Microautoradiography of water-soluble compounds in plant tissue after freeze-drying and pressure infiltration with epoxy resin
- PMID: 16662542
- PMCID: PMC1067196
- DOI: 10.1104/pp.70.2.606
Microautoradiography of water-soluble compounds in plant tissue after freeze-drying and pressure infiltration with epoxy resin
Abstract
It is difficult to retain and localize radioactive, water-soluble compounds within plant cells. Existing techniques retain water-soluble compounds with varying rates of efficiency and are limited to processing only a few samples at one time. We developed a modified pressure infiltration technique for the preparation of microautoradiographs of (14)C-labeled, water-soluble compounds in plant tissue. Samples from cottonwood (Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marsh.) labeled with (14)C were excised, quick frozen in liquid N(2), freeze-dried at -50 degrees C, and pressure-infiltrated with epoxy resin without intermediate solvents or prolonged incubation times. The technique facilitates the mass processing of samples for microautoradiography, gives good cellular retention of labeled water-soluble compounds, and is highly reproducible.
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