Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK and Centre for Biophotonics, Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, UK.
Centre for Biophotonics, Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, UK.
Analyst. 2016 May 10;141(10):2896-903. doi: 10.1039/c6an00392c.
Terrestrial plants are ideal sentinels of environmental pollution, due to their sedentary nature, abundance and sensitivity to atmospheric changes. However, reliable and sensitive biomarkers of exposure have hitherto been difficult to characterise. Biospectroscopy offers a novel approach to the derivation of biomarkers in the form of discrete molecular alterations detectable within a biochemical fingerprint. We investigated the application of this approach for the identification of biomarkers for pollution exposure using the common sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus) as a sentinel species. Attenuated total reflection Fourier-transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy was used to interrogate leaf tissue collected from three sites exposed to different levels of vehicle exhaust emissions. Following multivariate analysis of acquired spectra, significant biochemical alterations were detected between comparable leaves from different sites that may constitute putative biomarkers for pollution-induced stress. These included differences in carbohydrate and nucleic acid conformations, which may be indicative of sub-lethal exposure effects. We also observed several corresponding spectral alterations in both the leaves of A. pseudoplatanus exposed to ozone pollution under controlled environmental conditions and in leaves infected with the fungal pathogen Rhytisma acerinum, indicating that some stress-induced changes are conserved between different stress signatures. These similarities may be indicative of stress-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, although further work is needed to verify the precise identity of infrared biomarkers and to identify those that are specific to pollution exposure. Taken together, our data clearly demonstrate that biospectroscopy presents an effective toolkit for the utilisation of higher plants, such as A. pseudoplatanus, as sentinels of environmental pollution.
陆生植物是环境污染的理想哨兵,因为它们具有固定不动的特性、丰富的数量以及对大气变化的敏感性。然而,可靠且敏感的暴露生物标志物迄今为止一直难以确定。生物光谱学提供了一种新的方法来推导生物标志物,其形式是在生化指纹图谱中可检测到的离散分子变化。我们研究了这种方法在鉴定污染暴露的生物标志物中的应用,以常见的梧桐(Acer pseudoplatanus)作为指示物种。衰减全反射傅里叶变换红外(ATR-FTIR)光谱用于检测来自暴露在不同水平车辆尾气排放的三个地点的叶片组织。对获得的光谱进行多元分析后,在来自不同地点的可比叶片之间检测到了可能构成污染诱导应激的潜在生物标志物的显著生化变化。这些变化包括碳水化合物和核酸构象的差异,这可能表明存在亚致死暴露效应。我们还观察到在受控环境条件下暴露于臭氧污染的 A. pseudoplatanus 叶片和感染真菌病原体 Rhytisma acerinum 的叶片中存在几种相应的光谱变化,这表明不同应激特征之间存在一些应激诱导的变化是保守的。这些相似性可能表明应激诱导的活性氧(ROS)的产生,尽管需要进一步的工作来验证红外生物标志物的确切身份,并确定那些专门针对污染暴露的生物标志物。总之,我们的数据清楚地表明,生物光谱学为利用高等植物(如 A. pseudoplatanus)作为环境污染的哨兵提供了一种有效的工具包。