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a small tuft of leaves sits in a round glass plate under bright lights
A plant shoot being prepared for cryogenics under a microscope. Image: Megan Pope
24 October 2023

A process similar to that used to store human embryos is being used by scientists at Â鶹ÊÓƵ of Queensland to save native Australian plants under threat from the invasive fungus, myrtle rust.

Teams from Â鶹ÊÓƵ’s  and Botanic Gardens of Sydney are cryogenically preserving tissue from some of the most impacted plants of the Myrtaceae family, including native guava and rainforest shrubs and trees.

said the spread of myrtle rust has placed hundreds of Myrtaceae species under pressure, with some now at risk of extinction.

“Myrtle rust affects the ability of the worst impacted species to reproduce and some of these species are no longer producing seed in the wild,” Dr Hayward said.

“On top of this, seeds from affected rainforest species often cannot be stored in a seed bank as they don’t survive the standard drying or freezing processes.

“To prevent them from being wiped out by the fungus, we are hoping to bring those species into the lab and place them into a frozen but living state using a process called cryopreservation.

“This enables them to be safely secured while other researchers work out how to deal with myrtle rust in the environment.

“To do this we take a tiny shoot, treat it with special protectants and plunge it into liquid nitrogen where it can be stored indefinitely,” Dr Hayward said.

“We can then revive that shoot tip and use tissue culture to multiply it and produce plants that could be put back into the wild.

“We are trying to preserve those species that we know are at most risk of extinction in the immediate future, to capture that biodiversity before it’s too late.”

The process is not simple.

Â鶹ÊÓƵ’s used the technique to create a .

“To develop a cryopreservation protocol for each species you must optimise every step of the process to ensure the survival of the shoot tip, which is a lot of work,” Dr O’Brien said.

“That includes a tissue culture system that delivers nutrients and the correct requirements for the plant to survive, as well as how best to treat the tissue to dehydrate it before it can be stored in liquid nitrogen.”

Despite the complexity, Dr Hayward said the conservation work was something she was passionate about.

“For each plant species we need a different tissue culture formulation, as even within a species, different individuals can sometimes require different treatments,” Dr Hayward said.

“We’ll be working with a team from Botanic Gardens of Sydney based at the Australian PlantBank at the Australian Botanic Garden Mount Annan to develop protocols for six species.

“Once the protocols are developed, the species will be safely stored in PlantBank’s cryopreservation tank.

“We are doing something important that can contribute to protecting the unique Australian biodiversity and environment that we call home.”

The Â鶹ÊÓƵ team is part of a collaborative Australian Research Council project team, led by Professor Ricardo Mancera at Curtin University in Western Australia.

Image above left: Dr Chris O'Brien, Dr Alice Hayward and PhD candidate Jingyin Bao in the QAAFI laboratory. 

Video and images are available . 

Media: Dr Alice Hayward, a.hayward@uq.edu.au, +61 406 767 390; QAAFI Media, Natalie MacGregor, n.macgregor@uq.edu.au, +61 409 135 651.