Onion Root Tip Mitosis
Materials: ★★☆ Available in most school laboratories or specialist stores
Difficulty: ★★☆ Can be done by science teachers
Safety: ★☆☆ Minimal safety procedures required
Categories: Cells and Microscopes, Genetics and DNA, Plants, Reproduction
Alternative titles: Observing Stages of Mitosis
Summary
This experiment demonstrates mitosis by preparing and observing stained onion root tip cells under a compound microscope. Students identify the stages of mitosis while understanding why onion root tips are suitable for studying active cell division.
Procedure
- Grow onion bulbs in water until new root tips develop (4–6 days).
- Collect about 3 cm of young root tips and place them in aceto-alcohol fixative (3:1 ethanol and glacial acetic acid) for 24 hours.
- Transfer a root tip to a clean slide and add 0.1N HCl followed by acetocarmine stain.
- Gently heat over a burner without drying the stain.
- Trim off less-stained portions and retain the well-stained root tip.
- Add a drop of water and mount a coverslip.
- Tap the coverslip gently to squash the tissue into a thin layer.
- Place the slide under the compound microscope and observe the stages of mitosis.
Links
Mitosis in Onion Root tip Experiment - ThomasTKtungnung:
How To: Observe Mitosis in Onion Root Tips - LabXchange:
📄 study-of-mitosis-in-onion-root-tip-cells - byjus.com: https://byjus.com/biology/study-of-mitosis-in-onion-root-tip-cells/
Variations
- Use prepared slides of onion root tips if time or equipment is limited.
- Compare mitosis in onion root cells with mitosis in animal cells (e.g., whitefish blastula).
- Extend the study to include meiosis for comparison.
Safety Precautions
- Handle sharp blades and scalpels carefully.
- Use stains (acetocarmine, HCl, aceto-alcohol) cautiously; they can damage skin, clothing, and surfaces.
- Heat slides gently to avoid boiling or cracking.
- Follow all lab safety rules, including wearing gloves and protective eyewear if required.
Questions to Consider
- Why is mitosis called equational division? (Daughter cells have the same chromosome number as the parent cell.)
- Why are onion root tips commonly used to study mitosis? (They have actively dividing meristematic cells and large, visible chromosomes.)
- Which stage of mitosis shows the chromosomes most distinctly? (Metaphase, because chromosomes are thick, condensed, and aligned at the equator.)
- How can colchicine affect mitosis? (It prevents spindle fiber formation, stopping cells in metaphase.)
- How do plant and animal cells differ in spindle fiber origin? (Plant cells form spindle fibers from the cytoplasm; animal cells form them from centrioles.)