Abstract

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are ubiquitous on earth and drive numerous redox-centered biogeochemical processes. The rhizosphere of wetland plants is a highly dynamic interface for the exchange of oxygen and electrons, presenting the basis of the precedent for ROS production, yet whether extracellular ROS are produced in the rhizosphere remains unknown. Here, we designed a microfluidic chip setup to detect in-situ ROS productions in the rhizosphere of rice with spatial and temporal resolutions. Fluorescence imaging clearly displayed the hot spots of ROS generation in the rhizosphere. The formation concentration of the hydroxyl radical (•OH, a representative ROS, 10-6 M) was comparable to those by the classical photochemical route (10-6-10-7 M) in aquatic systems, therefore highlighting the rhizosphere as an unrecognized hotspot for ROS production. Moreover, the rhizosphere ROS production exhibits diel fluctuation, which simultaneously fluctuated with dissolved oxygen, redox potential, and pH, all driven by radial oxygen loss near the root in the daytime. The production and diel fluctuation of ROS were confirmed in the rhizosphere of rice root incubated in natural soils. We demonstrated that the extracellular ROS production was triggered by the interplay between root-released oxygen and microbial respiration released extracellular electrons, while iron mineral and organic matter might play key roles in storing and shuttling electrons. Our results highlight the rhizosphere as a widespread but previously unappreciated hotspot for ROS production, which may affect pollutant redox dynamics and biogeochemical processes in soils.

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