We describe the development and utilization of a new imaging technology for plant biology, optical coherence microscopy (OCM), which allows true in vivo visualization of plants and plant cells. This novel technology allows the direct, in situ (e.g. plants in soil), three-dimensional visualization of cells and events in shoot tissues without causing damage. With OCM we can image cells or groups of cells that are up to 1 mm deep in living tissues, resolving structures less than 5 m in size, with a typical collection time of 5 to 6 min. OCM measures the inherent light-scattering properties of biological tissues and cells. These optical properties vary and provide endogenous developmental markers. Singly scattered photons from small (e.g. 5 ϫ 5 ϫ 10 m) volume elements (voxels) are collected, assembled, and quantitatively false-colored to form a threedimensional image. These images can be cropped or sliced in any plane. Adjusting the colors and opacities assigned to voxels allows us to enhance different features within the tissues and cells. We show that light-scattering properties are the greatest in regions of the Arabidopsis shoot undergoing developmental processes. In large cells, high light scattering is produced from nuclei, intermediate light scatter is produced from cytoplasm, and little if any light scattering originates from the vacuole and cell wall. OCM allows the rapid, repetitive, non-destructive collection of quantitative data about inherent properties of cells, so it provides a means of continuously monitoring plants and plant cells during development and in response to exogenous stimuli.Studies in plant physiology and development characteristically follow changes in space and time that occur as part of normal plant activity or in response to exogenous stimuli. Typical studies require the destruction and analysis of a plant or a tissue sample, followed by the collection and analysis of a second distinct plant or sample. Thus, biological responses or changes are inferred by comparing different plants or samples. Such approaches have been used for centuries and have produced a great deal of knowledge. However, when scientists are able to nondestructively follow biological changes, important concepts and insights have emerged. For example, critical genes involved in programmed cell death were found in Caenorhabditis elegans partially because the developing nematode is nearly transparent, allowing the fate of each cell to be followed in vivo by light microscopy (Gilbert, 1998). Similarly, an elegant fate map for Arabidopsis roots was constructed because the relatively transparent roots allow changes in individual plants to be followed continuously (Dolan et al., 1993). This study led to new discoveries such as the presence of downward communication between mature root cells and the root apical meristem and short-range control of differentiation signals (van den Berg et al., 1997a(van den Berg et al., , 1997b.Except for the relatively transparent Arabidopsis root, plants provide a challenge for in vivo an...
SummaryAchieving the ability to non-destructively, non-invasively examine subsurface features of living multicellular organisms at a microscopic level is currently a challenge for biologists. Optical coherence microscopy (OCM) is a new photonicsbased technology that can be used to address this challenge. OCM takes advantage of refractive properties of biological molecules to generate three-dimensional images that can be viewed with a computer. We describe new data processing techniques and a different visualization algorithm that substantially improve OCM images. We have applied OCM imaging, in conjunction with these improvements, to a variety of structures of plants, including leaves, flowers, ovules and germinating seeds, and describe the visualization of cellular and subcellular structures within intact plants. We present evidence, based on detailed examination of our OCM images, comparisons to classical plant anatomy studies, and current knowledge of light scattering by cells and their components, that we can distinguish nuclei, organelles and vacuoles. Detailed examination of vascular tissue, which contains cells with elaborate wall structure, shows that cell walls produce no significant OCM signal. These improvements to the visualization process, together with the powerful non-invasive, nondestructive aspects of the technology, will broaden the application of OCM to questions in studies of plants as well as animals.
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