Uptake of a fluorescent dye as a swift and simple indicator of organelle intactness: Import-competent chloroplasts from soil-grown Arabidopsis

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Abstract

We developed a rapid and reliable technique for specifically staining intact chloroplasts using the fluorescent dye carboxyfluorescein diacetate. Intact, import-competent chloroplasts were isolated simply and rapidly from soil-grown Arabidopsis thaliana plants, with yields of 20 ± 5 μg chlorophyll per g FW, greater than previously reported yields from soil-grown Arabidopsis. Traditional chloroplast isolation buffers sometimes contain low concentrations (<10 mM) sodium ascorbate as a general-purpose anti-oxidant, but we found that only Arabidopsis chloroplasts isolated in the presence of high concentrations (50-100 mM) of sodium ascorbate in the initial grinding buffer were import-competent.

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Schulz, A., Knoetzel, J., Scheller, H. V., & Mant, A. (2004). Uptake of a fluorescent dye as a swift and simple indicator of organelle intactness: Import-competent chloroplasts from soil-grown Arabidopsis. Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, 52(5), 701–704. https://doi.org/10.1177/002215540405200514

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