"DIRT/μ: Automated Extraction of Root Hair Traits Using Combinatorial O" by Peter Pietrzyk, Neen Phan-Udom et al.

Entomology, Department of

 

Document Type

Article

Date of this Version

9-2024

Citation

Journal of Experimental Botany (2025) 76(2): 285–298

doi: 10.1093/jxb/erae385

Comments

Copyright 2025, the authors. Open access

License: CC BY-NC 4.0

Abstract

As with phenotyping of any microscopic appendages, such as cilia or antennae, phenotyping of root hairs has been a challenge due to their complex intersecting arrangements in two-dimensional images and the technical limitations of automated measurements. Digital Imaging of Root Traits at Microscale (DIRT/μ) is a newly developed algorithm that addresses this issue by computationally resolving intersections and extracting individual root hairs from two-dimensional microscopy images. This solution enables automatic and precise trait measurements of individual root hairs. DIRT/μ rigorously defines a set of rules to resolve intersecting root hairs and minimizes a newly designed cost function to combinatorically identify each root hair in the microscopy image. As a result, DIRT/μ accurately measures traits such as root hair length distribution and root hair density, which are impractical for manual assessment. We tested DIRT/μ on three datasets to validate its performance and showcase potential applications. By measuring root hair traits in a fraction of the time manual methods require, DIRT/μ eliminates subjective biases from manual measurements. Automating individual root hair extraction accelerates phenotyping and quantifies trait variability within and among plants, creating new possibilities to characterize root hair function and their underlying genetics.

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