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Seeing the bigger picture: imaging technique widens our view on the inner worlds of plants and their guests


Norwich, United Kingdom
February 17, 2017

Plants come in all shapes and sizes – but why, and how? Scientists at the John Innes Centre exploring how interactions between genes affect plant patterning have developed an imaging technique to visualise live gene activity at the macroscopic scale.

Why does a rose flower have layered petals, while daffodils have trumpets? Why is the shape of an oak leaf so different from that of a pine needle? Questions like these fascinate Professor Enrico Coen, whose research explores the development of patterns and shapes in plants.

To help answer these questions, Professor Coen’s team is developing novel imaging methods that allow researchers to look into the 3D depths of plant structures.

Recording plant structures started with botanical illustrations and then moved to photography. More recently, 3D methods such as optical projection tomography (OPT) allow us to see the gene activity inside living plants in 3D. The images can be used to build up a picture of how gene activity changes over time, which in turn can be fed into computer models to simulate and predict plant patterns.

However, until now, this technique was only good enough to visualise very small structures up to 1.5 cm across.

In a new paper published in Journal of Experimental Botany, Professor Coen and his team of cell and developmental biologists at the John Innes Centre describe a vast improvement on the existing OPT technique.

M-OPT Scanner. Specimens are imaged through 360 degrees. These images are then reconstructed allowing surfaces, internal structures and gene activity in the specimen to be seen in 3D

Karen Lee, first author of the paper and a research assistant in Professor Coen’s lab said: “We’ve successfully developed ‘Macro OPT’ (M-OPT) – a larger scale version of OPT that allows us to explore 3D gene activity in fixed or living plant structures up to 6 cm in length. As well as greatly increasing the diversity of plant structures we can study, this advance also helps us to better assess how gene activity in particular tissues affects the wider organism."
 

M-OPT images of an Arabidopsis plant. The gene activity (green) can be tracked as the plant grows.

“A further exciting benefit is that we can also use M-OPT on animal tissues – so, for the first time, we have been able to visualise pollinating insects within flowers in 3D. In future, we could use M-OPT to see, for example, how pests damage leaves or roots, or precisely how a Venus fly trap changes shape to enclose and digest a trapped insect.”

Macro Optical Projection Tomography image of a bee inside a Snapdragon flower

The website ‘The Inner Worlds of Plants and their Guests’ has been updated to accompany the release of the new paper. Here, you can find out more about the lab’s research, view amazing photographs, and watch video clips of M-OPT in action. To see how M-OPT can be combined with traditional botanical illustrations see ‘Beauty and the Bee’ below. To see how it can be combined with movies of bees in their natural habitat see ‘Flower Duet’, also below.

 

 

 


More solutions from: John Innes Centre


Website: http://www.jic.ac.uk/

Published: February 17, 2017


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