Manual isolation of living early embryos from tobacco seeds

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Abstract

Zygotic embryogenesis is one of key processes for fertile seed development and therefore has gained great attention for decades in the field of plant developmental biology. However, this process is deeply embedded in the maternal tissues. The inaccessibility of tiny early embryos has greatly hindered the study of early embryogenesis, especially limits direct observation and accurate omics investigations. In order to investigate the molecular mechanism regulating embryo development with modern technologies, it is necessary to develop a reliable method to isolate living embryos at different stages. For this purpose, plant scientists have been trying to develop different methods for isolating zygotes and early embryos in different plants such as maize, wheat, rice, and tobacco during past decades. Nicotiana tabacum has long been considered as an ideal model eudicot for the study of embryogenesis, which displays a traceable and predictable cell division pattern, spanning from the first zygotic division to the mature embryo formation. Here, we provide a detailed protocol for isolating living embryos from zygote to cotyledon embryo. Isolated living zygotes and early embryos could be used for several important studies such as cell type-specific transcriptome construction and clear GFP observation.

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Zhao, P., Zhou, X., Shi, C., & Sun, M. xiang. (2020). Manual isolation of living early embryos from tobacco seeds. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 2122, pp. 101–111). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-0342-0_8

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