globular or heart stages of somatic embryos formed in carrot cultures, it decreased the growth at stages beyond this (Fujimura and Komamine, 1975). Embryo formation in Citrus sinensis is supressed by 11-21 mg/l ABA (SpiegelC

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Roy and Kochba, 1980), or by even higher concentrations (Tisserat and Murashige, 1977a). Pre-formed late stage embryos can be completely arrested in growth by 26.4 mg/l ABA, but remain viable (even though they lack chlorophyll), and will continue to develop and grow when the ABA is removed. ABA treatment might therefore be used to facilitate the storage of embryos needed at some future date for plant propagation (Ammirato, 1974). The inhibition of somatic embryos by ABA is very similar to the inhibition of zygotic embryo growth, which it induces naturally (LePage-Degivry, 1973; Sondheimer et al., 1968); this serves to keep seed embryos dormant, preventing precocious germination. Seeds of Dendrocalamus strictus germinated in the presence of 0.1-1.0 μM ABA, but if 2,4-D was also added, embryogenic callus was produced. However, the number of embryos obtained was finally less than with 2,4-D alone (Rao et al., 1987). As noted earlier, in many of the cases where ABA has been shown to be inhibitory this is almost certainly due to the use of unphysiological concentrations. However, there is also evidence that part of this may be due to changes in ABA concentrations in cultures during embryogenesis and also differences between types of embryos. Thus, in carrot, Jimenez and Bangerth (2001) showed that there were much higher ABA levels in embryogenic calli compared to non-embryogenic. Similarly, Jimenez and Bangerth (2000), using different callus lines of Vitis vinifera showed that there was a strong correlation between high endogenous ABA concentrations and morphogenetic capacity. Similarly, Faure et al., (1998) demonstrated a relationship between precocious germination of somatic embryos of Vitis vinifera and low ABA levels, and Kim et al., (1998) showed that while ABA did not promote maturation in embryos of Larix leptolepis it was beneficial in reducing precocious germination. It is also clear from the work of Faure et al., (1998) and Gawronska et al., (2000) that somatic and zygotic embryos differ significantly in their ABA contents - generally low in the former and high in the latter - and this is likely to influence the concentration of the hormone at which beneficial effects will be observed.


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3. ETHYLENE The presence of very low concentrations of ethylene (17) in the atmosphere, has long been known to affect plant growth and development. Ethylene concentrations in the gaseous phase are usually expressed as ppm - parts per million (volume per million) - or μl.l-1 and many ethylene effects show half-maximal responses at 0.1μl.l-1. Since ethylene equilibrates rapidly with the aqueous phase of the cell this corresponds to a concentration of the substance in that phase of about 4.5x10-10M at 20oC. P

P

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It is now known that ethylene is produced by all living plant tissues and regulates their growth. The gas is most obviously involved in fruit ripening, senescence, and the abscission of leaves, but also has many other functions (see Abeles et al., 1992). It is also notable that, depending on the species or the tissues involved, ethylene can have markedly different effects on development. For example, while the gas generally inhibits the growth of dicotyledonous shoots (e.g. peas) it promotes growth in a number of hydrophytes - e.g. rice (Ku et al., 1970; Suge, 1972). Equally, in the light, ethylene can actually promote the growth of Arabidopsis seedlings (Smalle et al., 1997). 3.1. ETHYLENE BIOSYNTHESIS

The biosynthetic pathway for ethylene is now well established (see Imaseki, 1999) and is illustrated in Fig. 7.3. Methionine is converted to Sadenosylmethionine, which in turn is converted to 1aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) via the enzyme ACC synthase (ACS); the ACC is then metabolised to ethylene via ACC oxidase (ACO). Methylthioadenosine, the other product of ACS, is recycled to methionine hence conserving sulphur. Unsurprisingly, addition of either methionine, or ACC, to plant tissue of all kinds usually leads to increased rates of ethylene biosynthesis. While, in comparison with other plant hormones, the biosynthetic pathway for ethylene appears to be relatively simple, the issue is complicated because of the existence of isozymes for both the enzymes involved (see Imaseki, 1999). Moreover, these enzymes are controlled differentially. Thus, there are

three specific stimuli, which activate gene expression of different ACS isogenes - auxin, wounding or ripening - but this expression in turn can be modulated by other components - ethylene itself, abscisic acid, cytokinin, carbon dioxide and light. Hence, manipulation of tissue or cultures, the environmental conditions and the makeup of media can all influence ethylene production, the final outcome depending on the balance between activation and inactivation of particular genes. It is also important to note that because ethylene may have either an autocatalytic or an autoinhibitory effect on its own synthesis depending on the tissue or plant species (Vendrell and McGlasson, 1971; Zeroni et al., 1976; McGlasson et al., 1978; Riov and Yang, 1982a; Yang and Hoffman, 1984; Bufler, 1986; Mattoo and White, 1991; McKeon et al., 1995) and that this is receptor-controlled, then the use of receptor-directed inhibitors of ethylene action such as norbornadiene (see below) may in fact result in either increased or decreased biosynthesis of ethylene depending on the tissue type or plant species. Similarly, the ethylene receptor mutants etr1 and eti5 of Arabidopsis (where ethylene biosynthesis is autoinhibited in wild type) both overproduce the gas. Plants can metabolise ethylene to ethylene oxide via monooxygenase enzymes (Jerie and Hall, 1978); however, with the exception of those from Vicia faba and alfalfa, these latter usually show low activity and low specificity and are unlikely to affect internal concentrations markedly (Beyer, 1985). 3.2. INHIBITORS OF BIOSYNTHESIS

A number of compounds or treatments have been shown to inhibit ethylene biosynthesis: 3.2.1. Aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG)

AVG (18) is a potent inhibitor of ethylene biosynthesis in plants. It acts by inhibiting ACS (Yang et al., 1980; Kende et al., 1980). In tissue cultures 1-50 μg/l is effective without causing direct toxicity.


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3.2.2. Cobalt ions

A high concentration of cobalt ions inhibits ethylene production in plant tissues (Lau and Yang, 1976) by preventing the conversion of ACC to ethylene. In the presence of 50-500 ÎźM Co2+, ACC levels increase in tissues treated with IAA (Yu and Yang, 1979). Cobalt chloride (10-100 mM) added to rose shoot cultures increased apical dominance (the opposite of the effect produced by low concentrations of ethylene (Kevers et al., 1992). P

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3.2.3. Anoxia and Oxidation inhibitors

Because oxygen is required for the conversion of ACC to ethylene, anoxia inhibits ethylene production and synthesis may decrease significantly when the partial pressure of oxygen falls below 15 kPa.

However, in some plants, such as barley and maize ethylene production is stimulated at 3-5 kPa (Jackson, 1985a, b). Similarly, the effects of a variety of oxidation inhibitors have been assessed in ethyleneforming systems. These have included salicylic acid (19) and acetyl salicylic acid (20) (but also see below), and n-propyl gallate (21) as well as uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation and inhibitors of cytochrome oxidase. However, while they may indeed affect ethylene synthesis their broadspectrum effects are such that their use for this purpose cannot be recommended, especially since much more specific inhibitors, such as AVG, are available.

Fig. 7.3 Biosynthesis of ethylene.


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Chapter 7

where ethylene is thought to affect growth or morphogenesis in tissue cultures. Silver ions. Silver ions are known to overcome the action of ethylene on whole plants (Beyer, 1976a, b). Both silver thiosulphate (Ag2S2O3) and silver nitrate (AgNO3) are therefore effective in preventing ethylene action although the former is much more effective because it is readily translocated. They do not, as was once thought, appear to replace Cu(I) in the binding domain and in fact increase rates of ethylene biosynthesis in peas (Sanders et al., 1991), but may act by inhibiting the copper transporter protein RAN1. Carbon dioxide. High concentrations (5-10%) of carbon dioxide can antagonise some ethylene effects for example inhibition of epicotyl or hypocotyl extension (Burg and Burg, 1967; Beyer, 1979). The effect is competitive in vivo (Burg and Burg, 1967) but does not appear to be a result of displacement of ethylene from its receptor (Sisler, 1982; Sanders et al., 1991). On the other hand, CO2 at atmospheric concentrations appears to be necessary for some responses to ethylene (Hall et al., 1980). Chemical inhibitors. Although a wide range of chemicals [e.g. ioxynil (23) 3,5-diiodo-4-hydroxybenzoic acid (DIHB) (24) and 5-methyl-7-chloro-4ethoxycarbanylmethoxy-2,1,3-benzothia-diazole (benzothiadiazole TH6241; 25)] are known to block developmental effects of ethylene reputedly via effects on ethylene action, it is questionable whether this is so or whether the mechanisms’ effects may be indirect and/or the result of modulation of ethylene biosynthesis. However, a number of hydrocarbons do specifically inhibit ethylene action by competing with the growth regulator for binding sites on its receptor. Such substances include 2,5 norbornadiene (26), cis2-butene (27), cyclooctene (28) and methylcyclopropene (29) (Sisler, 1991; Sisler et al., 1996). The latter is particularly effective, at concentrations as low as 10-9 M (Sisler and Serek, 1997). Cytokinins. Cytokinins antagonise ethylene in many systems - for example leaf senescence probably via early events in signal transduction (see e.g. Novikova et al., 1999). B

3.2.4. Chelating agents

Chelating agents such as 8-hydroxyquinoline (22) are effective in prolonging the vase life of cut flowers (thereby overcoming ethylene-induced senescence). Their mode of action is unknown, but may be related to their ability to sequester copper ions (see below).

3.3. ETHYLENE ACTION

Five partially functionally redundant receptors for ethylene have now been identified (Bleecker, 1999) and signal transduction appears to involve protein kinases (Kieber et al., 1993; Novikova et al., 2000, Moshkov et al., 2003a), monomeric GTP-binding proteins (Novikova et al., 1997, 1999, Moshkov et al., 2003b), transcription factors (Chao et al., 1997) and other proteins of unknown function (Johnson and Ecker, 1998; Stepanova and Ecker, 2000). The receptors all contain Cu(I) in the binding domain (Rodriguez et al., 1999). The downstream effects include altered gene transcription and protein synthesis. 3.3.1. Inhibitors of ethylene action

Several chemicals and environmental factors are known to inhibit ethylene action. These may either compete with ethylene for binding domains in the receptors or act by unknown mechanisms. Inhibitors of ethylene action have been used experimentally as an alternative to biosynthesis inhibitors, in conditions

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3.3.2. Ethylene-Releasing Chemicals

Several synthetic ethylene-releasing chemicals have been discovered. The one most commonly used in plant tissue culture experiments is ethephon (2CEPA or 2-chloroethanephosphonic acid; 30). This compound is absorbed into plant tissues where it breaks down to release ethylene at cytoplasmic pH


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levels. Cultures also usually produce more ethylene if the compound from which it is naturally derived, ACC, is added to the medium (Puschmann et al., 1985). Adding methionine may also have the same effect (Druart, 1988).

perchlorate solution (Young et al., 1951). The latter is the most efficient. 3.5. ETHYLENE PRODUCTION IN VITRO

Ethylene is produced during the culture of all kinds of plant cells, tissues and organs. The rate of biosynthesis is increased if cells are subjected to stress of some kind [e.g. high sodium chloride levels (Garcia and Einset, 1982, 1983) or toxic levels of ammonium ions]. Some chemicals added to culture media can also stimulate ethylene formation. Mannitol, which is commonly used in protoplast and other tissue cultures as an osmoticum, causes ethylene biosynthesis to be increased (Riov and Yang, 1982b); polyethylene glycol, which is sometimes used in protoplast fusion experiments, can also have the same effect. Potato protoplasts which had been treated with polyethylene glycol were much more likely to produce microcalli if 100 mg2-1 Ag2S2O3 was added to the medium (Perl et al., 1988). Ethylene production is also greater during the senescence of cultured plant material: it reaches a maximum in suspension cultures at the start of the stationary phase when nutrients are limiting and most of the cells are senescing (LaRue and Gamborg, 1971). As noted, Prunus avium shoot cultures produced ethylene at a constant rate over 30 days (19 mlg-1 dry weight) (Righetti et al., 1988) even when the CO2 in the culture vessels reached 30% (Righetti et al., 1990). Suspension cultures of several different kinds of plants were found by Gamborg and LaRue (1968) and LaRue and Gamborg (1971) to produce ethylene at up to 1.22 μmole/hour/g dry weight of cells. The rate of evolution was greatest as the cells reached stationary phase, was the same in the light or the dark, and varied greatly between species (being especially low in cultures of monocotyledonous plants). Marked differences in the rate of ethylene production in different experiments were attributed to the differing physiological state of the cells. The amount of ethylene produced by callus cultures is also dependent on genotype (Thomas and Murashige, 1979a). In sunflower suspensions, there appears to be no functional relationship between growth and ethylene synthesis, ethylene being just a by-product of actively dividing cells (Sauerbrey et al., 1987). As with whole plants or parts of plants, auxins generally increase the production of ethylene by cell and callus cultures but results have not always been predictable. This is unsurprising since, as noted P

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3.4. ETHYLENE SOLUBILITY AND CHEMICAL ABSORPTION

Ethylene has a partition coefficient in water (concentration in aqueous phase ⁄concentration in gaseous phase) of 0.20 at 0ºC but only 0.10 at 20°C; so it is important to remember that the temperature at which a culture is maintained may have a marked effect on the cellular concentration and hence perhaps the developmental response. For experimental purposes, ethylene in the atmosphere of culture vessels can be be preferentially absorbed on a solution of potassium permanganate or mercuric

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above, auxins can stimulate transcription of a specific isogene(s) for the ethylene biosynthetic enzyme ACS. Some at least of the effects of auxins on cultures are certainly mediated, at least in part, by ethylene. Production of ethylene by suspension cultures is dependent on the level of 2,4-D in the medium, but is independent of the effect of 2,4-D on growth (Mackenzie and Street, 1970; Sauerbrey et al., 1987). Similarly, addition of 2,4-D to suspensions of Ruta graveolens promoted ethylene formation, but did not do so in cell cultures of Rosa, where only NAA and pCPA were stimulatory (Gamborg and LaRue, 1971). IAA increased ethylene production by suspension cultures of pear (Puschmann et al., 1985). Wulster and Sacalis (1980) observed that ethylene production from callus cultures of Rosa hybrida was increased by 1-3 mg/l of the auxins NAA or IBA, but was little affected by 5-15 mg/l of three cytokinins except when they were used in conjunction with auxin. Then the rate of ethylene production could be markedly increased. The concentration of cytokinin at which synergism occurred varied according to whether BAP, 2-iP or zeatin riboside was used. Lau and Yang (1973), who found a similar synergism in mung bean, discovered that ethylene evolution was closely related to the level of free IAA in the tissue. Kinetin promoted ethylene evolution because it prevented added IAA being converted rapidly into indoleacetylaspartic acid. In this conjugated form, the auxin had no effect on ethylene production. The amount of ethylene evolved by Dahlia callus was proportional to the concentration of NAA added to the medium (Gavinlertvatana et al., 1982). The addition of galactose to a medium has been found to increase ethylene levels within tissues (Colclasure and Yopp, 1976). Ethylene production by habituated cultures is in general lower than in the normal hormone-dependent equivalents (see below). 3.5.1. Accumulation in culture vessels

As ethylene is produced from all kinds of plant cultures, including callus and suspensions, it accumulates in the gas phase within sealed culture vessels. The concentration in the free air space is found to vary according to the type of tissue being grown, the weight of the tissue, the volume of the culture vessel, the manner in which it is sealed, and the culture conditions. The physiological effects of an ethylene atmosphere within vessels vary according to the concentration of the gas. The desirable and

undesirable physiological effects of the concentrations with which cells or tissues are sometimes presented (particularly in containers that are tightly closed), are discussed below. If the suspension cultures of LaRue and Gamborg (1971) produced ethylene at the same rate in tightly closed flasks as they did in foam-stoppered vessels, the air space in the flasks after 6 days of culture would have contained from only a trace (Triticum monococcum) to ca. 7.4 p.p.m ethylene (rose). Huxter et al., (1981) measured 0.3-1.8 ppm ethylene in foam-stoppered flasks containing tobacco callus; Mackenzie and Street (1970) - 10 ppm in the air space above their sycamore suspensions; De Proft et al., (1985) - up to 2-3 ppm above tightly stoppered Magnolia shoot cultures after 9 weeks. The retention of ethylene depends of the nature of the closures used on culture vessels and on the tightness of the seal. Loosely covered flasks, such as those capped with aluminium foil, have been found to lose 50% of their ethylene in 2 hours, the rate of loss thereafter being constant (Gavinlertvatana et al., 1982). Ethylene can accumulate in flasks in significant quantities if their necks are momentarily flamed with an alcohol or natural gas burner during transfers (Beasley and Eaks, 1979). It should be noted however that the effects of closures do not necessarily reflect changes in gaseous components such as CO2 and ethylene. Thus, Santamaria et al., (2000), using Delphinium plantlets, concluded that improved stomatal performance, growth and survival of the plantlets in ventilated vessels was more likely due to increased flow of water rather than an improvement in the gaseous environment. B

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3.6.1. Explant Isolation

Ethylene production by plant tissues is temporarily increased when they are wounded, and so is significant during explant isolation. Less ethylene was produced during the isolation of potato leaf protoplasts if shoots, from which the leaves were taken, had been previously cultured with silver thiosulphate; the quantity of ethylene decreased still further if acetylsalicylic acid was added during the maceration process (Perl et al., 1988). The effects of wounding on growth and morphogenesis are discussed further below.


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3.6.2. Suspension cultures

In the cell cultures of LaRue and Gamborg (1971) described above, exogenous ethylene could not replace an auxin, which was required to induce cell division. Ethylene naturally accumulated within flasks appeared to have little effect, and there was only a 20-30% reduction in cell yield of Ruta and Rosa suspensions when relatively large amounts of ethylene were artificially added. The addition of ethephon did not stimulate cell division or growth of sycamore cells (Mackenzie and Street, 1970). 3.6.3. Callus initiation and growth

Growth stimulation. It might be expected that the accumulation of ethylene in culture vessels would induce the formation of callus, because in whole plants, undifferentiated callus-like growths (intumescences) have been seen to grow from the stems (Wallace, 1928; Evanari, 1961) or roots (Wilson, 1966) of intact plants, which have been kept for prolonged periods in low ethylene concentrations. Ethylene does seem to stimulate callus growth of some plants in vitro. For example, on a hormone-free medium, Ginkgo biloba embryos germinated when placed on medium within tubes sealed with cotton plugs, but gave rise to callus if the tubes were covered with Parafilm (Webb et al., 1986). Furthermore, although it has been thought that the increase in ethylene evolution caused by 2,4-D is independent of the effect of the auxin on growth (MacKenzie and Street, 1970), a close correlation has been found between the rate of ethylene production and the growth rate of tobacco (Huxter et al., 1979; Bridgen and Lineberger, 1981), Dahlia (Gavinlertvatana et al., 1982) and tomato (Mukund et al., 1988) calluses. Several chemicals known to inhibit ethylene biosynthesis also reduced growth and ethylene evolution in exact proportion. Growth inhibition. Contrary indications have also often been obtained: Chalutz and DeVay (1969) showed that ethylene inhibited the formation of callus and suberised cork cells on the injured surfaces of sweet potato roots and seemed to have little effect on the subsequent division of undifferentiated cells. Similarly, Zobel and Roberts (1978) found that an ethylene concentration above 0.1 ppm. prevented the initiation of callus and tracheids from Lactuca pith explants and deduced that this was because the gas prevented the cells becoming determined or differentiated. Once the cells became programmed to divide and grow as callus, ethylene had no further effect.

In rice, callus necrosis was most likely to occur in cultivars which produced ethylene at a high rate. Callus growth of these plants was more strongly inhibited by a controlled gas mixture high in ethylene than was that of necrosis-tolerant cultivars (Adkins et al., 1990). Songstad et al., (1991) showed that the ethylene action inhibitor AgNO3 increased type II callus production from immature embryos of maize. Other physiological effects. A promotory effect of ethylene on xylogenesis in soybean callus and Lactuca pith explants has been reported (Miller and Roberts, 1982; Miller et al., 1985). Chlorophyll synthesis and chloroplast development in vitro is depressed by ethylene (Dalton and Street, 1976). 3.6.4. Morphogenesis

The role of ethylene in morphogenesis is by no means clear, although its action in inhibiting polar auxin movement (see Chapter 5) may be partly responsible for the observed effects. Besides influencing the determination of cells that will give rise to callus (see above), the gas can influence organ formation in vitro. From available results, it appears that there is often a critical concentration at which morphogenesis is stimulated; concentrations below and above this being respectively ineffective or inhibitory. Determination. Ethylene appeared to inhibit the capacity of Helianthus annuus callus to produce adventitious shoots. The determination was influenced by treatments to the seedlings from which explants were derived. Hypocotyls of dark-grown seedlings of Helianthus annuus produced less adventitious shoots than those grown in the light. This seemed to be correlated with an effect of light on the sensitivity of the tissues to ethylene, because treating 3-day-old dark-grown seedlings with 10 ÎźM AVG, inhibited ethylene production for 7 days; providing 4 days elapsed before cultures were initiated, callus from the hypocotyls of these seedlings produced the same number of adventitious shoots as light-grown callus (Robinson and Adams, 1987). Adventitious shoot formation. Ringe (1972) reported that direct shoot formation on Begonia x richmondensis stem segments was inhibited by 2-20 mg/l ethephon and completely prevented by 200 mg/l (although these same concentrations promoted callus proliferation). Adding ethephon to media supporting callus growth of wild or cultivated carrot has been reported to inhibit root and shoot formation (Wochok C


Chapter 7

and Wetherell, 1971). However, Gonzalez et al., (1997) showed that AVG inhibited shoot induction and elongation in nodal segments of Populus tremula. Ethephon and ACC on the other hand promoted shoot induction. Chraibi et al., (1991) showed that CoCl2 and AgNO3 stimulated shoot formation from cotyledons of Helianthus annuus. Similar effects of AgNO3 on shoot formation from cotyledons of Cucumis melo were demonstrated by Roustan et al., (1992). Thorpe and co-workers (Thorpe et al., 1981; Huxter et al., 1981) concluded that ethylene inhibited shoot formation during the first 5 days of the initiation period, but thereafter it speeded up the formation of primordia. Callus of wheat and Nicotiana plumbaginifolia cultured on Tran Thanh Van (1973) medium with 1 mg/l 2,4-D, formed adventitious shoots when the auxin was omitted. Shoot formation was inhibited if ethylene (70 mM ethephon) was present from the beginning of the culture period and was stimulated (and adventitious root formation simultaneously reduced) if 5-50 mg/l silver nitrate was present thoughout the culture period (Purnhauser et al., 1987). Ethylene inhibitors have been found to have a similar effect in other species too. For example, adventitious shoot formation on cotyledons or hypocotyls of Brassica spp. was enhanced by adding AVG (1-10 μM) or AgNO3 (5-30 μM) to MS medium containing auxin and cytokinin (Chi et al., 1990). Ethylene in culture vessels. The ethylene and carbon dioxide, which built up in closed culture flasks during the first 15 days of culture, promoted the formation of shoot buds from Pinus radiata cotyledons. The additional ethylene was especially promotory during the first few days of culture but, if flasks were stoppered with foam plugs for 10-15 days, there was only a low frequency of shoot bud formation. Excessive concentrations of ethylene, which accumulated after 15 days (e.g. 25 ml/l at 25 days) caused a slight dedifferentiation of buds (Kumar et al., 1986, 1987). Formation of apogamous buds in the fern Pteridium aquilinum was also stimulated most effectively by a certain concentration of ethylene. Gametophytic colonies exposed to air produced only 4 buds per gram of tissue, whereas those exposed to 0.7 ppm. ethylene gave rise to 32. Less apogamous buds were formed by colonies in 2.5 and 14.5 ppm ethylene (Elmore and Whittier, 1973). The number of adventitious buds formed on bulb scale explants of lily was increased if 1-10 ppm B

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ethylene was applied in the gas phase above the cultures during the first 3-7 days of culture (Van Aartrijk et al., 1985). A similar result was obtained by Taeb and Alderson (1987) with sections of the immature floral stems of tulips. Adding 1-10 μM ACC or 0.1-100 mM ethephon did not have the same promotory effect. Bulb formation. The formation of bulbs on tulip shoots was enhanced by increased endogenous ethylene, achieved by adding 0.1-10 mg/l ACC to the medium, or by growing cultures under lights with a low red/far red ratio (Alderson and Taeb, 1990). Root formation. Ethylene has been reported to have both promotory and inhibitory effects on rooting in vitro. Coleman et al., (1980) showed that in conditions where 5 mM IAA promoted the formation of adventitious roots on tomato leaf discs, the simultaneous application of ethylene, or ethephon, was inhibitory. Furthermore, although natural ethylene production was stimulated by adding auxin to the medium, lowering its level in the culture flasks by aeration, absorbing it with mercuric perchlorate, or leaf disc pretreatment with AgNO3 (1.7-17.0 mg/l for 30 min), doubled the number of roots formed. Although Coleman et al., (1980) concluded that ethylene was not a rooting hormone per se, others have reported contrary indications. Fabijan et al., (1981) suggested that although the initiation of roots from Helianthus hypocotyls was blocked by endogenous ethylene on the first day after excision, thereafter the gas was promotory. Thin cell layers of Nicotiana tabacum were found to produce 100 times more ethylene on a rootinducing medium (containing 10 mM IBA and 0.1 mM kinetin) than tissues cultured on other media. The appearance of roots was associated with a further increase in ethylene synthesis, which was maximal at 30ºC and only trivial at 15 or 40ºC, suggesting an enzyme-mediated process. If silver ions were added to the medium, root formation was blocked and adventitious shoot buds were formed (Le Guyader, 1987). Providing oxygen was present, the rooting of chrysanthemum cuttings in an experimental mist system was slightly enhanced by adding 10 ppm ethylene in the gas phase (Soffer and Burger, 1988), and extensive wounding (likely to increase endogenous ethylene evolution) also increased rooting of mung bean cuttings except when they were treated with 10 μM AVG (Robbins et al., 1981). Gonzalez et al., (1997) showed that AVG inhibited root formation in nodal segments of Populus tremula


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whereas ethylene was promotory. On the other hand, Khalafalla and Hattori (2000) showed that AgNO3, cobalt chloride and acetylsalicyclic acid enhanced root formation on Vicia faba shoots regenerated on a medium containing thidiazuron. ACC inhibited root formation. Embryogenesis. Size of culture vessel was found to be most important to obtain optimum rates of embryogenesis from tobacco anthers (Dunwell, 1979), suggesting that a volatile substance was stimulatory at a critical concentration. In embryogenic ‘Shamouti’ orange cultures, low concentrations of ethephon (0.01-1.0 mg/l) stimulated embryo formation, but levels above these were inhibitory (Kochba et al., 1978), and excessive levels of ethylene accumulated within closed flasks, have been found to prevent embryogenesis (Spiegel-Roy and Kochba, 1980). Ishizaki et al., (2000) found that at low concentration (10-9 M) ethephon more than doubled the frequency of formation of embryogenic callus from explants of spinach, a process inhibited by AgNO3. Conversely, ethephon completely inhibited embryo development whereas AgNO3 markedly increased the number of embryos. Hatanaka et al., (1995) showed that removal of ethylene from culture flasks reduced the number of somatic embryos produced from leaf disks of Coffea canephora whereas AgNO3 and cobalt inhibited embryo formation - the latter effect being reversed by ethephon. Other evidence also suggests that ethylene, normally produced by tissues, is inhibitory to embryogenesis. The addition of 1-3 mg/l AgNO3 to anther cultures of many varieties of Brassica oleracea gemmifera, increased the production of somatic embryos, and allowed embryos to be obtained from experiments and varieties where there would normally have been very few (Biddington et al., 1988). Similarly, by placing 50-200 μM AgNO3 in the medium on which maize embryogenic callus was cultured for 21 days (before it was placed on a regeneration medium), the number of plants obtained per unit weight of callus was increased. Acetyl salicylic acid also improved regeneration, but was less effective than AgNO3 (Duncan and Widholm, 1987). Al-Khayri and Al-Bahrany (2001) showed that AgNO3 increased embryogenic callus weight from date palm in the absence of cytokinin but not in its presence. Similar effects were noted upon the numbers of embryos formed, although here the B

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number was reduced by an increase in AgNO3 concentration. Fernandez et al., (1999) found that AgNO3 enhances the induction of direct somatic embryogenesis from the scutellum of immature embryos of Triticum durum. That ethylene is inhibitory to some early step in embryo initiation was suggested by the results of Duncan and Widholm (1988). Callus of Zea mays derived from immature embryos cultured with 15 mM dicamba (medium D) which produced somatic embryos when moved to a regeneration medium without the auxin (medium H), tended to regenerate many more plants from somatic embryos if 200 μM AgNO3 had been added to the D medium. Tisserat and Murashige (1977c) found that embryogenesis of carrot and Citrus media was inhibited if ethephon was added to the medium. However the inhibitors of ethylene biosynthesis, AVG, amino-oxyacetic acid, 2,4-dinitrophenol and salicylic acid, prevented embryogenesis in Medicago sativa. Meijer and Brown (1988) suggested that these compounds were possibly blocking a biosynthetic pathway, other than ethylene formation, of crucial importance to embryogenesis. In the same connection Taylor et al., (1994) observed that while AgNO3 increased the yield of protoplasts and reduced shoot regeneration from sugarcane heterogeneous cell suspension cultures, application of either AVG or ACC had no effect on protoplast yield – suggesting that, at least as far as this process is concerned the role of AgNO3 is probably not via an effect on ethylene action. Some of these apparently contradictory results may be due to differences between species, but, equally, may be due to the concentrations of ethylene used. Thus, Chen and Chang (2003) using Oncidium leaf cultures, observed that very low concentrations of ACC (5 and 10 mμM) retarded direct embryo formation from cut ends, but higher concentrations (20 and 50 mμM) accelerated the process. Shoot growth and axillary bud break. Ethylene in the external atmosphere is generally inhibitory to cell growth in the meristems of seedlings (Fidler, 1960), whole plant shoots (Heck and Pires, 1962a, b), or roots (Chadwick and Burg, 1967; Andreae et al., 1968; Radin and Loomis, 1969). Monocotyledons such as cereals and grasses are less affected than dicotyledons. Many species are extremely sensitive: pea seedlings for instance make noticeably less growth in an atmosphere containing 0.05-0.1 ppm ethylene (Fidler, 1960). It might therefore be expected that concentrations of ethylene found within culture flasks would prevent the normal growth of


Chapter 7

directly or indirectly regenerated shoots, or of axillary shoots proliferating in shoot cultures. In fact, growth inhibition seldom appears to take place, and there is some evidence that ethylene may often have a stimulatory role (see introductory section). Adding 50-100 mg/l of the ethylene precursor methionine to the medium together with 1 mg/l BAP increased the rate of propagation of several woody species through several subcultures (Druart, 1988). Although their quality was poor, more shoots were produced by rose shoot cultures grown in sealed vessels (Horn et al., 1988a, b), and low rates of exogenous ethylene (an injection of which gave an intra-vessel concentration of 5 p.p.m. that declined to zero over 10 days) were found to increase the rate of rose shoot proliferation. Higher concentrations (20 and especially, 100 p.p.m.) were inhibitory (Kevers et al., 1992). An intriguing experiment of Walker et al., (1988) also suggests that ethylene affects the growth of Rhododendron shoot cultures. Firstly, the fresh weight and the number of shoots were reduced if culture vessels were flushed with a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen and carbon dioxide. Secondly, when cultures were grown in divided vessels with a common atmosphere, the presence in the medium on one side of the partition, of normal growth regulators (4 mg/l IAA and 15 mg/l 2-iP), increased the weight of shoots obtained from the other side when the shoots there were grown without regulants, or with IAA and 2-iP at half the above rates. Stolon formation. Ethylene appears to be somehow involved in the regulation of stolon formation. Stolons are axillary shoots with the capacity for considerable internode extension. If metal caps covering jars for potato cultures were screwed down too tightly, there was a tendency for stolon-like shoots with small leaves to be produced; but shoots were short and swollen and had only scale leaves if the closures had been further covered with PVC tape or Parafilm. These ethylene-induced effects were eliminated by placing an ethylene absorbent (a vial containing mercuric perchlorate solution) into sealed jars or by replacing the metal covers with polyurethane foam (Hussey and Stacey, 1981; Creissen and Karp, 1985). Shoot cultures of Fragaria ananassa in covered vessels produced runners if silver nitrate (20 mg/l) and gibberellic acid (20 mg/l) were added to Boxus (1974a) medium. Without silver nitrate, gibberellic acid only caused the elongation of normal shoots (Zatyko et al., 1989). Growth inhibition. Some cases of ethyleneinduced inhibition of shoot growth have been

247

reported. The growth of cultured Kalanchoe blossfeldiana shoots was inhibited by the ethylene which built up in sealed tubes. There were less nodes per plant and a higher proportion of yellow leaves (Horn et al., 1988a). Torres et al., (1981) have reported that shoot formation from in vitro cultures of Begonia x hiemalis seemed to be inhibited in sealed flasks, although little difference was observed with Easter lilies or Exacum. When carnation shoot cultures were grown in tightly sealed vessels, sufficient ethylene was produced to reduce shoot internode length and cause leaves to become yellowish in colour and more swollen than those of the controls (MelĂŠ et al., 1982). Ethylene may normally be prevented from inhibiting the growth (rather than formation) of shoots in shoot cultures, through the presence of cytokinin in the growth medium. Bud dormancy. Although the dormancy of buds is preserved in the presence of external ethylene, once the plant or plant organ is removed from the gas, dormancy is broken and shoot growth is often more rapid than it might otherwise have been [e.g. that of potato tuber sprouts (Elmer, 1936)]. The dormancy of axillary buds on cuttings of woody plants such as apple, plum, cherry and willow is also broken when shoots, which have been kept for some while in an ethylene atmosphere, have subsequently been removed (Vacha and Harvey, 1927). For micropropagation purposes, cytokinins are used to promote the growth of axillary shoots, and so in this instance cytokinins and the previous presence of high ethylene levels have the same final effect. Accumulation of metabolites. A number of workers have observed that ethylene may modulate the accumulation of several secondary metabolites in plant cell cultures. Thus, Guo and Ohta (1994) found that ethylene promoted and AVG reduced the amount of 6-methoxymellein produced by suspensioncultured cells of carrot. Mirjalili and Linden (1995) found that the presence of ethylene in suspension cultures of Taxus cuspidata enhanced taxol production; on the other hand in suspension cultures of Taxus chinensis and Taxus yunnanensis ethephon decreased paclitaxel production and inhibitors of ethylene biosynthesis and silver nitrate increased it (Zhang and Wu, 2003). Yahia et al., (1998) showed that ethylene stimulated indole alkaloid accumulation in cell suspension cultures of Catharanthus roseus. Interestingly, cytokinin also enhanced accumulation and the responses to this hormone and ethylene were additive. On the other hand, Lee and Shuler (1991)


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found that ethylene inhibited the production of ajmalicine production in the same type of cultures. Berglund and Ohlsson (1992) also showed that AVG increased and ethephon decreased the accumulation of cardenolide in tissue cultures of Digitalis lanata. 3.7. OTHER VOLATILES

Volatile substances apart from ethylene are produced and evolved from cultured plant tissues. Methane, ethane, acetaldehyde and ethanol have all been detected in the gas phase above tissue cultures (Thomas and Murashige, 1979a, b; Torres et al.,

1981), some of which are the products of inefficient respiration in conditions of oxygen deficiency: ethane is produced by cells, which have been wounded and have suffered membrane damage (Van Aartrijk et al., 1985). Embryogenesis in carrot and date palm callus can be inhibited by ethanol evolved by cultures (Tisserat and Murashige, 1977b; Thomas and Murashige, 1979a, b). Acetaldehyde has been thought to inhibit aerobic respiration, thereby stopping cell division (Laties, 1962). Methyl jasmonate (see below) is also volatile.

4. OTHER MESSAGES AND MESSENGERS Until relatively recently, auxins, gibberellins, cytokinins, abscisic acid and ethylene were considered to be the only ‘classical’ plant hormones or natural plant growth substances. It is now clear that this is an oversimplification and that a number of other substances should be considered in this category - for example brassinosteroids, jasmonate and systemin. Yet others - such as polyamines cannot be considered as hormones, but they are undoubtedly plant growth regulators. On the whole these other substances have so far found little application in tissue culture, (other than polyamines) but this is likely to change. 4.1. POLYAMINES

All higher plants contain aliphatic amine compounds which are necessary for growth. The most common of these compounds are putrescine (a diamine) (see Fig. 7.4), spermidine (a triamine) (Fig. 7.4) and spermine (a tetraamine) (Fig. 7.4), although there are many others. In solution, at cytoplasmic pH levels, these polyamines act as polycations and complexing agents. Polyamines are synthesized by plant cells in culture (Smith et al., 1977). Polyamines have been found to act as growth stimulants and sometimes to enhance the action of plant growth substances. It has been suggested that they may function as secondary messengers for hormones within cells (Smith, 1985), but this hypothesis is questioned (Fobert and Webb, 1988) and no further evidence for it has since been advanced. However, they are undoubtedly important

in metabolism and development in plants (see Chattopadhyay and Ghosh, 1998; Malmberg et al., 1998) and there is strong evidence that they are involved in resistance to both biotic and abiotic stresses (for reviews see Bouchereau et al., 1999, Walters, 2000) Some advantages have been shown to accrue from their addition to plant culture media. 4.1.1. Biosynthesis

The biosynthetic route to polyamines from the precursors arginine and ornithine has been determined (Fig. 7.4) although the pathways, which are operative may vary from one species to another, and according to whether morphogenesis, or growth, is taking place (Feirer et al., 1984; Tiburcio et al., 1987). Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is thought to be chiefly activated during cell division (Heimer et al., 1979; Bagni et al., 1983), arginine decarboxylase (ADC) being activated during cell elargement (Galston, 1983). Interestingly, Arabidopsis thaliana, used widely in molecular genetic studies, appears to lack ODC (Hanfrey et al., 2001). The biosynthesis of polyamines is influenced by the medium used for in vitro culture; that of putrescine has been shown to be much greater on ammonium-based nutrition than when nitrogen is supplied as nitrate ions (Smith and Wiltshire, 1975; Altman and Levin, 1993). This may be in response to the reduction of medium pH which is associated with uptake of NH4+, although it has been suggested that putrescine accumulation may result when ammonium competes for potassium at a site of metabolic importance (Le Rudulier and Goas, 1975).


Chapter 7

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Fig. 7.4 Biosynthetic pathways to common polyamines.

4.1.2. Inhibitors of biosynthesis

Inhibitors of specific stages in the biosynthetic pathways illustrated in Fig. 7.4 have been discovered. They are: • DFMA, DL-α-difluoromethylarginine (31); • DFMO, α-difluoromethylornithine (32); • MGBG, methylglyoxal-bis-(guanylhydrazone) (33). The cyclohexylammonium ion is also inhibitory: it is commonly made available from one of two compounds, viz: • DCHA, dicyclohexylammonium sulphate (34); • CHAP, cyclohexylammonium phosphate (35). Very recently Bachmann et al., (1998) have demonstrated that phaseolotoxin, a peptide produced by Pseudomonas syringae phaseolicola, is a potent inhibitor of ODC.

Responses obtained from addition of these inhibitors to plant culture media have been used to indicate the involvement of polyamines in growth and morphogenesis. DFMO has been said to be ineffective in certain plants (Galston, 1983; Flores and Galston, 1984). DFMO retards the growth of phytopathogenic fungi and it is claimed that plants treated with this inhibitor are protected from some kinds of fungal attack (Weinstein and Galston, 1988). Polyamine conjugates with hydroxylated cinnamic acids also occur in plants. They are thought to have regulatory properties and to be used by plants to inhibit the multiplication of viral pathogens. 4.1.3. Physiological activity

At physiological pH, polyamines act as cations and bind strongly to nucleic acids and proteins, which


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carry negatively charged groups. RNA and DNA are stabilized by their association with polyamines and in the bound form are more resistant to nuclease enzymes and thermal denaturation (Galston et al., 1980). Free polyamines can compensate for ionic deficiencies or stress (Spector, 1989) within plants and can temporarily substitute for, and sometimes have the same physiological effect as, the cations K+, Ca2+ and Mg2+. Part of their function may be to act as buffers to minimize fluctuations in cellular pH (Slocum et al., 1984). The concentration of putrescine is high in plants grown in conditions which favour the production of H+ ions, such as acid stress, or where ammonium ions are provided as the major nitrogen source. P

Levels of polyamine compounds tend to be highest in actively growing tissues and organs, such as root tips, buds (Kulpa et al., 1985) and cells and tissues undergoing, or which have just undergone, morphogenesis (Tiburcio et al., 1987; Wang and Faust, 1986; Martin-Tanguy et al., 1988). 4.1.4. Interaction with growth regulators

Auxin activity. Exogenous polyamines have similar effects on plants to auxins, are directly involved in cell division (Bagni, 1966) and cell elongation (Bagni, 1986), and in certain circumstances can be used as a substitute for auxin treatment (Bagni et al., 1978). Both auxins and polyamines are thought to act at cell membranes together with Ca2+ ions. The promotion of peroxidase secretion by auxins depends on the presence of calcium but polycations cause a rapid release of Ca2+ from the plasma membrane (Kevers et al., 1985). In Sideratis callus, 10 mM spermidine was able to annul the toxic effect of supra-optimal auxin or cytokinin levels (Sanchez-Graz and Segura, 1988). This may be related to the effects of polyamines on ethylene biosynthesis (see below). Ethylene. Because polyamines and ethylene share a common precursor (S-adenosylmethionine, see Fig. 7.3) much attention has been devoted to their possible relationship. Polyamines can certainly inhibit ethylene biosynthesis, probably by inhibiting ACO (Apelbaum et al., 1981); equally, ethylene can inhibit polyamine synthesis, by reducing the activity of ADC (Palavan et al., 1984). Blocking ethylene production with the inhibitor AVG lends to increased spermidine production (Even-Chen et al., 1982). There are also many reports that DFMO and DFMA treatment of plants leads to increased ethylene production. However, in some cases ethylene can increase putrescine levels (Lee and Chu, 1992). It should be noted that these latter findings were made in rice coleoptiles, where, in contrast to most other plants, ethylene promotes elongation, so this may be a special case. It is clear that a relationship between polyamines and ethylene does prevail in planta. For example Bisbis et al., (2000a) showed that whereas fully habituated non-organogenic sugarbeet callus overproduces polyamines relative to its normal hormone-dependent counterpart, the reverse is true for ethylene production. In the same work, treatment of the habituated callus with both DFMA and DFMO reduced polyamine content and promoted ethylene production. P

The modulation of growth caused by these compounds probably springs from their ability to bind to phospholipid groups and other anionic sites on membranes, cell wall polysaccharides and nucleic acids such as DNA, tRNA and mRNA. They are thought to modulate enzyme activities, enhance DNA replication and transcription and to be necessary to convert the structure of tRNA from an inactive to active form (Bagni and Biondi, 1987).


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Gibberellic acid. In dwarf peas, gibberellic acid enhances the activity of ADC and ODC, with the result that polyamine levels in tissues are increased (Daie et al., 1982; Galston, 1983; Galston et al., 1983). The quantities of polyamines in genetic lines of peas differing in growth habit from very dwarf to tall, has also been found to be correlated with internode elongation and extractable gibberellin content. Inhibitors of polyamine synthesis also prevent internode elongation of dwarf lines by gibberellic acid (Smith et al., 1985). However polyamines seem to affect only cell division, whereas gibberellin-induced growth involves both cell division and cell elongation. It was therefore concluded that polyamines are involved with only some aspects of these processes. Cytokinins. Like gibberellins, cytokinins have also been found to increase the polyamine content of several different kinds of plant tissue (Suresh et al., 1978; Cho, 1983; Palavan et al., 1984), apparently because they increase the activity of arginine decarboxylase. Polyamines (and to a lesser extent arginine and lysine) delay leaf senescence in plants, and so have a similar physiological effect as cytokinins (Slocum et al., 1984). It may also be significant that cytokinins commonly antagonise the effects of ethylene in accelerating leaf senescence and here again it is possible that the effects involve an interplay between ethylene and polyamines. Cadaverine, putrescine (1 mM), spermidine and spermine (0.1 mM), all inhibited the senescence of Rosa suspension cultures (Muhitch et al., 1983). Polyamines are thought to delay senescence by stabilizing membranes (Altman, 1979; Srivasta and Smith, 1982), by interfering with the release or activity of hydrolytic ribonuclease and protease enzymes (Galston et al., 1978), preventing lipid peroxidation, and protecting nucleic acids against nuclease degradation. Some synthetic chelating agents have similar effects (Shoemaker et al., 1983). Jasmonate. Lee et al., (1996) showed that induction of chilling tolerance in rice led to increased levels of putrescine and spermidine and increases in the activities of ADC and SAMDC. The induction of tolerance was reduced by DFMA. Methyl jasmonate (see below) upregulated polyamine metabolism in thin layer explants of tobacco and this was associated with differences in growth and organogenesis (Biondi et al., 2001).

4.1.5. Activity in tissue cultures

Cell division. Putrescine (50-100 μM) and ornithine (25 μM) have been found to stimulate cell division and callus colony formation from Alnus protoplasts (Huhtinen et al., 1982); putrescine, spermidine and spermine improve the plating efficiency of sweet potato protoplasts through interaction with growth regulators (Eilers et al., 1988). Unconjugated polyamines do not appear to promote callus initiation, but do seem to improve the growth of callus when combined with sub-optimum levels of auxin and cytokinin. Perhaps this is because other growth regulators promote natural polyamine synthesis? If DCHA was added to the medium, callus growth from Sideratis angustifolium hypocotyls was decreased in the presence of auxins (Sanchez-Graz and Segura, 1988). Spermidine (10 μM) or spermine (100 μM) were found to stimulate the growth of Helianthus tuberosus tuber explants and callus in a similar way to 0.05 μM IAA (Bagni, 1966; Bertossi et al., 1965). Nicotiana sylvestris callus was stimulated by 90 μM putrescine (Oshmarina et al., 1982), and Sideritis callus by spermidine (Sanchez-Graz and Segura, 1988). Hormone-induced dedifferentiation of root cultures of Datura stramonium was markedly inhibited by DFMA and the effect could be reversed by the addition of putrescine (Ford et al., 1998). The rapid growth of crown gall tumour tissue is thought to be associated with its high polyamine content (Kulpa et al., 1985). Polyamines conjugated with phenolic acids such as cinnamic, coumaric, caffeic and ferulic derivatives (see Chapter 5) are found in many plants (Smith, 1977). Martin et al., (1985) found that putrescine could promote cell division if conjugated with a cinnamic acid. Out of several cinnamoyl derivatives tested, the best was caffeoyl putrescine, where 0.25 mM induced the maximum rate of cell division. Higher concentrations inhibited cell division, but were not toxic. When hydroxycinnamoylputrescine was added to a medium containing BAP, leaf discs of N. tabacum formed undifferentiated callus, instead of direct adventitious buds (Martin-Tanguy et al., 1988). Adventitious shoot formation. Polyamines may regulate adventitious shoot formation. Inhibitors of polyamine synthesis have been found to reduce the number of adventitious buds formed from chicory roots (Bagni and Biondi, 1987) and cotyledons of Pinus radiata (Biondi et al., 1986). Shoot regeneration from apple leaf explants was enhanced C


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by adding 0.1-1 mM putrescine to a medium containing 0.5 mg/l NAA and 2 mg/l BAP (James et al., 1988). DMFO was ineffective in preventing adventitious bud formation in tobacco, although ODC appeared to be particularly involved in the production of polyamines required for subsequent growth of the primordia once they had been formed (Tiburcio et al., 1987). In maize, however DMFA promoted indirect shoot formation: embryo-derived calluses of maize were cultured for three months on a modified MS medium containing 9 ÎźM 2,4-D and 0.5 mM DMFA, and then moved the cultures to the same medium with 1 ÎźM 2,4-D (and no inhibitor) (Tiburcio et al., 1991). Many more calluses formed adventitious shoots than if the inhibitor had not been present. The number of plants obtained per callus was also four times greater and the plants developed more rapidly than the controls. Adventitious roots. Inhibitors of polyamine synthesis have been found to prevent the formation of roots by thin cell layers excised from the floral stems of tobacco (Tiburcio et al., 1989; Torrigiani et al., 1990). Synthesis of endogenous polyamines increased prior to the formation of root primordia and during root growth on cuttings and hypocotyls of Phaseolus and Vigna treated with IBA (Friedman et al., 1982, 1985; Jarvis et al., 1983, 1985). Furthermore, in these plants, rooting was promoted by 50 mM spermine in the presence or absence of IBA, a result confirmed in Phaseolus by Fletcher et al., (1988) and Kakkar and Rai (1987). Spermidine promoted adventitious root formation on root callus of Sideratis, but not on hypopcotyl callus (Sanchez-Graz and Segura, 1988). DFMO inhibits root formation from hypocotyls segments of Euphorbia esula and this can be partly overcome by treatment with IAA or 2,4D (Davis, 1997) Light of 60 mmol m-2 sec-1 flux density is normally inhibitory to the rooting of micropropagated olive shoots, but was found not to be so if 160 mg/l putrescine was added to the rooting medium (Rugini et al., 1988). The compound promoted earlier rooting and increased the proportion of cuttings forming roots. MGBG totally blocked rhizogenesis but strongly promoted tuber formation in Solanum tuberosum (Pal Bais and Ravishankar, 2002). Flowering. Evidence is accumulating that polyamines are associated with floral development (see review by Evans and Malmberg, 1989). In thin cell layers of tobacco, DFMA diminishes adventitious P

P

P

P

bud formation, particularly that of floral buds (Tiburcio et al., 1987). Moreover, spermidine is able to induce the formation of flower buds (KaurSawhney et al., 1988), an event, which has been said to be associated with the attachment of the compound to a unique protein (Apelbaum et al., 1988). On the other hand, in Chrysanthemum marifolium while flowering was inhibited by DFMO there was no effect of DFMA. Promotion of embryogenesis. That polyamines are required for somatic embryo development was suggested by the discovery of Feirer et al., (1984, 1985) that the number of somatic embryos formed from wild carrot cultures was severely reduced by 1 mM DMFA, but that embryogenesis could be restored if 0.1 mM putrescine, spermidine or spermine were added to the medium. Prevention of embryogenesis by DFMA is accompanied by an inhibition of ADC activity and a reduction in polyamine levels (Robie and Minocha, 1989). DMFO was more effective than DMFA at inhibiting direct embryogenesis on Solanum melongena cotyledons; the addition of putrescine restored the incidence of embryo formation to that of the controls (Fobert and Webb, 1988). Altman et al., (1990) have observed that MGBG inhibited the growth of embryogenic clumps in suspension cultures of celery. DCHA and CHAP also have some inhibitory effect on carrot embryogenesis (Fienberg et al., 1984; Khan and Minocha, 1991). Hypocotyl callus of Sideratis initiated with NAA failed to produce somatic embryos when transferred to a medium without regulants, but embryogenesis did occur if the initial medium contained 27 ÎźM NAA and 0.01 mM spermidine (Sanchez-Graz and Segura, 1988). This compound also promoted plantlet formation from embryogenic clumps of celery (Altman et al., 1990). It is becoming clear however that the absolute level of polyamines is not necessarily the critical factor. Thus Koetje et al., (1993) showed that in rice, DFMA suppressed suspension culture growth and plant regeneration from callus. DFMO inhibited suspension culture growth only in the absence of 2,4-D and had no effect on plant regeneration. Also in rice, while spermidine had an inhibitory effect on plant regeneration in fresh cultures, it promoted this process in long-term cultures, which showed a reduction in regeneration potential (Bajaj and Rajam, 1995). Treatment with DFMA also restored regeneration potential in the long-term cultures (Bajaj and Rajam, 1996). These effects were attributed to


Chapter 7

change in the spermidine/putrescine ratio. That this ratio is important was confirmed by Shoeb et al., (2001) who showed that during rice embryogenesis, genotypes with good regenerative capacity had a putrescine/spermidine ratio of 2.3, those with moderate capacity a ratio of 3.8 while one genotype with a ratio of 10 showed no response at all. Inhibition, or lack of involvement in embryogenesis. Bradley et al., (1984, 1985) found that putrescine and arginine inhibited somatic embryo growth in wild carrot and could be used experimentally to synchronise embryo development. On a medium containing 40 mg/l arginine, cell suspensions or callus cultures of carrot produced somatic embryos asynchronously approximately 3 weeks after the auxin is withdrawn. But if 0.03 mM

253

putrescine had been added to the induction medium, globular embryos were formed on the second medium (lacking the amine) but failed to develop further. Rapid and synchronous embryo growth of approximately half of these embryos occurred when they were moved to a medium without arginine. No positive effect of added polyamines on either callus induction or somatic embryogenesis was observed from cultured nucelli of mangos (Litz, 1987) or with cotyledon explants of Solanum melongena (Fobert and Webb, 1988), although in the latter case DMFO (and to a lesser extent DMFA) caused there to be a reduction in embryogenesis and an increase in adventitious root formation. Polyamines did not significantly affect somatic embryogenesis in Pinus taeda.

5. STEROIDS Until recently there was no definitive evidence that plant steroids were natural growth regulators although application of both plant and animal steroids had been shown to elicit growth responses in plants (see below). There is now convincing evidence that brassinosteroids - of which the first was brassinolide (36) and of which group over forty related compounds are now known - are true hormones (Clouse and Sasse, 1998).

The pathways of brassinolide biosynthesis are complex (Yokota, 1999) but involve the conversion of squalene to cycloartenol as a first step. A number of mutants of pea and Arabidopsis have defects in this biosynthetic pathway (see e.g. Fujioka et al., 1997) and much work on the latter has been carried out using transformed and mutant cells of Catharanthus roseus (Fujioka et al., 2000).

Little is known of the mode of action of brassinolide and other steroids but they appear to be involved in stem and root elongation and xylem differentiation (Iwasaki and Shibaoka, 1991). Some of these effects appear to be the result of alterations in the auxin response, but not all, and there is evidence for a role for light, either via effects on biosynthesis or signal transduction (Li et al., 1996, Li and Chory, 1997, Brosa, 1999). The BRI1 gene in Arabidopsis appears to code for a brassinolide receptor (He et al., 2000). In isolated Zinnia mesophyll cells brassinolide promted tracheary element differentiation (Iwasaki and Shibaoka, 1991), a process inhibited by the growth retardant uniconazole – presumably through an effect on brassinosteroid biosynthesis. Brassinolide has also been shown to accelerate early cell division in regenerating leaf protoplasts of Petunia hybrida (Oh and Clouse, 1998) and Arabidopsis (Hu et al., 2000); it also increased growth in Onosma paniculatum cell cultures and enhanced shikonin formation (Yang et al., 1999). It is beneficial in somatic embryogenesis in coconut palm (Cocos nucifera) (Azpeitia et al., 2003) and in conifers and rice (Pullman et al., 2003) and, in combination with BA, two analogues of brassinosteroids enhanced both callus formation an shoot regeneration from cotyledons of lettuce (Nunez et al., 2004).


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6. PHYTOTROPINS AND FUSICOCCIN Highly specific receptor proteins for the auxin transport inhibitor naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) [(8) in Chapter 5] have been detected in higher plants (see e.g. Rubery, 1990) suggesting that there exists an endogenous substance(s) which interacts with these receptors. This has not yet been identified with certainty but may be a flavonoid or flavonoid-like molecule such as quercitin (Table 5.2). It seems likely that the endogenous substances act in the same way as NPA, namely through the inhibition of auxin transport. Similarly, the toxin fusicoccin (36) derived from the fungus Fusicoccum amygdali binds to a plant protein(s) with high affinity and specificity (see e.g. Aducci et al., 1996), suggesting the presence of endogenous ligand(s) - for which there is some supporting evidence although the identity of these is

unknown. Fusicoccin appears to mediate the effects of the protein(s) – which include promotion of growth and stomatal opening – via transmembrane ion pumps.

C

7. SYSTEMIN The peptide systemin (38), which is produced in plants from its precursor prosystemin in response to wounding, appears to have a role in the development of resistance to pathogens via induction of proteinase inhibitors I and II. This effect is probably mediated via jasmonic acid. In suspension cultures of Lycopersicon peruvianum systemin induced transient

alkalinisation of the culture medium and increased the activity of the ethylene biosynthetic enzyme ACS (Felix and Boller, 1995). The peptide is translocated - at least in tomato plants (Narvaezvasquez et al., 1994; Leon et al., 2001) - but the generality of its effects remain to be determined.

8. SALICYLIC ACID Salicylic acid (SA; Table 5.2) occurs widely in plants, being synthesized from t-cinnamic acid. It appears to have a role in systemic acquired resistance to pathogens and is able to induce various pathogen resistance proteins (Durner et al., 1997). It also

appears to be the substance, which controls thermogenesis in the floral spadix of some Arum spp. While SA is undoubtedly important in these cases, the generality of its effects and its possible function as a hormone remain to be proven.

9. NITRIC OXIDE The important role of nitric acid (NO) as a messenger in animal systems is by now well established. However, there is increasing evidence that it has an important role in plant growth and development (Beligni and Lamattina, 2001a, b). Plants certainly have the necessary enzymic apparatus to produce the gas (Barroso et al., 1999) and there have been reports of effects on plant disease resistance (Delledonne et al., 1998), senescence (Leshem et al., 1998) and stomatal closure (Mata and

Lamattina, 2001). Very little has been done in relation to plant tissue and organ culture but the use of an NO donor - sodium nitroprusside - and an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase, NG-monomethylL-arginine, in callus cultures from Kalanchoe daigremontiana and Taxus brevifolia indicates the involvement of NO in apoptosis (programmed cell death) (Pedroso et al., 2000).


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10. JASMONIC ACID Jasmonic acid (JA) (39) and its methyl ester, methyl jasmonate (Me-JA) (40) have been shown to occur in many plants and synthesis is promoted by wounding via the action of systemin which activates a pathway in which linolenic acid is released from membranes (Ryan, 2000). Since JA induces the synthesis of a wide range of defence proteins, some of the effects of systemin are thought to be mediated by this compound (see also under the section on wounding below).

JA has been used by a number of workers to modulate production of various secondary metabolites in tissue culture. Thus, Yukimune et al., (1996) showed that Me-JA increased paclitaxel and related taxane production in cell cultures of Taxus spp. Reports of developmental effects in tissue culture are scanty but Camloh et al., (1996, 1999) showed that JA stimulates the development of rhizoids and shoots in leaf cultures of Platycerium bifurcatum and can promote division of fern protoplasts. On the other hand Swiatek et al., (2002) showed that jasmonate can freeze synchronized tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) BY-2 cells in both the G1and G2 stages of the cell cycle.

12. MYO-INOSITOL

myo-Inositol (41) is an important component in plant metabolism (see e.g. Keller et al., 1998) where it is involved in the synthesis of polyols, cell wall components and phosphoinositides. myo-Inositol often improves the growth of plant cultures but there is little evidence for a regulatory role – despite the fact that a derivative, myo-inositol-1,4,5-triphosphate, is a key factor in the phosphatidylinositol signalling

system. Methylated derivatives such as oninicitol and piritol seem to have important properties as osmoprotectants (Ishitani et al., 1996; Nelson et al., 1998). It should be noted however, that there is increasing evidence for interactions between simple sugars such as glucose, other than those concerned with the purely nutritional function of the carbohydrate (Gibson, 2004). For example, it has been shown that glucose enhances the degradation of a key transcriptional regulator in the ethylene signal transduction chain (Yanagisawa et al., 2003). This role of monosaccharides may have considerable implications for plant cell and tissue culture.

13. OLIGOSACCHARINS AND ELICITORS Oligosaccharins are complex sugars composed of one or more different monosaccharides. The three main types appear to be β-glucans (42), galacturonides (43) and xyloglucans (44). It has been suggested that these compounds naturally regulate cellular processes when they are released from cell walls by hydrolytic enzymes, which are activated by

changes in pH, or by the presence of growth regulators such as auxins and cytokinins (Mohen et al., 1985; Mutaftschiev et al., 1987; Tran Thanh Van and Mutaftschiev, 1990). The degree of oligosaccharin polymerisation is critical for determining the biological activity of experimental samples prepared from plant cell walls using an


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endopolygalacturonase enzyme or hydrolysis with a base (Tran Thanh Van and Mutaftschiev, 1990). Synthesis of the enzymes (such as β-1,3glucanase), which are responsible for the release of oligosaccharides, can be both induced and inhibited by auxin (York et al., 1984; Mutaftshiev et al., 1987) and mixtures of an auxin and a cytokinin (Mohen et al., 1985). Other growth substances may also be involved (Albersheim et al., 1988). Oligosaccharins have been shown to be capable of inducing cell enlargement and cell division in a similar fashion to IAA (York et al., 1984; Mutaftshiev et al., 1987) and to be capable of regulating morphogenesis (Tran Thanh Van et al., 1985; Mutaftshiev et al., 1987). Cell elongation caused by auxin can be either enhanced or inhibited by oligosaccharins. Because it is difficult to explain apical dominance satisfactorily by the translocation of IAA, Martin (1987) suggested that inhibition of lateral bud growth might be due to auxin at the apex inducing the action of β-1,3glucanase. Oligosaccharins, which are consequently released from the walls of apical cells might then be transported to lateral buds, inhibiting their growth. The effects of exogenous oligosaccharins are dose and pH dependent and can depend on the time at which they are introduced to the culture and the relative concentrations of auxin and cytokinin present in the medium (Mutaftschiev et al., 1987; Tran Thanh Van and Mutaftschiev, 1990). Their mode of action is not determined, but they are thought to modulate the transcription of specfic genes (Guern, 1987).

Interest in these substances by workers in plant cell and tissue culture seems to have diminished in the last decade, but this may be due to difficulties in obtaining sufficient of the compounds to carry out rigorous tests. Much more interest has been generated by elicitors - molecules of microbial origin that stimulate a number of defence responses in plants (Hahn, 1996). Such substances come in many guises - oligosaccharides, glycopeptides, peptides and proteins. Equally, substances such as alginates can often mimic the effects of elicitors (Akimoto et al., 1999). Elicitors induce the formation of phytoalexins and other metabolic changes [for example increases in JA (Gundlach et al., 1992)] in plant cells including those in suspension and tissue cultures. These properties have found some application by workers seeking to optimise the production of various secondary metabolites by tissue cultures. Thus, pterocarpen and isoflavone levels in chick pea cultures can be modulated by elicitors (Barz and Mackenbrock 1994) and large increases in sanguinarine production were observed in suspension cultures of Esctischoltzia californica after treatment with elicitors prepared from yeast extract, Colletotrichum lindemuthianum and Verticillium dahliae (Byun et al., 1992). Treatment of late experimental phase hairy root cultures with pectinase led to a 150% increase in tabersonine (Rijhwani and Shanks, 1998) and elicitors from Colletotrichum lindemuthianum increased artemisin concentration in hairy root cultures of Artemisia annua (Wang et al., 2001).


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14. STEROLS Plants synthesize a complex mixture of sterols; stigmasterol (45), sitosterol (46) and 24methylcholesterol (47) are usually major components (Hartmann, 1998). They are important in the control of membrane fluidity but, perhaps equally importantly, they are involved in the synthesis of brassinosteroids (for a review see Piironen et al., 2000). Indeed the phenotype of the dwarf pea mutant Ikb is ascribed to a block in sterol metabolism leading to reduced levels of sitosterol and brassinosteroid (Nomura et al., 1999). This may account for the effects of the sitosterol/24-methylcholesterol ratio on cell division in tobacco (Schaller et al., 1998). It should also be noted that some of the effects of ‘antigibberellins’ may be due to effects on sterol metabolism (Rademacher, 2000). Given these roles it is unsurprising therefore that sterols may influence growth and development in culture. Thus, stigmasterol and vitamins D2 (48) and D3 (49) (which are required in mammals for proper bone structure), have been found to promote adventitious root formation in plants (Pythoud et al., 1986; Talmon et al., 1989). In shoot cultures of some cherry and apple cultivars, 1-10 ml/l of a water soluble formulation of vitamin D2 enhanced the rate of propagation in early subcultures. After many subcultures with 10 ml/l, leaves became yellow (Druart, 1988). Rooting can be induced by relatively low concentrations of vitamin D3 (e.g. 0.1 mg/l) but yet there is no damage to the plant from relatively high concentrations. Green cuttings of Populus tremula rooted best after being pre-dipped for 24 h at room temperature into a 0.25 μM (95.7 mg/l) solution which also contained 50 μM (10.2 mg/l) IBA (Pythoud et al., 1986). The effect of vitamins D2 and D3 on stimulating root formation has been found to be additive or synergistic with that of auxins such as NAA (Moncousin and Gaspar, 1983), or IBA (Buchala and Schmid, 1979; Pythoud et al., 1986); the number of roots formed depending on the age of the cuttings, the concentration of the compounds and the timing of the treatment. The rooting of cuttings B

B

B

B

B

B

B

B

B

B

produced by micropropagation has been said to be improved by adding a small amount of one of the D vitamins (e.g. 0.1-1 mg/l to an auxin preparation) (Pittet and Moncousin, 1982).

B

B

15. UNUSUAL REGULANTS 15.1. COMPOUNDS WHICH CAN ARREST APICAL GROWTH

In shoot cultures, it is important to encourage the growth of lateral shoots, but genotypes vary in their

natural degree of apical dominance: some produce a few long shoots while others have shorter shoots, but many laterals are formed. Perhaps genotypes with strong apical dominance may have a high natural


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Plant Growth Regulators III

auxin content, or a more sensitive auxin receptor system (Newbury, 1986). Although cytokinins are most frequently added to the medium to promote lateral branching, other techniques can be used to assist the process. Examples are reducing apical dominance by laying explants on their sides, removing the tips of shoots manually (Bressan et al., 1982) and at each harvest subculturing the basal clump of tissue from which shoots have been removed. Some regulants can also help to remove apical dominance.

When Jackson et al., (1977) germinated seeds of Colocasia esculenta on Linsmaier and Skoog (1965) medium containing 5 mM of the surfactant octadecylpolyethoxyethanol (OPE), they found that growth of the seedlings was restricted, but this was followed by the appearance of 5-10 shoots. Trial of this surfactant on shoot cultures is not reported. 15.4. GLYPHOSATE

15.2. DIKEGULAC

Dikegulac (50) is a compound which, when sprayed over entire plants, is capable of arresting the growth of apical buds. Axillary buds are not inhibited and therefore grow out to produce a bushy plant. Dikegulac has been used routinely for this purpose on pot azaleas. Adding 500 or 1000 mg/l sodium dikegulac to the medium in which shoot cultures of sweet cherries were grown, caused an increased number of shoots to be developed from axillary buds (Snir, 1982).

15.3. METHYL LAURATE AND OPE

Methyl esters of fatty acids have been applied routinely to field-grown tobacco to prevent the growth of side shoots. Voyiatzi and Voyiatzis (1988) found that 100 mg/l methyl laurate (MELA) (51), added to MS medium containing 0.3 mg/l IAA and 3 mg/l BAP, increased the number of shoots produced by Rosa hybrida shoot cultures. The effect of the compound was initially similar to manual tipping but shoot number continued to be increased during further subcultures of the basal clump even though MELA was not then present. TIBA (3 mg/l) had an effect similar to manual tipping but only during the first passage.

Glyphosate (52) is a general purpose postemergence weedkiller which is translocated within both xylem and phloem. Winata and Harvey (1980) reported that sub-lethal doses, added to the medium used to induce callus from axillary buds of alfalfa, produced growth responses similar to those of more common growth regulators. In the presence of 0.17 mg/l glyphosate, the cultures produced rather more shoots than normal. If mother plants of some clones of lowbush blueberry had been sprayed with 250 or 500 mg/l glyphosate, single bud explants produced more shoots than usual during in vitro culture (Frett and Smagula, 1981). Scorza et al., (1982, 1984) similarly found that when stem explants of cranberry were dipped in a 102.5 mg/l glyphosate solution for 30 seconds or a 321.2 mg/l solution for 5 seconds the development of both axillary and adventitious shoots was greater than usual when the explants were cultured afterwards on Anderson (1975) rhododendron medium containing 2-iP. Lower or higher levels of glyphosate were respectively ineffective or toxic. Stepwise selection carried out with increasing glyphosate concentrations to produce suspension cultures of alfalfa, soybean and tobacco leads to the production of glyphosate tolerant lines (100 fold more resistant than the original culture) (Widholm et al., 2001). 15.5. ACTIVATED CHARCOAL

Finely-divided activated charcoal is often added advantageously to media at different stages of tissue cultures. Activated charcoal is not a growth regulator, but a discussion of its properties is conveniently included in this chapter on account of


Chapter 7

its ability to modify medium composition, and thereby, in some circumstances, improve or regulate plant growth in vitro. The properties of activated charcoal vary according to the method by which it has been prepared, and not all brands are equivalent. A clear difference in the effectiveness of charcoal of different origins in promoting androgenesis was reported by Heberle-Bors (1980). As many of the beneficial effects of charcoal depend on its ability to absorb a wide range of compounds, results from even the most effective brands are liable to be unpredictable; inhibition of growth and morphogenesis are frequently observed. Five kinds of advantageous uses of charcoal have been reported depending on the type of culture: • to absorb compounds secreted from cultured tissues or present in agar that would otherwise inhibit growth; • to prevent unwanted callus growth; • to promote morphogenesis, particularly embryogenesis; • to promote root formation (where some of the beneficial effect seems to be due to its ability to exclude light from the medium); • to act as a reservoir during the production of secondary plant products in cultures; A recent review on the effects and mode of action of activated charcoal may be found in Pan and van Staden (1998). 15.5.1. Mode of action of charcoal

Activated charcoal (AC) is prepared by the controlled carbonisation of wood in steam or air: it possesses strong absorptive properties and is used in chemistry to absorb both gases and dissolved solids. Activated charcoal added to tissue culture media was commonly thought to remove only growth inhibitory substances exuded by tissues or present in the ingredients of the medium; but it is now clear that promotory substances can also be absorbed and made unavailable. Weatherhead et al., (1979) pointed out that AC has the potential to absorb some inorganic ions. A sample of fresh unused AC analysed for these authors contained many inorganic impurities, of which iron, aluminium, nickel and magnesium might have had physiological significance, but there was no evidence that these metals were donated to culture media. 15.5.2. Absorption of growth inhibitors

Charcoal can assist in absorbing toxic substances, which may be present in media ingredients, produced

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as a result of autoclaving, or exuded by cultured tissues, particularly when they are first transferred to media. Fridborg et al., (1978) showed that AC could adsorb some phenols commonly produced by wounded tissues, and this was later confirmed by Weatherhead et al., (1979). Extracts of the charcoal that had been incubated in Bourgin and Nitsch (1967) agar medium showed that it had adsorbed 5hydroxymethyl-furfural (HMF). This compound was thought to have originated from autoclaving sucrose in the medium under mildly acid conditions. Furthermore, HMF was shown to be somewhat inhibitory to embryogenesis in tobacco anther culture, unless activated charcoal was present (Weatherhead et al., 1978). Charcoal is sometimes used in bacteriological media to remove inhibitory fatty acids present in agar. That some agars can contain substances capable of hindering plant growth and morphogenesis was shown by Kohlenbach and Wernicke (1978). Somatic embryo formation from tobacco anthers on an agar medium was improved when agar was prewashed with water dialysed against activated charcoal. Better results were obtained by using highly purified Difco Noble agar rather than Difco Bacto agar. Tyagi et al., (1980) also reported that effective concentrations of charcoal for promoting embryogenesis from Datura pollen, varied according to the type of agar employed. The atypical growth of Pinus radiata shoots on some brands of agar could be prevented if AC was added (Nairn, 1988). 15.5.3. Adsorption of organic compounds

Growth regulators. Fridborg and Eriksson (1975) suggested that activated charcoal removed growth regulators, particularly auxin, from the medium and evidence has indeed accumulated to show that this does occur. A protective coating of charcoal is able to protect seeds from herbicides in soil mixtures (Taylor and Warholic, 1987). In tissue culture media 0.1% (w/w) AC can effectively absorb 10 mM IAA (1.75 mg/l) and 10 mM IBA (2.03 mg/l) from liquid MS medium to the extent that these compounds can no longer be detected by high performance liquid chromatography (limit 0.05 mg/l) (Nissen and Sutter, 1988, 1990). Examples of growth regulators in culture media, which have been rendered ineffective by AC, are shown in Table 7.1. Note that cytokinins and abscisic acid, as well as auxins, can be made unavailable. Jona and Vigliocco (1985) added charcoal (together with GA3) to the medium on which Prunus persica


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shoots were to be elongated, finding that it overcame the negative effect of the high rate of cytokinin previously used in a shoot proliferation medium. AC can make comparatively high concentrations of growth regulators inaccessible to tissue cultures. Nissen and Sutter (1990) recommend that 10-100 times more auxin should be added to a medium if high concentrations of activated charcoal are also introduced. In cultures of palms, where up to 3% AC is added to prevent blackening, it is necessary to add 0.15-0.5 mM 2,4-D to induce embryogenesis (i.e. 520 times what would normally be required) (Tisserat et al., 1979; 1981). To initiate embryogenic callus of oil palm (Elaeis), Paranjothy and Rohani (1982) had to use 10 times the level of auxin that would otherwise have been effective, and Nwankwo and Krikorian (1983), using 0.5 g/l AC, increased the concentration of NAA or 2,4-D from 5-10 mg/l to 1070 mg/l. Activated charcoal is capable of trapping gases, and so may remove ethylene or other gases, released from cultured tissues (Ernst, 1974; Johansson et al., 1982, Mensualisodi et al., 1993), although in the latter case this absorption did not seem of itself to improve the growth of Anemone seedlings in culture since they produced more of the gas in the presence of active charcoal than in its absence. Organic nutrients. AC may not only remove growth regulators from the medium, but also some organic nutrients. Weatherhead et al., (1979) found that tobacco anther cultures were deprived of thiamine-HCl and nicotinic acid when 0.3% AC was added to Bourgin and Nitsch (1967) H medium. Biotin, folic acid and pyridoxine are also likely to be absorbed, but not myo-inositol Excluding light from the medium. If sufficient AC is added to the medium it can exclude light sufficiently to promote physiological reactions, which occur in the dark. The absorptive properties of the substance are incidental, for lamp-black carbon or graphite can be used equally effectively. Altering the pH of the medium. Several authors (Langowska, 1980; Rahbar and Chopra, 1982; Smith and Krikorian, 1990) have noticed that the presence of activated charcoal causes the pH of culture media to be higher than they would otherwise have been. Owen et al., (1991) found that an increase of ca. 0.75

units occurred in the pH of MS medium in the presence of 0.5% charcoal; the pH change occurred partly during autoclaving and partly in the the subsequent first 14 days of medium storage. A similar increase in pH occurred with both hydrochloric acid washed and neutralised activated charcoal (Sigma Chemical Co.), but the final pH of the medium containing the former was ca. 6.2; that containing the netralised charcoal was ca. 6.7. It has been suggested that increase in pH could be due to the capacity of AC to absorb cations (Langowska, 1980). Table 7.1. Examples of growth regulators absorbed by activated charcoal.

Growth regulator 1mg/l NAA

AC % w/v 1

0.01-10 mg/1 NAA & IAA 5mg/l BAP

1 0.3

10 mg/1 BAP

0.5

2,4-D and 0.03 mg/1 IAA + 1 mg/1 kinetin 0.002-2 mg/1 BAP & 2-iP + up to 300 mg/1 NAA 1 mg/1 NAA + 10 mg/1 BAP ABA in cultured anthers 2.64 mg/1 ABA

0.5

Reference Fridborg & Eriksson (1975b) Constantin et al., (1976, 1977) Maene and Debergh (1985) Takayama & Misawa (1980) Scholl et al., (1981)

0.3

Weatherhead et al., (1978)

0.5

Steinitz & Yahel (1982) Johansson et al., (1982) Johansson (1983)

1&10 1

As pH can influence culture growth and morphogenesis, it is probable that at least some of the effects of activated charcoal on plant cultures can be attributed to the changes it induces in the pH of the medium. Other effects. It should be noted that sucrose hydrolysis is accelerated during autoclaving of media containing activated charcoal (1%) resulting in acidification and increase in osmolarity (Druart and Dewulf, 1993).

16. UNIDENTIFIED GROWTH FACTORS 16.1 THE WOUND RESPONSE

Wounding is a commonplace occurrence for plants in the field or the laboratory, whether

herbivory, mechanical stress or attack by insects, infection by microorganisms or nematodes and so on. Equally, in plant manipulation for tissue and organ


Chapter 7

culture, wounding is a feature of the techniques whether this be shear stresses in liquid culture, excision of plant parts and, more recently, in plant transformation - for example via particle guns or Agrobacterium. It has become clear in the last decade that the response of plants to wounding - by whatever means is extremely complex, but also tightly regulated. It has long been known that wounding leads to increased ethylene biosynthesis and that the effect is dependent on the expression of wound-specific genes for ACS. However, it is now clear that this is only part of the story. Mention has already been made of the induction of the mobile peptide systemin by wounding and of the fact that this in turn leads to increased synthesis of ethylene and jasmonate. This results in a galaxy of effects including changes in ion fluxes, induction of pathogen related proteins, proteinase inhibitors, antioxidant enzymes as well as other processes leading to increased lignification and cross-linking of cell wall components (e.g. Bradley et al., 1992; McGurl et al., 1994; Grantz et al., 1995; Hiraga et al., 2000). Aside from mechanical wounding itself other dimensions of this syndrome are provided by elicitors and oligosaccharins, which

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may induce similar and/or complementary effects. Indeed, it is notable that many other natural and unnatural stresses such as heat, cold, drought, salinity and synthetic growth regulators can also initiate metabolic events similar to those caused by wounding. The key to understanding these phenomena probably lies in the fact that whatever the stimulus or signal - environmental or endogenous - the initial responses are mediated by systems similar to those found in animals, monomeric G-protein and protein kinase cascades, phospholipid signalling and so on. Moreover, these signalling pathways are not wholly independent but may interact in complex ways (for a review see Hall et al., 2002). Given the foregoing, it is unsurprising therefore that wounding tissue often leads to effects such as those seen after application of various substances such as hormones, elicitors and synthetic growth regulators which are described earlier in this chapter for example effects on morphogenesis. However, we can only see through a glass darkly at this stage and the effect of wounding on any one system will depend on a multitude of factors, which we cannot presently define.

17. HABITUATION The capacity of cells to change from a state of being dependent on the exogenous supply of a particular substance to one, in which they are wholly - or partly - sufficient, has been termed habituation: cells or tissues are said to be habituated to subtance X or substance Y. The habituated condition of cultured cells or tissues is usually self-perpetuating from one vegetative generation to another, but can be reversed. Clearly habituation can only occur to organic molecules, which can be synthesized by cells, and not to basic nutrients. Although habituation usually describes a change in the requirement of cultured tissues, from needing an exogenous supply of a substance, to becoming self-sufficient, the definition could be extended to include all cells or tissues capable of self-sufficiency, whether or not the trait was developed in culture. Tissues habituated towards the production of a particular substance or type of substance are autotrophic for that compound, while non-habituated tissues are heterotrophic. It has been found that in vitro habituation does not necessarily result in complete independence from exogenous growth factors. Meins (1974) showed that

cells were capable of shifting into a variety of stable states of cytokinin-habituation and could also undergo changes into states of greater or lesser habituation (see below). Kevers et al., (1996) showed that fully habituated organogenic sugarbeet calluses responded to auxins, both in terms of growth and ethylene production and that these treatments also resulted in changes in contents of cytokinin, polyamines and ajmalicine; a hypothesis supported by the work of Gaspar et al., (1991) with sugarbeet calluses. Habituated tissues are often differentiated. Highly embryogenic callus [e.g. of Citrus (Button et al., 1974; Spiegel-Roy and Kochba, 1980)] and shoot-forming calluses [e.g. of sugarbeet (de Greef and Jacobs, 1979; Van Geyt and Jacobs, 1985)] have been capable of growth and morphogenesis without the addition of exogenous growth regulants. Habituation to growth regulators occurs commonly in plant tissue cultures, but plant cells may also become habituated to other organic compounds normally added to culture media to support cell growth. For example, Ikeda et al., (1979) recorded the habituation of soybean cells to thiamine and its precursors and Savage et al., (1979) the recovery of a


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pantothenate autotroph from a cell line of Datura innoxia which previously required this vitamin for growth.

that the formation of callus habituated for both auxin and cytokinin could be induced with high frequency after a very short treatment of hypocotyls of Nicotiana bigelovii with 2,4D.

17.1. GROWTH FACTOR DEPENDENCE

Auxin- or cytokinin-habituations are found relatively frequently in tissue cultures and are generally very stable. Cells in this condition can remain independent of an exogenous growth factor supply for many generations, although typically the condition is eliminated when plants are regenerated. However, as noted above, habituation to a growth regulator does not imply insensitivity to it. Kerbauy et al., (1986) found that cytokininautotrophic callus could be isolated from tissue explanted directly onto media without cytokinin, and Jackson and Lyndon (1988) have showed that explants removed from the meristematic regions of tobacco are most likely to form cytokinin-autotrophic callus. Thus callus derived from internode pith of juvenile plants was autotrophic, but that derived from similar regions of a mature plant was not. Pith removed from a few internodes below that, which was habituated gave rise to callus which could become cytokinin-habituated when cultured at 35ºC. Cheng (1972) obtained auxin autotrophic callus from pith isolated near the apex of Nicotiana glauca x N. langsdorfii hybrids, but auxin-requiring (heterotrophic) callus from pith taken from below the 7th node. 17.2. INDUCTION OF HABITUATION

Meins (1974) showed that a cytokinin-habituated state can be induced in tobacco tissue by incubating explants at 35ºC without cytokinin. In subsequent incubation at 25ºC, no cytokinin was required for callus initiation or growth, unlike tissue incubated throughout at this temperature. However, cells habituated at 35ºC required exogenous cytokinin once again if incubated at 16ºC (Binns and Meins, 1979). Presumably endogenous synthesis of cytokinin had decreased at the lower temperature (or there was an accelerated rate of degradation). A reversal of cytokinin habituation by culturing tissue at 16ºC, instead of the usual 26ºC, was reported by Syono and Furuya (1971); a reversal of habituation is also commonly brought about by the regeneration of complete plants from cell clones autotrophic for cytokinin and/or auxin. Explants from the regenerated plants are unable to grow in culture without addition of the growth factor, which was produced endogenously by cells in the original habituated state. Bennici and Bruschi (1999) showed

17.3. THE CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF HABITUATION

Meins (1974) and Meins and Lutz (1980) argued that reversible habituation results from an altered expression of the genes already present in the cell (their repression or derepression) and is epigenetic by nature, because the changes observed: • are directed rather than random; • are restricted by the genetic capacity of the cell; • are potentially reversible; • involve a large number of cell conversions per generation, and • do not alter the totipotency of the altered cell. Meins and Binns (1978) and Meins (1987) have proposed that cell division factors can induce the biosynthesis of naturally-occurring substances of the same kind, through a positive feedback mechanism (Fig. 7.5). It is not clear whether the rate of biosynthesis is accelerated or the rate of metabolism increased, and so one could predict either of the two scenarios shown in the figure. • If according to the first case, kinetin were to cause the natural production of zeatin to be increased, and if this natural cytokinin were not metabolised sufficiently rapidly, the increase in overall cytokinin concentration would cause the level of zeatin biosynthesis to increase even further. Withdrawal of the kinetin trigger to zeatin production, would then leave the tissue in a cytokinin-autonomous state. • The second hypothesis presumes that biosynthesis of zeatin and/or other natural cytokinins is normally balanced by the metabolism of growth substance which is not required for immediate use. This condition would be disturbed by the presence of an inhibitor of cytokinin metabolism which decreased the rate of biodegradation causing an increase in the level of free natural cytokinin. An elevated level of free growth substance must then be supposed to lead to an autocatalytic increase in biosynthesis. Case 1 in Fig. 7.5 is supported by the discovery that kinetin can induce the increased accumulation of zeatin riboside in callus tissue (Hansen, reported in Meins, 1987). A similar condition is occasionally noted in shoot cultures of some species, where high endogenous levels of cytokinins are found after several subcultures (Boulay and Franclet, 1986; McCulloch, 1988). That case 2 can also occur, is shown by the findings that thidiazuron can inhibit the


Chapter 7

cytokinin oxidase enzyme (see Chapter 4), and can induce cytokinin autonomous growth, for example in some Phaseolus lunatus genotypes (Mok et al., 1982). However, this is certainly not the whole story. Thus, Lambe et al., (1997) have presented evidence that there are marked changes in DNA methylation during long-term callus culture and suggest that auxin has a role in this process (and see also below under ‘Effects of habituation’). 17.4. GENETIC CONTROL

Although habituation of cultured tissues is usually reversible, it is now known that heterotrophic cells can also become permanently autotrophic as a result of somatic mutation in the genes governing the production of endogenous growth factors. Evidence that this might be the case was discovered by several workers; callus capable of growing on media without the addition of growth substances was, for example, obtained by exposing cultures to gamma radiation

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(Pandey and Sabharwal, 1979); the ability of some genotypes of Phaseolus lunatus to grow in vitro without the presence of cytokinin appeared to be under genetic control (Mok and Mok, 1979). Delbreil and Jullien (1994) using different genotypes of Asparagus officinalis demonstrated the random occurrence of highly embryogenic tissue, which could be continuously subcultured on hormone-free medium. Genetic analysis demonstrated that this was due to a dominant monogenic mutation. Callus, re-initiated from plants derived from habituated sugarbeet callus, was again found to be habituated (Coumans et al., 1982), as were plants regenerated from auxin- habituated callus of Nicotiana bigelovii var. quadrivalvis (Bennici, 1983). Examples of stable and sexually transmissible ‘habituations’ are provided by Meins et al., (1983) and Meins and Foster (1986).

Fig. 7.5 Two possible explanations of growth regulator habituation in plant cultures. 17.5. EFFECTS OF HABITUATION

Habituated cultures show many differences in metabolism to normal cultures. This can take the

form of changes not only in the growth regulators to which the callus has become habituated but also of others. Thus, Bisbis et al., (2000a) showed that fully


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