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A novel analytical approach for visualizing and tracking organic chemicals in plants.

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A novel analytical approach for visualizing and tracking organic chemicals in plants. / Wild, Edward; Dent, John; Barber, Jonathan L. et al.
In: Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 38, No. 15, 01.08.2004, p. 4195-4199.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Wild, E, Dent, J, Barber, JL, Thomas, GO & Jones, KC 2004, 'A novel analytical approach for visualizing and tracking organic chemicals in plants.', Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 38, no. 15, pp. 4195-4199. https://doi.org/10.1021/es049915u

APA

Wild, E., Dent, J., Barber, J. L., Thomas, G. O., & Jones, K. C. (2004). A novel analytical approach for visualizing and tracking organic chemicals in plants. Environmental Science and Technology, 38(15), 4195-4199. https://doi.org/10.1021/es049915u

Vancouver

Wild E, Dent J, Barber JL, Thomas GO, Jones KC. A novel analytical approach for visualizing and tracking organic chemicals in plants. Environmental Science and Technology. 2004 Aug 1;38(15):4195-4199. doi: 10.1021/es049915u

Author

Wild, Edward ; Dent, John ; Barber, Jonathan L. et al. / A novel analytical approach for visualizing and tracking organic chemicals in plants. In: Environmental Science and Technology. 2004 ; Vol. 38, No. 15. pp. 4195-4199.

Bibtex

@article{4f1b3985f2c7420a93dec403ebbbd8d9,
title = "A novel analytical approach for visualizing and tracking organic chemicals in plants.",
abstract = "Vegetation plays a key role in the environmental fate of many organic chemicals, from pesticides applied to plants, to the air−vegetation exchange and global cycling of atmospheric organic contaminants. Our ability to locate such compounds in plants has traditionally relied on inferences being made from destructive chemical extraction techniques or methods with potential artifacts. Here, for the first time, two-photon excitation microscopy (TPEM) is coupled with plant autofluorescence to visualize and track trace levels of an organic contaminant in living plant tissue, without any form of sample modification or manipulation. Anthracene−a polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)−was selected for study in living maize (Zea mays) leaves. Anthracene was tracked over 96 h, where amounts as low as 0.1−10 pg were visible, as it moved through the epicuticular wax and plant cuticle, and was observed reaching the cytoplasm of the epidermal cells. By this stage, anthracene was identifiable in five separate locations within the leaf: (1) as a thin (5 μm) diffuse layer, in the upper surface of the epicuticular wax; (2) as thick (28 μm) diffuse bands extending from the epicuticular wax through the cuticle, to the cell walls of the epidermal cells; (3) on the external surface of epidermal cell walls; (4) on the internal surface of epidermal cell walls; and (5) within the cytoplasm of the epidermal cells. This technique provides a powerful nonintrusive tool for visualizing and tracking the movement, storage locations, and degradation of organic chemicals within vegetation using only plant and compound autofluorescence. Many other applications are envisaged for TPEM, in visualizing organic chemicals within different matrixes.",
author = "Edward Wild and John Dent and Barber, {Jonathan L.} and Thomas, {Gareth O.} and Jones, {Kevin C.}",
year = "2004",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1021/es049915u",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "4195--4199",
journal = "Environmental Science and Technology",
issn = "0013-936X",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "15",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A novel analytical approach for visualizing and tracking organic chemicals in plants.

AU - Wild, Edward

AU - Dent, John

AU - Barber, Jonathan L.

AU - Thomas, Gareth O.

AU - Jones, Kevin C.

PY - 2004/8/1

Y1 - 2004/8/1

N2 - Vegetation plays a key role in the environmental fate of many organic chemicals, from pesticides applied to plants, to the air−vegetation exchange and global cycling of atmospheric organic contaminants. Our ability to locate such compounds in plants has traditionally relied on inferences being made from destructive chemical extraction techniques or methods with potential artifacts. Here, for the first time, two-photon excitation microscopy (TPEM) is coupled with plant autofluorescence to visualize and track trace levels of an organic contaminant in living plant tissue, without any form of sample modification or manipulation. Anthracene−a polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)−was selected for study in living maize (Zea mays) leaves. Anthracene was tracked over 96 h, where amounts as low as 0.1−10 pg were visible, as it moved through the epicuticular wax and plant cuticle, and was observed reaching the cytoplasm of the epidermal cells. By this stage, anthracene was identifiable in five separate locations within the leaf: (1) as a thin (5 μm) diffuse layer, in the upper surface of the epicuticular wax; (2) as thick (28 μm) diffuse bands extending from the epicuticular wax through the cuticle, to the cell walls of the epidermal cells; (3) on the external surface of epidermal cell walls; (4) on the internal surface of epidermal cell walls; and (5) within the cytoplasm of the epidermal cells. This technique provides a powerful nonintrusive tool for visualizing and tracking the movement, storage locations, and degradation of organic chemicals within vegetation using only plant and compound autofluorescence. Many other applications are envisaged for TPEM, in visualizing organic chemicals within different matrixes.

AB - Vegetation plays a key role in the environmental fate of many organic chemicals, from pesticides applied to plants, to the air−vegetation exchange and global cycling of atmospheric organic contaminants. Our ability to locate such compounds in plants has traditionally relied on inferences being made from destructive chemical extraction techniques or methods with potential artifacts. Here, for the first time, two-photon excitation microscopy (TPEM) is coupled with plant autofluorescence to visualize and track trace levels of an organic contaminant in living plant tissue, without any form of sample modification or manipulation. Anthracene−a polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)−was selected for study in living maize (Zea mays) leaves. Anthracene was tracked over 96 h, where amounts as low as 0.1−10 pg were visible, as it moved through the epicuticular wax and plant cuticle, and was observed reaching the cytoplasm of the epidermal cells. By this stage, anthracene was identifiable in five separate locations within the leaf: (1) as a thin (5 μm) diffuse layer, in the upper surface of the epicuticular wax; (2) as thick (28 μm) diffuse bands extending from the epicuticular wax through the cuticle, to the cell walls of the epidermal cells; (3) on the external surface of epidermal cell walls; (4) on the internal surface of epidermal cell walls; and (5) within the cytoplasm of the epidermal cells. This technique provides a powerful nonintrusive tool for visualizing and tracking the movement, storage locations, and degradation of organic chemicals within vegetation using only plant and compound autofluorescence. Many other applications are envisaged for TPEM, in visualizing organic chemicals within different matrixes.

U2 - 10.1021/es049915u

DO - 10.1021/es049915u

M3 - Journal article

VL - 38

SP - 4195

EP - 4199

JO - Environmental Science and Technology

JF - Environmental Science and Technology

SN - 0013-936X

IS - 15

ER -