Imaging Tools for the Plant Sciences
A special issue of Plants (ISSN 2223-7747). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Cell Biology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 March 2022) | Viewed by 33535
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Many branches of the plant sciences require us to see our favourite organism, organ, tissue, cells and subcellular compartments in different ways. This inevitably requires development of novel imaging approaches or refinements of existing techniques, with improved ways of interpreting the data. Porting existing techniques directly from the animal and biomedical fields is not always a solution, given the extra challenges we face for our samples, such as autofluorescence, a desire for gravity and diffractive thick cell walls. We are increasingly utilising a wider range of techniques, sometimes in tandem on the same sample (correlative microscopy), giving rise to ever more complex and large datasets and sometimes requiring heavy computational approaches.
This special issue will focus on new approaches to imaging, covering a wide range of macro-, micro- and nano-related techniques applied specifically to the study of plants. Examples include (but are not limited to) fluorescence microscopy (widefield, confocal, lifetime, super-res, light sheet), light, chemical (IR/Raman/EDX mapping and chemical probes), electron (cryo, fixed, block face imaging), X-ray, mechanobiology (AFM, Brillouin, mechanical probes), sample preparation (including microfluidics) and various methods of dealing with the data (3D visualisation, segmentation, big data, correlative data).
For research articles or short communications, submissions should either be a description of a new technique with a proof-of-concept plant-related application or significant development of an existing technique that demonstrates a greater understanding of plant biology. Expertise in any area of imaging and microscopy can vary widely and a detailed methodology should not just cater to experts but be supplied in a way that can be followed and applied by an advanced beginner or proficient user, using supplementary material for further in-depth descriptions and diagrams. Full raw datasets and software tools need to be made available through a suitable repository and cited within the article.
Dr. Raymond Wightman
Guest Editor
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Light microscopy
- Fluorescence
- Confocal
- Super resolution and nanoimaging
- Electron microscopy
- Mechanobiology
- Prototype devices for imaging
- Sample preparation
- Image analysis
- Reagents
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