3.3 Surface sterilization agents and protocols 

Here’s a professional, lab-ready section on Surface Sterilization Agents and Protocols for COPI’s Agarwood Tissue Culture Course, designed for SOP manuals, training guides, and regulatory alignment.


Surface Sterilization of Explants in Aquilaria Tissue Culture


1. Purpose

Surface sterilization is essential to eliminate microbial contaminants (bacteria, fungi, yeasts) from explant surfaces while maintaining tissue viability for successful tissue culture.

Effective sterilization minimizes contamination, ensures plantlet survival, and preserves genetic integrity.


2. Common Surface Sterilization Agents

AgentConcentrationActionNotes / Precautions
70% Ethanol (EtOH)30–60 secDenatures proteins, disrupts membranesFlammable; short exposure only; often first step
Sodium Hypochlorite (NaOCl)0.5–2.5% (commercial bleach diluted)Oxidizing agent; kills bacteria & fungiExposure time 5–15 min; rinse thoroughly
Mercuric Chloride (HgCl₂)0.1–0.2%Highly effective for stubborn contaminationHighly toxic; use with fume hood & PPE; last resort
Hydrogen Peroxide (H₂O₂)3–6%Oxidizing agent; mild sterilizationUseful for delicate explants; rinse thoroughly
Bavistin / Carbendazim (Fungicide)0.1–0.2%Fungal controlOften combined with NaOCl

3. General Sterilization Protocol

Step 1: Preliminary Cleaning

  1. Wash explants in running tap water to remove dust and debris (5–10 min)
  2. Optionally soak in detergent solution with gentle agitation

Step 2: Ethanol Treatment

  1. Dip explants briefly in 70% ethanol (30–60 sec)
  2. Blot dry with sterile tissue

Step 3: Main Sterilant Treatment

  1. Immerse explants in NaOCl solution (0.5–2.5%) for 5–15 min
  2. Gently agitate to ensure full contact

Step 4: Optional Secondary Sterilization

  • For stubborn contaminants: HgCl₂ 0.1–0.2% for 2–5 min (under fume hood)
  • Or fungicide soak for 5–10 min

Step 5: Rinse

  • Rinse explants 3–5 times with sterile distilled water
  • Ensure no residual sterilant remains, as it can damage tissues

Step 6: Culture Initiation

  • Transfer to sterile culture media under laminar airflow
  • Avoid prolonged exposure to LAF airflow drying

4. Tips for Optimizing Sterilization

  • Explants selection: Young, healthy tissue reduces contamination
  • Exposure time: Longer sterilization increases tissue necrosis; balance is key
  • Sterilant freshness: Prepare fresh solutions daily
  • Sequential sterilization: Combining ethanol + NaOCl improves efficiency
  • Endophytic contamination: May require additional chemical or thermal pre-treatment

5. Troubleshooting Common Problems

ProblemLikely CauseSolution
High contamination rateExplant harboring endophytesPre-treat mother plant, increase NaOCl contact, consider HgCl₂
Tissue necrosis / browningOverexposure to sterilantReduce sterilant concentration or exposure time
Poor regenerationResidual sterilant toxicityRinse thoroughly with sterile distilled water

6. COPI SOP Alignment

  • Standardized surface sterilization protocols per explant type (nodal, shoot tip, leaf, hypocotyl)
  • Maintain sterility logs with date, batch number, sterilants used, and exposure times
  • Follow biosafety and waste disposal procedures for all chemical agents

7. Course-Ready Key Statement

Surface sterilization is a critical first step in Aquilaria tissue culture. Proper choice of sterilizing agents, exposure times, and rinsing procedures ensures explant survival, minimizes contamination, and lays the foundation for successful organogenesis and elite plantlet production.


I can next:

  • Create a visual infographic for surface sterilization workflow
  • Make a stepwise SOP chart for each explant type
  • Integrate it into Module 2.4 of your course manual

Do you want me to create the infographic version next?