Begin by cutting the desired aged maize seedling at the mesocotyl tissue using a small knife or pair of scissors. Clean the seedling with a paintbrush. Then hold the wire stripper with its jaws facing the chute.
Position the chute to the selected hole and squeeze the stripper handles together. Slide the stripper away from the chute to trim the upper portion of the leaves. Use a ruler to measure the length from the primordium's tip to the chute's base.
To begin the leaf primordium imaging, hold the chute steady on a smooth surface under a stereo microscope at around 0.8x magnification. Using a razor blade or scalpel, make an initial cut slightly above the target region to discard the distal portion of the chute. Then obtain around 0.25 to 0.8 millimeter thin sections at the desired points along the length of the primordium.
Once done, mount the leaf section on a clean glass slide. Apply a few drops of water directly to the section using a pipette. And place a cover slip on top.
Apply a few more drops through the edges of the cover slip if needed. Place the slide on the epifluorescence microscope's stage and adjust the settings to visualize the fluorophore. Using this method, chance resection sampling was standardized by measuring the primordia prior to sectioning.
A trend was discovered showing that the vanishing tassel two had a wider primordia and more veins than normal, indicating that the defect in the mutant began early in the leaf development. This method also enabled the systematic examination of the expression patterns of hormone response fluorescent protein reporters in the leaf primordia.