| Literature DB >> 31911811 |
Ying Zhang1, Liming Ma1, Jinglu Wang1, Xiaodong Wang1,2, Xinyu Guo1, Jianjun Du1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Micro-computed tomography (μCT) bring a new opportunity to accurately quantify micro phenotypic traits of maize stem, also provide comparable benchmark to evaluate its dynamic development at the different growth stages. The progressive accumulation of stem biomass brings manifest structure changes of maize stem and vascular bundles, which are closely related with maize varietal characteristics and growth stages. Thus, micro-phenotyping (μPhenotyping) of maize stems is not only valuable to evaluate bio-mechanics and water-transport performance of maize, but also yield growth-based traits for quantitative traits loci (QTL) and functional genes location in molecular breeding. RESULT: In this study, maize stems of 20 maize cultivars and two growth stages were imaged using μCT scanning technology. According to the observable differences of maize stems from the elongation and tasseling stages, function zones of maize stem were firstly defined to describe the substance accumulation of maize stems. And then a set of image-based μPhenotyping pipelines were implemented to quantify maize stem and vascular bundles at the two stages. The coefficient of determination (R2) of counting vascular bundles was higher than 0.95. Based on the uniform contour representation, intensity-related, geometry-related and distribution-related traits of vascular bundles were respectively evaluated in function zones and structure layers. And growth-related traits of the slice, epidermis, periphery and inner zones were also used to describe the dynamic growth of maize stem. Statistical analysis demonstrated the presented method was suitable to the phenotyping analysis of maize stem for multiple growth stages.Entities:
Keywords: CT scanning; Function zone; Level set; Maize stem; Vascular bundle; μPhenotyping
Year: 2020 PMID: 31911811 PMCID: PMC6942302 DOI: 10.1186/s13007-019-0549-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Methods ISSN: 1746-4811 Impact factor: 4.993
Fig. 1Schematic function zones of maize stem in a CT cross-section image. a The boundaries of the epidermis, periphery and inner zones. b The source and mask images of each individual zones, and the intensity and histogram results. c The detection pipeline of function zones
Fig. 2Detection and identification for vascular bundles. a Shape improvement for vascular bundles in the inner zone. b The object split of candidate regions for vascular bundles in the periphery zone
Fig. 3Distribution-related traits of vascular bundles. a Layer scheme with equal-area. b Layer scheme with equal-distance. c Voronoi diagrams of vascular bundles
Fig. 4The geometry-related and distribution-related traits of vascular bundles. a–c The relationship between geometry-related traits (perimeter, radius, area) of vascular bundles and the distance (from the center of vascular bundle to stem center). d The value ranges of 6 dimensionless geometry-related traits of vascular bundles. e The value ranges of 9 dimensional geometry-related traits of vascular bundles
List of five categories 28 phenotypic traits of stem obtained by automated image processing pipeline
| Phenotypic types | Description | Units |
|---|---|---|
| Intensity-based | Average intensity (AI) | Gray-level |
| Geometry-based (dimensional) | Width (W) | mm |
| Height (H) | mm | |
| Main axis length (MAL) | mm | |
| Main axis width (MAW) | mm | |
| Circumcircle radius (CR) | mm | |
| Inscribed circle radius (ICR) | mm | |
| Area (A) | mm2 | |
| Perimeter (P) | mm | |
| Convex hull area (CHA) | mm2 | |
| Geometry-based (dimensionless) | Rectangularity (RA), | – |
| Aspect ratio (AR), | – | |
| Circularity (CIR), | – | |
| Eccentricity (ECC), | – | |
| Sphericity (SPH), | – | |
| Convexity (CV), | – | |
| Distribution-based | Distance from vascular bundle to stem center (DC) | mm |
| Layer-based (equal-distance, equal-area) | Area of each layer (AEL) | mm2 |
| Number of vascular bundles in each layer (NVBEL) | – | |
| Area of vascular bundles in each layer (AVBEL) | mm2 | |
| Voronoi area of vascular bundle in each layer (VAVBEL) | mm2 | |
| Growth-based (epidermis, periphery, inner) | Area of each function zone (AEFZ) | mm2 |
| Number of vascular bundles in periphery zone (NVBPZ) | – | |
| Number of vascular bundles in inner zone (NVBIZ) | – | |
| Area of vascular bundles in periphery zone (AVBPZ) | mm2 | |
| Area of vascular bundles in inner zone (AVBIZ) | mm2 | |
| Voronoi area of vascular bundle in periphery zone (VAVPZ) | mm2 | |
| Voronoi area of vascular bundle in inner zone (VAVIZ) | mm2 |
Fig. 5Analysis of stem microscopic phenotypic traits (vascular bundle number, intensity, and vascular bundle voronoi area) in EA and ED layers at elongation and tasseling stages
Fig. 6Function zone distributions of maize stem (Jingke665) at the elongation and tasseling stage. a The source images of stem at elongation and tasseling stages. b Function zone distributions of maize stem at elongation and tasseling stages. c Histograms of different zones, the whole slice (white), epidermis zone (green), periphery zone (blue), inner area (yellow), and the combination of the epidermis and periphery zones (red)
Fig. 7Growth-related traits of the slice and epidermis zone at the elongation and tasseling stages. a Slice area of stem. b Slice intensity of stem. c Slice substance ratio of stem. d Epidermis thickness of stem
Fig. 8Growth-related traits of the periphery and inner zones at the elongation and tasseling stages. a–d Phenotypic traits of periphery zone (a zone area, b vascular bundle number, c vascular bundle area, and d area ratio of vascular bundle). e–h Phenotypic traits of inner zone (e zone area, f vascular bundle number, g vascular bundle area, and h area ratio of vascular bundle)
Fig. 9Counting accuracy comparison of vascular bundles numbers by the presented method and manual counting using stem samples from the elongation stage (a), stem samples from tasseling stage (b), and stem samples from two stages (c)