MultipleXLab: A high-throughput portable live-imaging root phenotyping platform using deep learning and computer vision

by Vinicius Lube, Mehmet Alican Noyan, Alexander Przybysz, Khaled Salama, Ikram Blilou
Open Access Year: 2022 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13007-022-00864-4

Bibliography

Lube, V., Noyan, M.A., Przybysz, A. et al. MultipleXLab: A high-throughput portable live-imaging root phenotyping platform using deep learning and computer vision. Plant Methods 18, 38 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13007-022-00864-4

Abstract

Background

Profiling the plant root architecture is vital for selecting resilient crops that can efficiently take up water and nutrients. The high-performance imaging tools available to study root-growth dynamics with the optimal resolution are costly and stationary. In addition, performing nondestructive high-throughput phenotyping to extract the structural and morphological features of roots remains challenging.

Results

We developed the MultipleXLab: a modular, mobile, and cost-effective setup to tackle these limitations. The system can continuously monitor thousands of seeds from germination to root development based on a conventional camera attached to a motorized multiaxis-rotational stage and custom-built 3D-printed plate holder with integrated light-emitting diode lighting. We also developed an image segmentation model based on deep learning that allows the users to analyze the data automatically. We tested the MultipleXLab to monitor seed germination and root growth of Arabidopsis developmental, cell cycle, and auxin transport mutants non-invasively at high-throughput and showed that the system provides robust data and allows precise evaluation of germination index and hourly growth rate between mutants.

Conclusion

MultipleXLab provides a flexible and user-friendly root phenotyping platform that is an attractive mobile alternative to high-end imaging platforms and stationary growth chambers. It can be used in numerous applications by plant biologists, the seed industry, crop scientists, and breeding companies.

Keywords

Phenomics Optical microscopy Phenotyping RSA