Tissue Culture Contd

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Plant tissue culture contd

CASE 1
Reliance Life Sciences develops new protocols as

well as standardizes protocols for micro


propagation to produce tissue cultured plants for
domestic
and
export
markets.
Reliance Life Sciences has established a
state-of-the-art Plant Biotechnology facility at Navi
Mumbai,
besides setting up several hardening centres

and
captive plantation sites across the country, for

The focus is on various varieties of


Banana, Date palm, Pomegranate, Potato,

Bamboo, Jatropha, Teak and also a range of


Ornamental, Medicinal and Aromatic plants.

Reliance Life Sciences has developed over 100

species of tissue cultured plants. Reliance Life


Sciences also provides cultivation technology as a
service, besides contract production and research
in the following products:
Horticulture: Banana, Pomegranate, Strawberry
and Date palm
Floriculture: Anthurium, Astil be, Calla lilly,
Campsis, Clematis, Day lilly, Gerbera, Heauchera,
Lilium, Limonium, Marigold and various Orchids
Ornamental: Alpinia, Calathea, Cordylines,
Diffenbachia, Ficus, Hosta, Nandina, Philodendron,
Schefflera, Spathiphyllum, Syngonium and Yucca


Plantation: Bamboo, Cardamom, Potato, Teak and Vanilla

Medicinal and Aromatic: Aloe vera, Bixa, Chlorophytum, Geranium,

Hemidesmus, Indigo, Patchouli, Piper, Stevia


Bio- Diesel: Jatropha

Services offered in Contract Production and Research are:Exclusive


contract production of plants, either using protocol supplied by the client or
utilizing protocols available in-house for clients from India and
overseas.

Micro-propagation of cultures supplied by the customer

Development of commercially viable tissue culture production protocols, if


desired by the customer

Services are also offered in Cultivation Technology Detailed package


of practices

Field inspection and advice by qualified and experienced agronomists

High quality tissue cultured plants are produced in the state-of-

the-art facility in Navi Mumbai and are distributed across


various states across the length and width of India through our
various hardening centres located at
Nagothane, Pandarpur, Nagpur (Maharashtra),
Anand, Vadodara (Gujarat)
Barabanki (Uttar Pradesh) Kakinada,
Pulivendula (Andhra Pradesh) and
Cumbam (Tamil Nadu). So far millions of tissue cultured plants
have been distributed across 12 states in the country.
Reliance Retail, a Reliance Group company is engaged in buyback of the products from farmers, quality control of the
products, post harvest technology, and also in bringing farm
produce to consumers through Reliance Fresh and other retail
initiatives.

Export
Reliance Life Sciences markets tissue cultured plants in India and also
exports to USA, Europe, Israel and Australia. The most efficient and up
to date technologies are implemented in producing crops that are difficult
to propagate by conventional methods.
Reliance Life Sciences has a high quality system in place to ensure
selection of elite mother plants devoid of diseases.
It also adheres to strict quality control, plant quarantine and other
norms at each stage before dispatch.
The Reliance Life Sciences Plant Biotechnology facility, located in DALC,
Navi Mumbai has been assessed and
Certified by the Accreditation Unit (AU) of Department of
Biotechnology (DBT) established Biotech Consortium India Limited
(BCIL), New Delhi and Australian Quarantine Inspection
Service(AQIS).

I-Micropropagation
Application;

Rapid propagation of a superior plant while


maintaining the genetic make up
To maintain stock under controlled conditions - Germplasm
storage
1.Immediate application; however, the ease with which plants can

be micropropagated varies from species to species and even


certain genotypes within a species can prove to be more
recalcitrant than others. In general, herbaceous species are
more amenable to tissue culture techniques than woody
perennials.
2. Somaclonal variation can be a problem with some
micropropagation techniques. Field evaluation of plants is required
to verify trueness-to-type and to check for genetic variants

II-Meristem culture
Application ; Elimination of diseases (particularly

viral diseases) from plant propagative material


1. Immediate application if plants amenable to

tissue culture.
2. Heat treatment/meristem culture does not
ensure that the material has been freed of virus.
Quarantine and virus indexing are still
recommended to verify that the material is in
fact disease-free

III -Somatic embryogenesis


Application ; To rapidly increase desirable plants while

maintaining the genotype of the original plant


1.Involves regeneration from callus and cell

suspensions and as such is more difficult to achieve than


micropropagation.
More research and development is needed to successfully
develop the technique and a time frame that may involve
years of trial and error with a recalcitrant species.
2. Orbital shakers centrifuge and microscopes are
needed when working with cell suspensions.
3. Because regeneration is from undifferentiated cells the
chances of somaclonal variations increase

IV - Somaclonal variation
Application :To induce desirable, heritable changes in regenerated

plants
1.Involves regeneration from callus and cell suspensions,

therefore the constraints and limitations are the same as those above.
2. Not all changes are desirable; in fact most are deleterious or of no
agronomic use.
3. Not recommended if suitable genetic diversity is already
present in the species; better application in vegetatively propagated
material with a limited gene base.
4. Screening the many thousands of plants for those with
useful characters is expensive and time-consuming. If a
selection pressure can be applied at the cellular level then better use
can be made of somaclonal variation and in vitro selection

V - Embryo culture
Application :To rescue embryos during

attempts at wide hybridization by sexual


crosses between distantly related plants and
culture them to maturity
1.Relatively easy to culture.
2. Immediate application.
3. Chances of success are good; but difficulty
increases with more immature embryos.
4. Hormone and growth factor requirements
are more specific with early-stage embryos

VI - In vitro selection
Application ;To induce desirable, heritable changes in

regenerated plants by subjecting a population of cells to a selection


pressure
1.Involves regeneration from callus and cell suspension.

Constraints and limitation as mentioned in embryo culture.


2. Important to have a reproducible system for the regeneration of
large numbers of plants from stressed cells as the selecting agent
may lower the ability to regenerate plants.
3. Important that tolerance to the stress operates at both the
cellular and whole plant levels so that there is a greater chance
of recovering desirable plant.
Unfortunately, many of the agriculturally important traits are
multigenic and depend on the structural and physiological integrity
of the whole plant

VII - Anther culture


Application:To produce homozygous, pure-breeding

lines of plants for hybrid production and genetic


studies - To improve the efficiency of in vitro selection
1.Involves regeneration from callus, cell suspension and
pollen. Constraints and limitation as mentioned in
embryo culture. .
2. Important to have the frequency of regeneration and
to be able to distinguish between plants regenerated
from haploid somatic tissue found in the anther.
3. The use of colchicines may be needed to double the
chromosome number of haploid plants

VIII - Protoplast culture


Application :To incorporate potentially useful genes

from one plant species to another by fusion of


protoplast and regeneration from the hybrid cell
line - Somatic hybridization - To transfer specific genes
into protoplasts and regenerate transgenic plants
1. Protoplast are cells from which the cell wall has been
removed either by mechanical and/or enzymatic methods
2. Orbital shakers, centrifuge and microscopes are
needed. 3. Regeneration of plants from protoplast is
generally very difficult to accomplish and a long lead
time is often needed to develop the techniques with a
particular species

The demand for micropropagated plants in

agriculture, horticulture and in social forestry


is growing by the day, since the traditional
methods of propagation do not yield sufficient
quantity and in some crops they are
cumbersome.
The emerging scenario on the growing use of
tissue culture plantlets predicts that each
state in our country should, at least, have ten
tissue culture laboratories.
t

The major consumers of tissue culture plants are


State Agriculture and Horticulture Departments,
Agri Export Zones (AEZs),
sugar and paper industries,
private farmers and
floriculturists.
State-wise, the requirement of the crop type is different for the domestic

consumption. It is important to note that the demand for some crops like
banana, grapes, pineapple, strawberry, sugarcane, potato, turmeric,
ginger, cardamom, vanilla and
ornamentals like anthuriums, orchids, chrysanthemums, rose, lily, and
gerberas are on the rise in different states in the country
. Small quantities of medicinal plants like Aloe, Coleus, Chlorophytum,
Digitalis, Melaleuca, Patchouli, Gloriosa and forestry crops like Bamboo,
Teak, Eucalyptus, Sandal, Mangium are also produced and consumed in
the domestic marke

A market survey made on tissue cultured plants by the Biotech

Consortium India Limited for the Department of Biotechnology and Small


Farmers Agri-business Consortium reveals that a total of about

million plant species

45

mentioned above was for the domestic 283


consumption valuing Rs. 38.5 crores.
The survey had also projected that for the year 2007-08 the overall
market demand for tissue culture plants would be 145 million plants of
the above species valuing Rs. 136 crores, with a growth rate of 20-25%.
The consumption of plants has been approximately
45 million plants with banana constituting 41% share
sugarcane at 31% and
ornamentals at 14%,
spices at 6% and
medicinal plants at 4%.

The growth in demand for tissue culture banana has increased at a high

rate of 25-30% and a similar trend for other crops is observed particularly
for that of sugarcane due to the introduction of ethanol blended petrol.
It can be noted that there is growing awareness of superiority of tissue

cultured plants, and demand for crops like banana, grapes, papaya,
ginger, turmeric, cardamom, vanilla, potato, Jatropha is increasing. When
it comes to the international demand, the foliages and ornamentals have
a great potential and the products have an unending elongated list.
Major pot plants and landscaping ornamentals like Ficus, Spathiphyllums,

Syngoniums, Philodendrons, Nerium, Alpenia, Yucca, Cordylines,


Pulcherrima, Sansevieria, Gerbera, Anthuriums, Rose, Statis, Lilies,
Alstromeria etc. are routinely produced by various plant tissue culture
laboratories in India.
About 212.5 million plants including 157 million ornamental plants

amounting to 78% of the total production are reported

Additional benefits
It may be pointed out that tissue culture

laboratory can also be used to produce


biofertilisers like rhizobium, azotobacter,
azospirillum, phosphate solubilising bacteria
culture as well as mushroom spawn culture
that indirectly contribute to the agricultural
sector

The demand projections of about 145 million

plants requirement in the domestic market are


highly conservative.
Assuming that only 50% of the installed
capacity is being used for addressing the
domestic demand, the remaining capacity is
used to cater to the export demand; still there is
a large gap between the demand and supply.
This clearly indicates a need for setting up

additional units and supply plants with more


competitive prices for improving the agricultural
productivity, and enhancing the social status of
the farmer

To encourage the tissue culture industry, various central and

state government departments have framed several schemes


and have announced incentives.
(a) Ministry of Agriculture: The Department of Agriculture and
Cooperation under the Ministry of Agriculture, Government of
India provides financial assistance up to Rs. 21 lakhs and Rs.
10 Lakhs for setting up tissue culture units in public and private
sectors respectively, subject to a maximum of 20% of the project
cost.
Under integrated development of fruits scheme, financial
assistance in the form of subsidy, up to 50% is provided for
purchase of tissue culture banana plants by various state
Governments.
The Government of India has set up a national facility for virus
diagnosis and quality control of tissue culture plants at New Delhi
with 5 satellite centers catering to the needs of the tissue
culture industries in various parts of the country.
human resource

(b) Agriculture and Processed Food Products Export

Development Authority (APEDA): Under the Ministry of


Commerce and Industry, state-of-the-art airfreight transshipment centre has been set up for tissue culture
plants (perishables) at New Delhi, Bombay and Bangalore
airports.
Airfreight subsidy up to 25% of the freight cost is
provided to tissue culture plants.
50% subsidy is given for the development of
infrastructure like refrigerated van, packing, export
promotion, market development, consultancy services,
feasibility studies, organization building and development.
Financial assistance is also given for strengthening quality

control facilities and implementation of ISO 9000

(c) National Horticulture Board (NHB):


For setting up tissue culture lab there is a provision for back-

ended capital subsidy not exceeding 20% of the project cost


with a maximum of Rs. 25 lakh per project. Such subsidies
are also extended to build up greenhouse and climate
controlled poly house/shade house.
(d) Small Farmers Agri-business Consortium (SFAC):

SFAC under the Ministry of Agriculture gives soft loans


up to 50 lakhs for setting up small tissue culture labs by
co-operative societies formed by small scale farmers.
(e) Department of Biotechnology (DBT): DBT supports

research and development projects across the country at


various laboratories in the universities and research
institutions for development and standardization of tissue
culture protocols.

The private tissue culture units are entitled for expansion of existing units as a Phase II

activity under a scheme called Small Business Innovation Research Initiative


(SBIRI).
To promote the adoption of tissue culture technology by the industry and the

end user, the department has established two micropropagation technology


parks (MTPs) which provide a large number of service packages and have an
important mandate of training and generating skilled manpower.
The MTPs have transferred about 10 technologies to the industry and have also

provided consultancy and taken up turn-key projects for various end users and state
departments.
The department has also set up a national facility for virus diagnosis and quality
control of tissue culture raised plants, which are located at 6 different centers in India
to ensure supply of disease free plants to the end users.
(f) State level incentives: The states of Karnataka, Gujarat, Maharashtra, and

Andhra Pradesh are giving financial assistance for setting up tissue culture units under
the new agro-industrial policy. Karnataka gives capital subsidy of 20% on investments.
All the above schemes have encouraged the establishment of tissue culture industry,
which in turn have tremendously improved the demand for tissue culture generated
quality planting material.
A concerted effort is being made by the Government and the Industries to ensure that
plant tissue culture, a technology with enormous commercial potential

Tissue culture has been one of the main

technological tools and reasons that have


contributed to the Second Green Revolution
and Gene Revolution. India is being looked
upon by the world as the main technology
base for production and supply of
economically important plant varieties.

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