Seeing the Whole Conversation
When a caterpillar chews a leaf or drought parches the soil, plants do not suffer in silence. Chemical alarms race through their tissues, coordinating defensive responses across organs that can be meters apart. Until now, scientists could only eavesdrop on fragments of this internal dialogue because conventional microscopes are too small to image an entire adult plant at once.
A collaboration between the Universita degli Studi di Milano and Politecnico di Milano has changed that. Their new imaging platform, MAPPI (MAcro Plant Projection Imaging), can visualize stress signals in leaves, stems, and roots simultaneously and in real time. The work, published in Science Advances, reveals a communication network far more complex than researchers had assumed.
How MAPPI Works
Lead researcher Alex Costa, a plant physiologist at the University of Milan, describes MAPPI as a macro-scale fluorescence microscope with a twist. The system uses perpendicular double vision, two camera angles that capture different parts of the plant at the same time, while fluorescent biosensors engineered into the plant report the concentration of signaling molecules.
The platform tracks two key messengers: calcium ions, which spike during rapid alarm responses, and glutamate, an amino acid that acts as a long-distance signal carrier much as it does in animal nervous systems. By watching both molecules move through the plant, MAPPI paints a dynamic picture of organ-to-organ communication that static snapshots could never reveal.
Crucially, MAPPI is modular, inexpensive, and open source. Study coordinator Andrea Bassi at Politecnico di Milano designed the hardware so that any lab with basic optics equipment can replicate it. The system accommodates plants approaching greenhouse size, removing the artificial constraint of working only with tiny seedlings under a conventional microscope.







