How tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum ) BY-2 cells cope with Eu(III) - a microspectroscopic study.
Max KlotzscheManja VogelSusanne SachsJohannes RaffThorsten StumpfBjörn DrobotRobin SteudtnerPublished in: The Analyst (2023)
The extensive use of lanthanides in science, industry and high-technology products is accompanied by an anthropogenic input of rare earth elements into the environment. Knowledge of a metal's environmental fate is essential for reasonable risk assessment and remediation approaches. In the present study, Eu(III) was representatively used as a luminescent probe to study the chemical environment and to elucidate the molecular interactions of lanthanides with a suspension cell culture of Nicotiana tabacum BY-2. Biochemical methods were combined with luminescence spectroscopy, two-dimensional microspectroscopic mappings, and data deconvolution methods to resolve the bioassociation behavior and spatial distribution of Eu(III) in plant cells. BY-2 cells were found to gradually take up the metal after exposure to 100 μM Eu(III) without significant loss of viability. Time-resolved luminescence measurements were used to specify the occurrence of Eu(III) species as a function of time, revealing the transformation of an initial Eu(III) species into another after 24 h exposure. Chemical microscopy and subsequent iterative factor analysis reveal the presence of four distinct Eu(III) species located at different cellular compartments, e.g. , the cell nucleus, nucleolus and cell walls, which could be assigned to intracellular binding motifs. In addition, a special type of bioaccumulation occurs through the formation of a Eu(III)-containing oxalate biomineral, which is already formed within the first 24 hours after metal exposure. Oxalate crystals were also obtained in analogous experiments with Gd and Sm. These results indicate that tobacco BY-2 cells induce the precipitation of metal oxalate biominerals for detoxification of lanthanides, although they also bind to other cellular ligands at the same time.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- risk assessment
- cell cycle arrest
- quantum dots
- single cell
- cell death
- public health
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- heavy metals
- machine learning
- pi k akt
- magnetic resonance
- genome wide
- gene expression
- stem cells
- cell proliferation
- transcription factor
- reactive oxygen species
- bone marrow
- high speed
- artificial intelligence
- electronic health record
- living cells
- drinking water
- cell wall
- dual energy