Callus cells are 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 the
control group. Plant calluses derived from many different cell types can differentiate into a whole plant, a process called regeneration, through addition of plant hormones to the culture medium. This ability is known as
totipotency. A classical experiment by
Folke Skoog and Carlos O. Miller on tobacco pith used as the starting explant shows that the supplementation of culture media by different ratios of auxin to cytokinin concentration can induce the formation of either shoots or roots – with higher auxin to cytokinin ratio, the rooting (rhizogenesis) is induced, applying equal amounts of both hormones stimulates further callus growth and changing the auxin to cytokinin ratio in favor of the cytokinin leads to the development of shoots. Regeneration of a whole plant from a single cell allows
transgenics researchers to obtain whole plants which have a copy of the transgene in every cell. Regeneration of a whole plant that has some genetically transformed cells and some untransformed cells yields a
chimera. In general, chimeras are not useful for genetic research or agricultural applications. Genes can be inserted into callus cells using
biolistic bombardment, also known as a
gene gun, or
Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Cells that receive the gene of interest can then be recovered into whole plants using a combination of
plant hormones. The whole plants that are recovered can be used to experimentally determine gene function(s), or to enhance crop plant traits for modern agriculture. Callus is of particular use in
micropropagation where it can be used to grow genetically identical copies of plants with desirable characteristics. To increase the yield, efficiency and explant survivability of micropropagation, a thorough care is taken for the optimization of the micropropagation protocol. For example, using explants composed of low totipotency cells may prolong the time necessary to obtain callus of sufficient size, increasing the total length of the experiment. Similarly, various plant species and explant types require specific plant hormones for callus induction and subsequent organogenesis or embryogenesis – for the formation and growth of maize calluses, auxin
2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) was superior to
1-Naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) or
Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), while the development of callus was hindered in prune explants after applying auxin
Indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) but not IAA. ==History==