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Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility Geoff Fincher, Mark Tester, Bob Furbank, Murray Badger PAG 2011 LemnaTec Workshop San Diego; 18 January 2011
26

Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Mar 28, 2016

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Page 1: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping:

The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Geoff Fincher, Mark Tester, Bob Furbank,

Murray Badger

PAG 2011 LemnaTec Workshop San Diego; 18 January 2011

Page 2: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Abiotic Stress Tolerance in Australian Cereals

• Drought

• Salinity

• Frost

• Hostile soils

– nutrients at toxic levels

– nutrients at deficient levels.

Page 3: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

The key research strategies to enhanced drought and salinity tolerance

Reverse genetics Nominate candidate genes from -omics approaches, bioinformatics; measure effects of

altering levels and patterns of expression in crop and model plants Forward genetics Discover and exploit natural variation • germplasm collections, mapping populations, association panels, mutant populations,

breeding populations • positional cloning of responsible alleles • introgression into commercial lines Useful approach for complex, multi-genic traits (drought, salinity tolerance)

Page 4: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Phenotyping – overcoming

the bottleneck

Genotyping is relatively fast; genome sequencing advancing!

Phenotyping is still time consuming and labor intensive

Technological advances essential for high throughput phenotyping – robotics, non-destructive image analysis, powerful computers

Page 5: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Australian Plant Phenomics

Facility – two nodes

The Plant Accelerator™

Adelaide

Mark Tester and Geoff Fincher

High Resolution Plant Phenomics Centre

Canberra

Bob Furbank and Murray Badger

$21 m

$32 m

Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

(Commissioned January 2010)

Page 6: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

High Resolution Plant Phenomics Centre

(Canberra): Phenotyping technology

• Infra-red imaging of transpiration

• Hyperspectral imaging of C, N, phenolics

• FTIR imaging at cellular level

• Chlorophyll fluorescence imaging of photosynthesis

• Hyperspectral sensing of stress tolerance

• Validation and deployment.

Page 7: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

High Resolution Plant Phenomics Centre

Page 8: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Australian Plant Phenomics

Facility – two nodes

The Plant Accelerator™

Adelaide

Mark Tester and Geoff Fincher

High Resolution Plant Phenomics Centre

Canberra

Bob Furbank and Murray Badger

$21 m

$32 m

Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Page 9: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

The Plant Accelerator

4,485 m2 building, 2,340 m2 of greenhouses, 250 m2 for growth chambers

4 x 140 m2 fully automated ‘Smart-houses’

Plants delivered on 1.2 km of conveyors to four sets of cameras

High capacity image capture and analysis equipment

50% containment/quarantine - 50% standard glasshouse; 2x imaging stations in each

handle >100,000 plants annually in a range of conditions, automated watering

variable room/compartment sizes and independent environmental control for each room

water purification and re-cycling system.

Page 10: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility
Page 11: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility
Page 12: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility
Page 13: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

LemnaTec System

Page 14: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Image capture

Side View Side View 90° Top view

Bettina Berger Barley cv. Sahara

Page 15: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Image analysis data match with

measured phenotypic data in wheat

Rajendran et al. (2009) Plant Cell Environ 32, 237-249

• The projected shoot

area of the RBG

image gives a good

correlation with

shoot biomass

• Tested for various

plant species

– wheat, barley

– rice

– cotton

– Arabidopsis …

y = 154154x + 19065

R² = 0.9205

0

50000

100000

150000

200000

250000

300000

0 0,5 1 1,5

Pro

jecte

d s

ho

ot

are

a [

pix

el]

Dry weight [g]

Page 16: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Measuring techniques

relevant for drought and

salinity research

Colour imaging – biomass, structure, phenology

– leaf health (chlorosis, necrosis)

Near infrared imaging – tissue water content

– soil water content

Far infrared imaging – canopy/leaf temperature

Fluorescence imaging – physiological state of photosynthetic machinery

Automated weighing and watering – water usage, imposing drought/salinity conditions

Page 17: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Colour classified image

Line Green area Necrotic area % Necrosis

Sahara 30739 4232 12%

Clipper 11640 15321 57%

Treated with 100 mM GeO2, 8 d

Julie Hayes, Margie Pallotta and Tim Sutton, ACPFG

Use of colour information e.g. Ge/B toxicity screen in barley

Original image

Germanium can alleviate B toxicity: same transporter?

Page 18: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

B toxicity - leaf symptom score Ge toxicity - leaf symptoms

Jefferies et al. 1999. TAG 98, 1293-1303 Hayes et al., unpubl., using LemnaTec

QTL for Ge tolerance identified using colour imaging overlaps QTL for B tolerance

Barley Chromosome 2H

Page 19: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Clipper Vlamingh

Object properties

• minimum enclosing

rectangle

• minimum enclosing

circle

• convex hull

• compactness

e.g. wilting:

- Alters rectangle

parameters

- Increases area below

top of pot

- Increases the

rotational moment

System can quantify

morphometric parameters

Page 20: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Measured shoot dry weight [g]

Pre

dic

ted s

hoot

dry

weig

ht

[g]

Golzarian et al. (2010) Plant Methods, submitted

Estimation of shoot biomass

Improved estimate of biomass

when age of the plant is

taken into account

Y = a0 + a1×(G+B+Y)+

a2×(G+B+Y)×H

(H = number of days after seed

preparation date)

(Correction for leaf colour did

not greatly improve weight

estimates)

(Cross validation run 10x)

Page 21: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Osmotic tolerance in wheat

Mapping population of Berkut x Krichauff – Berkut – CIMMYT

– Krichauff – Australian cultivar

– Berkut higher overall tolerance despite higher tissue [Na+]

Parents – Berkut – 0.65

– Krichauff – 0.33

Range of progeny – 0.13 to 0.96

Mapped significant (21%) QTL to chromosome 1D

(day-1)

Berkut

Krichauff

Karthika Rajendran

Page 22: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

QTL mapping of osmotic tolerance

Significant QTL on chromosome 1D

QTL1D.9 explains 21% of phenotypic variation in the population

Favourable allele comes from Berkut

Chromosome 1D

Karthika Rajendran

Page 23: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Data acquisition

Data management

Image analysis

Statistical analyses

Modeling and biological interpretation

aligning phenomics data with genomics data

ontologies development.

Offsite back-up

UniSA and ACPFG established a Chair and Assoc Prof in Plant Phenomics and Bioinformatics ($1.5m)

LemnaTec Data System

FLUO

1392 x 1040

RGB

2056 x 2454

IR

320 x 256 320 x 256

NIR

Snapshot

Smarthouse database

Imaging configurations

Conveyor tasks

Watering tasks

Smarthouse operations

Around 30MB per snapshot – 72 GB per day, 0.5 TB per week

Analysis results

Page 24: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

The Plant Accelerator™ team to date

Mark Tester

Geoff Fincher

Helli Meinecke – business manager

Bettina Berger – postdoctoral scientist

James Eddes, Bogdan Masznicz, Jianfeng Li – computer programmers

Robin Hosking – horticulturalist

Richard Norrish – electrical engineer

Lidia Mischis, A.N. Other – technicians

Karthika Rajendran – PhD student

Brett Harris – Honours student

Desmond Lun, Irene Hudson, Mahmood Golzarian

– UniSA /ACPFG maths, stats

Anton van den Hengel – UA computer vision

+ three programmers in UQ to construct the database repository

www.plantaccelerator.org.au www.plantphenomics.org.au

Page 25: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Acknowledgement of funding

Adelaide Canberra

NCRIS $10 m NCRIS $5.24 m

NCRIS - ALA $0.25 m NCRIS - ALA

$0.25 m

Federal government (stimulus package)

$5 m Federal government

$5 m

South Australian government

$10 m ACT government $1.1 m

University of Adelaide $5.9 m CSIRO $5.8 m

Interest (est.) $0.41 m ANU $3.5 m

Total $31.56 m Total $20.89 m

Page 26: Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping: The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Evaluation of Next Generation Phenotyping:

The Australian Plant Phenomics Facility

Geoff Fincher, Mark Tester, Bob Furbank,

Murray Badger

PAG 2011 LemnaTec Workshop San Diego; 18 January 2011