Abstract

BackgroundIn order to better understand and improve the mode of action of agrochemicals, it is useful to be able to visualize their uptake and distribution in vivo, non-invasively and, ideally, in the field. Here we explore the potential of plant autofluorescence (specifically chlorophyll fluorescence) to provide a readout of herbicide action across the scales utilising multiphoton-excited fluorescence lifetime imaging, wide-field single-photon excited fluorescence lifetime imaging and single point fluorescence lifetime measurements via a fibre-optic probe.ResultsOur studies indicate that changes in chlorophyll fluorescence lifetime can be utilised as an indirect readout of a photosystem II inhibiting herbicide activity in living plant leaves at three different scales: cellular (~μm), single point (~1 mm2) and macroscopic (~8 × 6 mm2 of a leaf). Multiphoton excited fluorescence lifetime imaging of Triticum aestivum leaves indicated that there is an increase in the spatially averaged chlorophyll fluorescence lifetime of leaves treated with Flagon EC—a photosystem II inhibiting herbicide. The untreated leaf exhibited an average lifetime of 560 ± 30 ps while the leaf imaged 2 h post treatment exhibited an increased lifetime of 2000 ± 440 ps in different fields of view. The results from in vivo wide-field single-photon excited fluorescence lifetime imaging excited at 440 nm indicated an increase in chlorophyll fluorescence lifetime from 521 ps in an untreated leaf to 1000 ps, just 3 min after treating the same leaf with Flagon EC, and to 2150 ps after 27 min. In vivo single point fluorescence lifetime measurements demonstrated a similar increase in chlorophyll fluorescence lifetime. Untreated leaf presented a fluorescence lifetime of 435 ps in the 440 nm excited chlorophyll channel, CH4 (620–710 nm). In the first 5 min after treatment, mean fluorescence lifetime is observed to have increased to 1 ns and then to 1.3 ns after 60 min. For all these in vivo plant autofluorescence lifetime measurements, the plants were not dark-adapted.ConclusionsWe demonstrate that the local impact of a photosystem II herbicide on living plant leaves can be conveniently mapped in space and time via changes in autofluorescence lifetime, which we attribute to changes in chlorophyll fluorescence. Using portable fibre-optic probe instrumentation originally designed for label-free biomedical applications, this capability could be deployed outside the laboratory for monitoring the distribution of herbicides in growing plants.

Highlights

  • In order to better understand and improve the mode of action of agrochemicals, it is useful to be able to visualize their uptake and distribution in vivo, non-invasively and, ideally, in the field

  • In order to show that fluorescence from Flagon EC400 is small compared to that from the Triticum aestivum leaf when using fluorescence excitation at 440 nm, the two emission spectra were scaled according to the measurements of their relative emission intensities using the multispectral point-probe spectrofluorometer, see Fig. 5

  • Imaging of treated (Flagon EC 400) and untreated plant leaves was performed in situ using time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC) on the Leica SP5 multiphoton system with a detection spectral band from 600 to 730 nm and implemented with leaf samples from the same plant fixed to a microscope slide

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Summary

Introduction

In order to better understand and improve the mode of action of agrochemicals, it is useful to be able to visualize their uptake and distribution in vivo, non-invasively and, ideally, in the field. Any physical or chemical perturbation to the natural state of a plant can result in stress, potentially triggering various reflex mechanisms that could lead to incorrect inferences [4] and such measurements can fail to report the true spatio-temporal distribution and interaction of agrochemicals. Analytical methods such as radiolabelling [5] can provide highly specific information on herbicide metabolism and over all absorption rates, but do not offer spatially resolved herbicide distribution data. We demonstrate this approach using fluorescence lifetime imaging of chlorophyll to map the local action of a PS II inhibiting herbicide

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