Biology, asked by srinivas1853, 1 year ago

What would you call the parenchyma cells that are made to divide under controlled laboratory conditions during plant tissue culture ?

Answers

Answered by Anandeshwer
172
Parenchyma cells that are made to divide to form callus under controlled laboratory conditions are examples of dedifferentiated tissue.
plzz mark it brainliest
Answered by mindfulmaisel
40

The parenchyma cells made to differentiate under controlled laboratory conditions during tissue culture can be called as an explant.  

The process of removing cells or tissues from a plant (parenchyma cells) and placing it in a culture medium to perform tissue culture under laboratory conditions is called explantation and the mass of parenchyma cells removed and used for tissue culture is called the explant.

It is a very usable technique for modern-day tissue culture.

Similar questions