Record ID No. |
4264 |
Author(s) |
Rath, M., Grolig, F., Haueisen, J., Imhof, S. , 2014 |
Affiliation |
Spezielle Botanik und Mykologie, Fachbereich Biologie, Philipps-Universität Marburg, 35032 Marburg, Germany, Email: rath@biologie.uni-marburg.de |
Title |
Combining microtomy and confocal laser scanning microscopy for structural analyses of plant-fungus associations |
Source. Vol.(no):Page |
Mycorrhiza 24(4): 293-300p. |
Categories |
Mycorrhiza General |
Subjects |
Methodology |
Host |
Triticum aestivum |
Organism |
EcM (Betula pendula), AMF(Galium aparine; Polygala paniculata, Polygala rupestris), ErM (Calluna vulgaris), orchid mycorrhiza (Limodorum abortivum, Serapias parviflora), Zymoseptoria tritici |
Country |
Germany, Western Europe |
Abstracts |
The serious problem of extended tissue thickness in the analysis of plant-fungus associations was overcome using a new method that combines physical and optical sectioning of the resin-embedded sample by microtomy and confocal microscopy. Improved tissue infiltration of the fungal-specific, high molecular weight fluorescent probe wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to Alexa Fluor® 633 resulted in high fungus-specific fluorescence even in deeper tissue sections. If autofluorescence was insufficient, additional counterstaining with Calcofluor White M2R or propidium iodide was applied in order to visualise the host plant tissues. Alternatively, the non-specific fluorochrome acid fuchsine was used for rapid staining of both, the plant and the fungal cells. The intricate spatial arrangements of the plant and fungal cells were preserved by immobilization in the hydrophilic resin Unicryl™. Microtomy was used to section the resin-embedded roots or leaves until the desired plane was reached. The data sets generated by confocal laser scanning microscopy of the remaining resin stubs allowed the precise spatial reconstruction of complex structures in the plant-fungus associations of interest. This approach was successfully tested on tissues from ectomycorrhiza (Betula pendula), arbuscular mycorrhiza (Galium aparine; Polygala paniculata, Polygala rupestris), ericoid mycorrhiza (Calluna vulgaris), orchid mycorrhiza (Limodorum abortivum, Serapias parviflora) and on one leaf-fungus association (Zymoseptoria tritici on Triticum aestivum). The method provides an efficient visualisation protocol applicable with a wide range of plant-fungus symbioses |