Questions in developmental biology are most frequently addressed by using fluorescent markers of otherwise invisible cell states. In plants, such questions can be addressed most conveniently in leaves. Indeed, from the formation of stomata and trichomes within the leaf epidermis to that of vein networks deep into the leaf inner tissue, leaf cells and tissues differentiate anew during the development of each leaf. Moreover, leaves are produced in abundance and are easily accessible to visualization and perturbation. Yet a detailed procedure for the perturbation, dissection, mounting, and imaging of developing leaves has not been described. Here we address this limitation (1) by providing robust, step‐by‐step protocols for the local application of the plant hormone auxin to developing leaves and for the routine dissection and mounting of leaves and leaf primordia, and (2) by offering practical guidelines for the optimization of imaging parameters for confocal microscopy. We describe the procedure for the first leaves of Arabidopsis, but the same approach can be easily applied to other leaves of Arabidopsis or to leaves of other plants. © 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Support Protocol 1: Preparation of plant growth medium
Support Protocol 2: Preparation of growth medium plates
Basic Protocol 1: Seed sterilization, sowing, and germination, and seedling growth
Support Protocol 3: Preparation of IAA–lanolin paste
Basic Protocol 2: Application of IAA–lanolin paste to 3.5‐DAG first leaves
Basic Protocol 3: Dissection of 3‐ to 6‐DAG first leaves and leaf primordia
Basic Protocol 4: Dissection of 1‐ and 2‐DAG first‐leaf primordia
Basic Protocol 5: Mounting of dissected leaves and leaf primordia
Support Protocol 4: Quality check of mounted leaves and leaf primordia by fluorescence microscopy
Basic Protocol 6: Imaging of mounted leaves and leaf primordia by confocal microscopy