For protoplast generation and collection of root slices, maize seeds were incubated in 3% (v/v) sodium hypochlorite for 8 min to sterilize the seeds. Then, seeds were then transferred to a sheet of wetted heavy-weight germination paper, rolled and covered with aluminum foil to prevent roots from exposure to direct light. Rolled paper was placed in a 2-gallon plastic container with at least 500ml of tap water and kept inside a Percival high light chamber for 7 days with a dark-light cycle of 16 hr light at 27ºC and 8hr dark at 24ºC and 50% humidity (also see https://currentprotocols.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/cppb.20072). For plant propagation and crosses, maize plants were grown inside a greenhouse with controlled light and temperature under a 16 hr light at 28oC and 8hr dark at 22oC for 3 months. Setaria seeds were sterilized as described before and germinated on square plates containing 0.5X Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium. Plates were kept in a Percival high light chamber for 14 days with a dark-light cycle of 16 hr light at 27ºC and 8hr dark at 24ºC and 50% humidity until collection of root tissue for microscopic analyses. Setaria plants used for seed bulking and genetic crosses were grown in a walk-in chamber exposed to the same light/dark cycle and temperature as described above. All non-transgenic plants were Zea mays B73 background.
Sequencing platform
Library concentration was determined by quantitative PCR (qPCR) and sequenced with an Illumina NextSeq 550 platform using a 1x150 high-output configuration for replicate 1-3 (2 libraires per chips) or a Novaseq 6000 chip SP V2.5, 1x100 high-output for replicates 4-9 (4 libraries per chip)
Readers should cite both the Bio-protocol preprint and the original research article where this protocol was used:
Birnbaum, K and Ortiz-Ramírez, C(2025). Plant growth Conditions. Bio-protocol Preprint. bio-protocol.org/prep2808.
Ortiz-Ramírez, C., Guillotin, B., Xu, X., Rahni, R., Zhang, S., Yan, Z., Araujo, P. C. D., Demesa-Arevalo, E., Lee, L., Eck, J. V., Gingeras, T. R., Jackson, D., Gallagher, K. L. and Birnbaum, K. D.(2021). Ground tissue circuitry regulates organ complexity in maize and Setaria. Science 374(6572). DOI: 10.1126/science.abj2327
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