Biology, asked by rijaabjafar817, 1 year ago

Although it provides a control- led experimental system, germination in-vitro does not completely mimic growth in-vivo such as temperature and germination medium. In-vitro germination can be affected by time of pollen collection and storage conditions as well as pollen density on the culture medium.

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Answered by simran3849
0

One of the rare weak points of the model plant Arabidopsis is the technical problem associated with the germination of its male gametophyte and the generation of the pollen tube in vitro. Arabidopsis pollen being tricellular has a notoriously low in vitro germination compared to species with bicellular pollen. This drawback strongly affects the reproducibility of experiments based on this cellular system. Together with the fact that pollen collection from this species is tedious, these are obstacles for the standard use of Arabidopsis pollen for experiments that require high numbers of pollen tubes and for which the percentage of germination needs to be highly reproducible. The possibility of freeze-storing pollen after bulk collection is a potential way to solve these problems, but necessitates methods that ensure continued viability and reproducible capacity to germinate.

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