Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Protoplast Isolation Technical and Teaching Notes

Better Essays
1177 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Protoplast Isolation Technical and Teaching Notes
Protoplast Isolation

Technical & Teaching Notes

Apparatus

• lettuce (round, green lettuce not iceberg) • scalpel or sharp knife • forceps • tile • glass Petri dish • 10 cm3 syringe • 1 cm3 syringe • 13% sorbitol solution • Viscozyme enzyme • Cellulase enzyme • Dropper • small filter funnel • 60 (m gauze square (approximately 12 cm X 12 cm) • tape • centrifuge tube • slide and coverslip

A centrifuge, high power microscope and incubator set at approximately 35 oC must be available in the lab.

Preparation of Materials

It is best to use limp green lettuce which has been left in an incubator at about 35 oC for an hour. This causes the cells to plasmolyse slightly.

Viscozyme, pectinase and cellulase enzymes can be bought from NCBE. Do not dilute the enzymes. The enzyme solution should be stored in a fridge until use.

Sorbitol solution (70%) can be bought from Boots the Chemist. To prepare a 13% solution add 18.5 cm3 stock to 100 cm3 distilled water.

Waterproof sticky tape can be used to secure the gauze mesh in a small filter funnel. This can be washed and reused.

Making the fusion mix

PEG (12 ml. of 50% solution)
HEPES buffer 0.9g
10 ml. water pH 8.0

A microcentrifuge can be used to spin the protoplasts. A spin of 3 minutes at the lowest voltage is sufficient. Care should be taken when resuspending the pellet as the protoplasts are very fragile.

Suppliers

Viscozyme, pectinase and cellulase enzymes can be bought from NCBE.

Sorbitol solution (70%) can be bought from Boots the Chemist.

60 (m gauze can be ordered from Clarcor, www.clarcoruk.com, (0)1925 654321

PEG 6000 (50% solution) and HEPES buffer can be ordered from Sigma-Aldrich (was Fluka Chemicals) www.sigmaaldrich.com

A microcentrifuge can be obtained from the NCBE, http://www.ncbe.reading.ac.uk/

Teaching Notes

Protoplasts are cells which have had their cell wall removed, usually by digestion with enzymes. Cellulase enzymes digest the cellulose in plant cell walls while pectinase enzymes break down the pectin holding cells together. Once the cell wall has been removed the resulting protoplast is spherical in shape.

Digestion is usually carried out after incubation in an osmoticum (a solution of higher concentration than the cell contents which causes the cells to plasmolyse). This makes the cell walls easier to digest. Debris is filtered and/or centrifuged out of the suspension and the protoplasts are then centrifuged to form a pellet. On resuspension the protoplasts can be cultured on media which induce cell division and differentiation. A large number of plants can be regenerated from a single experiment – a gram of potato leaf tissue can produce more than a million protoplasts, for example.

Protoplasts can be isolated from a range of plant tissues: leaves, stems, roots, flowers, anthers and even pollen. The isolation and culture media used vary with the species and with the tissue from which the protoplasts were isolated.

Protoplasts are used in a number of ways for research and for plant improvement. They can be treated in a variety of ways (electroporation, incubation with bacteria, heat shock, high pH treatment) to induce them to take up DNA. The protoplasts can then be cultured and plants regenerated. In this way genetically engineered plants can be produced more easily than is possible using intact cells/plants.

Plants from distantly related or unrelated species are unable to reproduce sexually as their genomes/modes of reproduction etc. are incompatible. Protoplasts from unrelated species can be fused to produce plants combining desirable characteristics such as disease resistance, good flavour and cold tolerance. Fusion is carried out by application of an electric current or by treatment with chemicals such as Polyethylene Glycol (PEG). Fusion products can be selected for on media containing antibiotics or herbicides. These can then be induced to form shoots and roots and hybrid plants can be tested for desirable characteristics.

Teachers’ Queries

In your document about Protoplast Isolation there is a line that reads "Fusion products can be selected for on media containing antibiotics or herbicides. These can then be induced to form shoots which grow into roots and hybrid plants that can be tested for desirable characteristics." I was wondering how this would be carried out?

Protoplasts from plant A with herbicide resistance could be fused directly with protoplasts from plant B which has other desirable qualities (eg potatoes which make good chips). In that case when you grow the protoplasts into calli, and then shoots, i) some calli will be from unfused protoplasts from the parent plants, ii) some from fusion products which result from protoplasts from plant A fusing with other plant A protoplasts, iii) some from fusion products resulting from protoplasts from plant B fusing with other plant B protoplasts, and iv) a few which are the result of fusion between plant A and B protoplasts - THESE are the ones you want. You have to have some way of selecting the calli/shoots which are of the latter type. If all the calli/shoots are placed on a medium containing the herbicide, then only calli/shoots which have the gene for herbicide resistance from plant A can grow ( these could have been regenerated from either fused or unfused protoplasats of plant A). You can carry out other tests (eg DNA analysis) to find out which ones are the desired fusion products, with the qualities of both parents. This is hugely simplified but the basic idea is correct. Alternatively if protoplasts have been transformed (eg by incubation with Agrobacterium containing a geneticallly modified plasmid which contains a marker gene for antibiotic resistance along with a desirable gene), then when the calli initially formed start to produce shoots (usually on a medium containing a high cytokinin:auxin ratio) some of them will produce shoots with the desired gene AND with antibiotic resistance. If grown on medium containing that antibiotic, only shoots with the antibiotic resistance gene (and the desired gene) will grow (ie it is a selective medium). This is the cause of a lot of debate, as many people feel that antibiotic resistance will with the antibiotic resistance gene are grown.

What varieties of lettuce could be used for protoplast fusion?

We advise that you use the 'normal' green lettuce as a source of green protoplasts and try to isolate protoplasts from a red lettuce, preferably the least crispy variety you can find. That way you can count not only the percentage of protoplasts fusing but also calculate the percentage of heterofusions (red-green) and the percentage of homo fusions (green-green or red-red) which obviously would not be desirable in a fusion experiment where one is trying to combine the characteristics of two different varieties/species. The problem you may encounter is that the osmoticum (sorbitol) concentration may need to be altered for the red lettuce, and that is an investigation in itself! But it should be possible and would yield lovely quantitative results.

Acknowledgements

Dr Lucy Payne, Dollar Academy

This experiment is modified from an original by NCBE
http://www.ncbe.reading.ac.uk/NCBE/PROTOCOLS/PRACBIOTECH/protoplasts.html

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Macrocyclic Synthesis

    • 612 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Placed 18.6 mL of propanoic acid in a 100ml round-bottomed flask with boiling chips, fit a reflux condenser and brought the acid to reflux. Simultaneously, added .33mL of pyrrole and .47 mL of benzaldehyde through the condenser by using plastic syringes and allowed the mixture to heat under the reflux for 30 minutes.…

    • 612 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Aspirate medium, wash cells once with 1x PBS. Aspirate PBS and add 500 L of 1x Cell Detachment Solution into 1 well of confluent NPCs. Incubate for 10 min at 37 °C.…

    • 237 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Nt1310 Unit 3 Pathogens

    • 643 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Now you are ready to start culturing. Start with one of your plates you can do both at the same time but to avoid making any errors I recommend just doing one at a time. Using aseptic technique take the tube containing the pathogen you have chosen and sterilize it. Next, take your sterile pipette (dropper) and pick up a small amount of your sampled pathogen. Using aseptic technique again flame the tube and close it, set aside till you are ready to use for the next plate. Open the lid of the first plate (I used the one labeled 1-5 first)…

    • 643 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Disinfect work area with bleach, wash hands thoroughly with soap and water. The remaining supplies can be returned to the lab kit for future use.…

    • 630 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Panacetin Essay

    • 943 Words
    • 4 Pages

    A digital scale, a centrifuge, two (2) test tubes, 4.0 mL of 5.0% NaHCO3, micropipette (glass with rubber suction top), a stirring rod, and a vial. A 50 mL beaker, 2 x 1.0 mL of 6.0 M HCl, pH paper, a vacuum chamber, a test tube rack, scooper, ice bath, hot water bath, hot plate, Hirsche funnel, and a rubber tube are all necessary to perform the…

    • 943 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Explain why you did this lab and what if any safety precautions needed to be followed.…

    • 694 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Copper Cycle Lab Report

    • 1530 Words
    • 7 Pages

    II. Measure 2mL of concentrated nitric acid, HNO3(aq), into a 100 ml beaker under a fume hood. Place penny into the beaker of nitric acid and observe the reaction. After 5 seconds remove penny with forceps and place into second beaker.…

    • 1530 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Once I distinguished my two different isolated colonies, I took a sterile loop and grabbed one and spread it on half of a new TSA plate. After sterilizing my loop again, I did the…

    • 895 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Afterwards place the used cotton swab into a beaker of detergent to stop the spread of infection.…

    • 579 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The following procedures and materials listed are what you will need in order to conduct the experiments end lab results. Equipment needed to perform this experiment is a 50 ml test tube, 100 ml beaker, 250 mL Erlenmeyer flask, Buchner…

    • 878 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The embryos will be incubated in an air-conditioned room at 26ºC as an alternative to the unavailability of an incubator (OECD, 2013). During the test, the embryos will be exposed to white light in a 12h: 12h light/dark cycle (Villamizar, Vera, Foulkes, & Sánchez-Vázquez, 2014) to ensure the greatest survival…

    • 1095 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Schollar

    • 5174 Words
    • 21 Pages

    Prepare PF Tek type jars, it is not necessary to use as much substrate as you usually would. Inoculate the jars, using plenty of spore solution.…

    • 5174 Words
    • 21 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    M9 Exp

    • 462 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Incubate the culture tubes at 35°C - 37°C for 12 hours. Do not let the cultures incubate for more than 24 hours as you may not get an accurate result!…

    • 462 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Microbiology exam essays

    • 569 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Then place each disk evenly spaced on a labeled nutrient agar plate for each bacterial species (3) and incubate for 24-48 hours at 37C.…

    • 569 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Take an aliquot of spores containing 2.5 × 108 (no more than 1 week old) and centrifuge for 5 min at 440 × g. Resuspend the pellet in 25 mL of YPG medium pH 4.5 (final spore concentration to 107 spores/mL), supplemented with 200 μg/ml of uridine when a uridine auxotroph is going to be…

    • 906 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays