The newly developed measuring device consists of a film with many electrodes in it, so thin that it can follow the curvature of the plant´s lobes. It allows researchers to measure the electrical signal in the lobe. Credit: Thor Balkhed/Linköping University
What
happens inside the carnivorous plant Venus Flytrap when it catches an insect?
New technology has led to discoveries about the electrical signaling that
causes the trap to snap shut. Bioelectronic technology enables advanced
research into how plants react to their surroundings, and to stress. The work
is published in the journal Science
Advances.
Most people know that the nervous system
in humans and other animals sends electric impulses. But do plants also have electrical signals even though they lack a nervous system? Yes,
plants have electrical signals that are generated in response to touch and
stress factors, such as wounds caused by herbivores and attacks on their roots.
As opposed to animals, who can move out of the way, plants must cope with
stress factors where they grow.
"There is currently a great need
for developing plants that are more stress resistant, for us to be able to grow
food and have healthy forests also in the future. That's why it's important
that we understand how plants respond to stress, and I think that this new
technology may contribute in this area of research," says Eleni
Stavrinidou, associate professor in the Department of Science and Technology at
Linköping University, Sweden, and leader of the Electronic Plants group.
It turns out that in some plants
electrical signals are correlated with rapid movements. The carnivorous plant
Venus Flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) is used by researchers as a model system for
fast electrical signaling in plants.
The inner side of the Venus Flytrap trap has
small sensory hairs. The bending of a hair, for example by an insect, may cause
the trap to snap shut. The animals caught are then broken down by an enzyme in
the trap, and the plant absorbs the nutrients. But for the trap to close, the
sensory hairs need to be touched twice within about 30 seconds. This way, the
plant can save energy by not snapping shut every time a hair is stimulated by
things other than potential prey. Credit: Thor Balkhed/Linköping University
The inner side of the Venus Flytrap
trap has small sensory hairs. The bending of a hair, for example by an insect,
may cause the trap to snap shut. The animals caught are then broken down by an
enzyme in the trap, and the plant absorbs the nutrients. But for the trap to
close, the sensory hairs need to be touched twice within about 30 seconds. This
way, the plant can save energy by not snapping shut every time a hair is
stimulated by things other than potential prey.
Electrical signaling in living organisms is based on a difference in voltage between the inside of cells and the outside environment. This difference in voltage is created when ions, i.e. electrically charged atoms, are moved between the inside and the outside of the cell. When a signal is triggered—for instance by mechanical stimulation in the form of bending a sensory hair—ions flow very fast through the cell membrane. The rapid change in voltage gives rise to an impulse that is propagated.
Abdul Manan Dar and Eleni Stavrinidou at
Linköping University, Sweden, demonstrate how the multi-electrode array
technology can be used to examine the emergence and propagation of the
electrical signal in a Venus Flytrap. Credit: Thor Balkhed/Linköping University
The newly developed measuring device consists of a film with many electrodes in it, so thin that it can follow the curvature of the plant´s lobes. It allows researchers to measure the electrical signal in the lobe. Credit: Thor Balkhed/Linköping University
There
is ample knowledge about how nerve impulses function in humans and other
animals. But when it comes to plants, which do not have a nervous system, a lot remains to be discovered.
In their study, published in Science Advances, the researchers
demonstrate a multi-electrode array technology that is used to examine the
emergence and propagation of the electrical signal in a Venus Flytrap. This new
technology was developed by researchers at Linköping University in
collaboration with researchers from Columbia University, who use this
technology for neuroscience studies in animals.
The newly developed measuring device
consists of a very thin film with electrodes in it. As it is roughly as thin as
plastic wrap used for covering food, it follows the curvature of the outside of
the plant's lobes. The researchers poked a sensory hair and, using around 30
electrodes, measured the signal in the lobe. They also filmed the plant's
movements, to be able to correlate the electrical signal with the closure of
the Venus Flytrap.
In previous research most often only one
measuring point was used, which did not allow for pinpointing the origin of the
signal, nor its directions of propagation.
"We can now say with certainty that the electrical signal originates in the sensory hairs of the Venus Flytrap. With our technology, we can also see that the signal mainly spreads radially from the hair, without any clear direction," says Eleni Stavrinidou.
The newly developed measuring device
consists of a film with many electrodes in it, so thin that it can follow the
curvature of the plant´s lobes. It allows researchers to measure the electrical
signal in the lobe. Credit: Thor Balkhed/Linköping University
The
new measuring technology also lets the researchers discover new information.
"As we could measure signals from
the entire trap, we see that signals are sometimes spontaneous and come from
sensory hairs that were not stimulated. This is very interesting, and we don't
know yet why this happens or what the function is."
"One of the most important aspects of this study is that we show that bioelectronic technologies, which are extensively used in biomedical research, can be applied to plant physiology research as well, therefore opening possibilities for new discoveries," says Eleni Stavrinidou.
Source: Fast
electrical signals mapped in plants with new bioelectronic technology
(phys.org)
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