Summary of ssbd-repos-000474

Name
URL
DOI

Title
Near-infrared imaging of phytochrome-derived autofluorescence in plant nuclei
Description

Capturing images of the nuclear dynamics within live cells is an essential technique for comprehending the intricate biological processes inherent to plant cell nuclei. While various methods exist for imaging nuclei, including combining fluorescent proteins and dyes with microscopy, there is a dearth of commercially available dyes for live-cell imaging. In Arabidopsis thaliana, we discovered that nuclei emit autofluorescence in the near-infrared (NIR) range of the spectrum and devised a non-invasive technique for the visualization of live cell nuclei using this inherent NIR autofluorescence. Our studies demonstrated the capability of the NIR imaging technique to visualize the dynamic behavior of nuclei within primary roots, root hairs, and pollen tubes, which are tissues that harbor a limited number of other organelles displaying autofluorescence. We further demonstrated the applicability of NIR autofluorescence imaging in various other tissues by incorporating fluorescence lifetime imaging techniques. Nuclear autofluorescence was also detected across a wide range of plant species, enabling analyses without the need for transformation. The nuclear autofluorescence in the NIR wavelength range was not observed in animal or yeast cells. Genetic analysis revealed that this autofluorescence was caused by the phytochrome protein. Our studies demonstrated that nuclear autofluorescence imaging can be effectively employed not only in model plants but also for studying nuclei in non-model plant species.

Submited Date
2025-09-29
Release Date
2025-10-10
Updated Date
-
License
Funding information
-
File formats
.czi, .tif
Data size
3.6 GB

Organism
Arabidopsis thaliana (NCBI:txid3702), Oryza sativa Japonica Group (NCBI:txid39947), Nicotiana benthamiana (NCBI:txid4100), Allium cepa (NCBI:txid4679), Nicotiana tabacum (NCBI:txid4097), Cardamine hirsute (NCBI:txid50463), Capsella bursa-pastoris (NCBI:txid3719), Eruca vesicaria subsp. sativa (NCBI:txid29727), Daucus carota subsp. sativus (NCBI:txid79200), Coriandrum sativum (NCBI:txid4047), Spinacia oleacea, Cucumis sativus (NCBI:txid3659), Allium fistulosum (NCBI:txid35875)
Strain
-
Cell Line
-
Genes
-
Proteins
-

GO Molecular Function (MF)
-
GO Biological Process (BP)
-
GO Cellular Component (CC)
-
Study Type
-
Imaging Methods
-

Method Summary
-
Related paper(s)

Akira Yoshinari, Reika Isoda, Noriyoshi Yagi, Yoshikatsu Sato, Jelmer J Lindeboom, David W Ehrhardt, Wolf B Frommer, Masayoshi Nakamura (2024) Near-infrared imaging of phytochrome-derived autofluorescence in plant nuclei., The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology

Published in 2024 Mar 20 (Electronic publication in March 20, 2024, midnight )

(Abstract) Capturing images of the nuclear dynamics within live cells is an essential technique for comprehending the intricate biological processes inherent to plant cell nuclei. While various methods exist for imaging nuclei, including combining fluorescent proteins and dyes with microscopy, there is a dearth of commercially available dyes for live-cell imaging. In Arabidopsis thaliana, we discovered that nuclei emit autofluorescence in the near-infrared (NIR) range of the spectrum and devised a non-invasive technique for the visualization of live cell nuclei using this inherent NIR autofluorescence. Our studies demonstrated the capability of the NIR imaging technique to visualize the dynamic behavior of nuclei within primary roots, root hairs, and pollen tubes, which are tissues that harbor a limited number of other organelles displaying autofluorescence. We further demonstrated the applicability of NIR autofluorescence imaging in various other tissues by incorporating fluorescence lifetime imaging techniques. Nuclear autofluorescence was also detected across a wide range of plant species, enabling analyses without the need for transformation. The nuclear autofluorescence in the NIR wavelength range was not observed in animal or yeast cells. Genetic analysis revealed that this autofluorescence was caused by the phytochrome protein. Our studies demonstrated that nuclear autofluorescence imaging can be effectively employed not only in model plants but also for studying nuclei in non-model plant species.

Contact(s)
Akira Yoshinari, Masayoshi Nakamura
Organization(s)
Nagoya University , Institute of Transformative Bio-Molecules (WPI-ITbM)
Image Data Contributors
Akira Yoshinari, Masayoshi Nakamura, Reika Isoda, Yoshikatsu Sato
Quantitative Data Contributors
Akira Yoshinari, Masayoshi Nakamura

Download files
Download zipped files