- Callus (cell biology)
In biological research and biotechnology, a callus of cells is a mass of undifferentiated cells. In plant biology, callus cells are those cells that cover a plant wound. [ [http://www.liv.ac.uk/~sd21/tisscult/what.htm What is Plant Tissue Culture?] ]
Design
A callus cell culture is usually sustained on gel media, much in the same manner as bacteria are grown. Sufficient media consists of agar and the usual mix of
macronutrient s andmicronutrient s for the given cell type. For plant cells, enrichment withnitrogen ,phosphorus , andpotassium is especially important. Water is provided as a constituent part of the gel media. Ex. sandalwood callusUses
A plant cell callus consists of
somatic undifferentiated cells from an adult subject plant.A callus is not necessarily genetically homogeneous because a callus is often made from structural tissue, not individual cells. Nevertheless, callus cells are often considered similar enough for standard scientific analysis to be performed as if on a single subject. For example, an experiment may have half a callus undergo a treatment as the
experimental group , while the other half undergoes a similar but non-active treatment as thecontrol group .Plant cell calluses may be made to differentiate into the specialized tissues of a whole plant, with the addition of a number of hormones or enzymes. This is an ability known as
totipotency .A callus is often the target of a
gene gun for specific DNA insertion experiments.Callus tissue is of particular use in micropropagation where it can be used to grow genetically identical copies of plants with desirable characteristics.
References
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