Abstract
Common methods for plant iron determination are based on atomic absorption spectroscopy, radioactive measurements or extraction with subsequent spectrophotometry. However, accuracy is often a problem due to background, contamination and interfering compounds. We here describe a novel method for the easy determination of ferric iron in plants by chelation with a highly effective microbial siderophore and separation by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). After addition of colourless desferrioxamine E (DFE) to plant fluids, the soluble iron is trapped as a brown-red ferrioxamine E (FoxE) complex which is subsequently separated by HPLC on a reversed phase column. The formed FoxE complex can be identified due to its ligand-to-metal charge transfer band at 435 nm. Alternatively, elution of both, DFE and FoxE can be followed as separate peaks at 220 nm wavelength with characteristic retention times. The extraordinarily high stability constant of DFE with ferric iron of K = 10(32) enables extraction of iron from a variety of ferrous and ferric iron compounds and allows quantitation after separation by HPLC without interference by coloured by-products. Thus, iron bound to protein, amino acids, citrate and other organic acid ligands and even insoluble ferric hydroxides and phosphates can be solubilized in the presence desferrioxamine E. The "Ferrioxamine E method" can be applied to all kinds of plant fluids (apoplasmic, xylem, phloem, intracellular) either at physiological pH or even at acid pH values. The FoxE complex is stable down to pH 1 allowing protein removal by perchloric acid treatment and HPLC separation in the presence of trifluoroacetic acid containing eluents.
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