| Literature DB >> 26454832 |
Thomas J Musielak1, Laura Schenkel1, Martina Kolb1, Agnes Henschen1, Martin Bayer2.
Abstract
KEY MESSAGE: The optical brightener SCRI Renaissance 2200 can be used as versatile dye to study various aspects of plant reproduction by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The study of sexual reproduction of plants has traditionally relied on light microscopy in combination with a variety of staining methods. Transgenic lines that label specific cell or tissue types with fluorescent proteins in combination with confocal laser scanning microscopy were an important development to visualize gametophyte development, the fertilization process, and to follow cell differentiation in the early embryo. Staining the cell perimeter to identify surrounding tissue is often a necessary prerequisite to put the fluorescent signal in the right context. Here, we present SCRI Renaissance 2200 (SR2200) as a versatile dye to study various aspects of plant reproduction ranging from pollen tube growth, guidance and reception to the early patterning process in the developing embryo of Arabidopsis thaliana. Furthermore, we demonstrate that SR2200 can be combined with a wide variety of fluorescent proteins. If spectral information can be recorded, even double labeling with dyes that have very similar emission spectra such as 4',6-diamidin-2-phenylindol (DAPI) is possible. The presented staining method can be a single, easy-to-use alternative for a range of other staining protocols commonly used for microscopic analyses in plant reproductive biology.Entities:
Keywords: Arabidopsis thaliana; Cell wall staining; Confocal microscopy; Embryogenesis; Pollen tube; Renaissance SR2200
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26454832 PMCID: PMC4623088 DOI: 10.1007/s00497-015-0267-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Reprod ISSN: 2194-7953 Impact factor: 3.767
Fig. 1Cell wall staining of developing Arabidopsis embryos. Two-cell stage (a–d): an overview is shown in a; b magnification of a indicating the planes of orthogonal sections by yellow lines; c x–z projection of image stack shown in b; d y–z projection of image stack shown in b. Four-cell stage (e–f): x–y section of image stack is shown in e. Planes of orthogonal sections are indicated by yellow lines; f x–z projection of image stack shown in e; g y–z projection of image stack shown in e. Two- and four-cell stage can easily be distinguished in x–z projections (Fig. 1c, f). Globular stage (h, i): x–y section of image stack indicating the plane of orthogonal section by a yellow line; i the x–z projection of the image stack shown in h demonstrates uniform staining of inner tissue layers of the embryo. Late globular and triangular stage embryos expressing Q0990≫erGFP in pre-vasculature cells (j, k; Levesque et al. 2006; Weijers et al. 2006): detailed staining of inner embryonic cells is possible in combination with detection of GFP. Torpedo stage embryo expressing pDR5rev::mRFP-ER (l; Gallavotti et al. 2008): even at this late stage, uniform cell wall staining with cellular resolution is possible in combination with detection of dsRed. SR2200 staining of the cell wall is depicted in gray scale; DAPI signal in nuclei was separated from SR2200 signal by spectral unmixing (described in main text and Fig. 3) and is shown in magenta (a–g). Scale bar 5 µm (a–g) and 10 µm (h–l), respectively
Fig. 3Spectral unmixing of SR2200 and DAPI fluorescence signals. a Emission spectra of SR2200 (green line) and DAPI (red line) between 370 and 650 nm (excitation with 350 nm). Both dyes show rather similar emission spectra that can be successfully distinguished and separated in different image channels by spectral unmixing (b–d); SR2200 signal (gray scale) in b, DAPI signal (magenta) in c; merged image in d. Scale bar 5 µm
Fig. 2SR2200 staining to study PT guidance and fertilization. SR2200 can be used for PT staining (a–f). a PTs growing on the placenta surface; micropylar guidance of wild-type PT (b) and pod1-2 mutant PT (c); failed PT reception in fer-5 mutant ovules (d; inset shows overview) in comparison with wild type (e). Arrow head indicates intact tip of PT in d. f Rare case of polytubey in a wild-type ovule (fer-5 ± parent plant) with two PTs targeting one ovule (indicated by arrow heads). Burst of PTs (white) can be seen by release of CFP-ER from the vegetative cell (cyan). Double fertilization has occurred as judged by the 15 dsRed-labeled centromers in each endosperm nucleus (magnification shown in inset; labeled by pHTR12::HTR12-mCherry depicted in orange). The second sperm pair from the other PT failed to fuse with female gametes (indicated by arrows; labeled by pMGH3::MGH3-2xVenus-N7 and shown in green). Auto-fluorescence is shown in yellow. g Overview of unfertilized ovule expressing synergid-specific pNTA≫NLS-tdtomato; h magnification of g; i fertilized ovule of the same transgenic line shown in g. The nuclear-localized tdtomato signal is now visible in the developing endosperm. Developing embryo is indicated by bracket; endosperm nuclei are labeled by asterisks. SR2200 staining is shown in gray scale (a–c, g–i) and in cyan as overlay with DIC image in gray scale (d, e). Scale bar 20 µm