1 research outputs found
Imaging Nutrient Distribution in the Rhizosphere Using FTIR Imaging
Symbiotic
associations in the rhizosphere between plants and microorganisms
lead to efficient changes in the distribution of nutrients that promote
growth and development for each organism involved. Understanding these
nutrient fluxes provides insight into the molecular dynamics involved
in nutrient transport from one organism to the other. To study such
a nutrient flow, a new application of Fourier transform infrared imaging
(FTIRI) was developed that entailed growing <i>Populus tremulodes</i> seedlings on a thin, nutrient-enriched Phytagel matrix that allows
pixel to pixel measurement of the distribution of nutrients, in particular,
nitrate, in the rhizosphere. The FTIR spectra collected from ammonium
nitrate in the matrix indicated the greatest changes in the spectra
at 1340 cm<sup>–1</sup> due to the asymmetric stretching vibrations
of nitrate. For quantification of the nitrate concentration in the
rhizosphere of experimental plants, a calibration curve was generated
that gave the nitrate concentration at each pixel in the chemical
image. These images of the poplar rhizosphere showed evidence for
symbiotic sharing of nutrients between the plant and the fungi, <i>Laccaria bicolor</i>, where the nitrate concentration was five
times higher near mycorrhizal roots than further out into the rhizosphere.
This suggested that nitrates are acquired and transported from the
media toward the plant root by the fungi. Similarly, the sucrose used
in the growth media as a carbon source was depleted around the fungi,
suggesting its uptake and consumption by the system. This study is
the first of its kind to visualize and quantify the nutrient availability
associated with mycorrhizal interactions, indicating that FTIRI has
the ability to monitor nutrient changes with other microorganisms
in the rhizosphere as a key step for understanding nutrient flow processes
in more diverse biological systems