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DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2818.2009.03224.x
OpenAccess: Closed
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Towards correlative imaging of plant cortical microtubule arrays: combining ultrastructure with real‐time microtubule dynamics

Deborah Barton,John Gardiner,Robyn L. Overall

Microtubule
Cytoskeleton
Live cell imaging
2009
Summary There are a variety of microscope technologies available to image plant cortical microtubule arrays. These can be applied specifically to investigate direct questions relating to array function, ultrastructure or dynamics. Immunocytochemistry combined with confocal laser scanning microscopy provides low resolution “snapshots” of cortical microtubule arrays at the time of fixation whereas live cell imaging of fluorescent fusion proteins highlights the dynamic characteristics of the arrays. High‐resolution scanning electron microscopy provides surface detail about the individual microtubules that form cortical microtubule arrays and can also resolve cellulose microfibrils that form the innermost layer of the cell wall. Transmission electron microscopy of the arrays in cross section can be used to examine links between microtubules and the plasma membrane and, combined with electron tomography, has the potential to provide a complete picture of how individual microtubules are spatially organized within the cortical cytoplasm. Combining these high‐resolution imaging techniques with the expression of fluorescent cytoskeletal fusion proteins in live cells using correlative microscopy procedures will usher in an radical change in our understanding of the molecular dynamics that underpin the organization and function of the cytoskeleton.
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    Towards correlative imaging of plant cortical microtubule arrays: combining ultrastructure with real‐time microtubule dynamics” is a paper by Deborah Barton John Gardiner Robyn L. Overall published in 2009. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.