Issue 34, 2019

Fluoro-electrochemical microscopy reveals group specific differential susceptibility of phytoplankton towards oxidative damage

Abstract

In the vicinity of an electrode creating a highly oxidising environment the fluorescence – arising from the presence of chlorophyll-a – of single cellular phytoplankton becomes inhibited. Even for phytoplankton that are very comparable in size (ca. 2–20 μm) the rate of this (electro)chemically induced fluorescence inhibition differs significantly between phytoplankton species; the fluorescence signal of the freshwater algae Stichococcus bacillaris turns off ∼70 times faster than that of the marine coccolithophore Emiliana huxleyi. The varying behaviour reflects the differing susceptibility of these globally important phytoplankton species towards extreme levels of radical induced oxidative stress, indicating the physical and chemical properties of the plankton cell wall and membrane are very different between species, and are important in determining their susceptibility. These results have potential implications for the analytical detection and characterisation of phytoplankton cells in the natural environment.

Graphical abstract: Fluoro-electrochemical microscopy reveals group specific differential susceptibility of phytoplankton towards oxidative damage

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
03 Jun 2019
Accepted
11 Jul 2019
First published
16 Jul 2019
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2019,10, 7988-7993

Fluoro-electrochemical microscopy reveals group specific differential susceptibility of phytoplankton towards oxidative damage

M. Yang, C. Batchelor-McAuley, L. Chen, Y. Guo, Q. Zhang, R. E. M. Rickaby, H. A. Bouman and R. G. Compton, Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 7988 DOI: 10.1039/C9SC02699A

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