A biosensor utilizing black platinum and carbon nanotubes developed at Purdue University will help give scientists a better understanding of how the plant hormone auxin regulates root growth and seedling establishment.
Marshall Porterfield, an associate professor of agricultural and biological engineering and biomedical engineering, created a new sensor to detect the movement of auxin along a plant's root surface in real time without damaging the plants.
The nanomaterials at the sensor's tip react with auxin and create an electrical signal that can be measured to determine the auxin concentration at a single point. The sensor oscillates, taking concentration readings at different points around a plant root. An algorithm then determines whether auxin is being released or taken in by surrounding cells.
"It is the equilibrium and transport dynamics that are important with auxin," said Porterfield, whose findings were published in the early online version of The Plant Journal.
A current focus of auxin research is understanding how this hormone regulates root growth in plants growing on sub-optimal soils. Angus Murphy, a Purdue professor of horticulture and the paper's co-author, said that worldwide pressure on land for food and energy crops drives efforts to better understand how plant roots adapt to marginal soils. Auxin is one of the major hormones involved in that adaptive growth.
"It's the key effector of these processes," Murphy said.
Although sensors using similar nanomaterials have been in use for real-time measurement of auxin levels along a root surface for several years, those earlier sensors required application of external auxin at toxic levels as part of the measurement process. Porterfield and Eric McLamore, a former Purdue postdoctoral researcher, created a new algorithm to decode the information obtained from the sensor. The algorithm processes the sensor information to show whether the hormone is moving into or out of cells. This allows the sensor to be self-referencing, eliminates the need for auxin application, and allows instantaneous and continuous measurements to be made during root growth.
Other current methods based on radioisotope tracers and auxin-responsive fluorescent proteins inserted into the plant can detect changes taking place over hours. Most auxin responses take place on a timescale of minutes.
Murphy said auxin movement is key to how plants adapt to their environments. He said that the effort to develop the sensor with Porterfield originated with the need to improve real-time measurement capability and develop a method that allows comparison with other measurements to better understand how auxin transport and other biological functions are connected.
"Using sensors like this, we can get answers that just aren't possible with existing tools," Murphy said. "Being able to measure the efflux and uptake simultaneously is really essential to a lot of ongoing work."
Murphy and Porterfield were looking for a simple model to use to test the sensor and chose an auxin transport mutant in corn. Wendy Peer, a Purdue assistant professor of horticulture and a paper co-author who studies seedling development and establishment, collaborated with Murphy in a detailed analysis of auxin transport in mutant and control corn roots using traditional methods. The information was then used to validate the sensor's functionality.
Murphy plans to continue testing on other auxin-related mutants. The National Science Foundation and the U. S. Department of Energy funded the research.
Writer: Brian Wallheimer, 765-496-2050, bwallhei@purdue.edu
Sources: Marshall Porterfield, 765-494-1190, porterf@purdue.edu
Angus Murphy, 765-496-7956, Murphy@purdue.edu
Ag Communications: (765) 494-2722;
Keith Robinson, robins89@purdue.edu
Agriculture News Page
Brian Wallheimer
bwallhei@purdue.edu
765-496-2050
Researchers have created new "microtweezers" capable of manipulating objects to build tiny structures, print coatings to make...
Read Full Story
The smallest wires ever developed in silicon - just one atom tall and four atoms wide - have been shown by a team of researchers...
Read Full Story
Researchers have shown how arrays of tiny "plasmonic nanoantennas" are able to precisely manipulate light in new ways that could...
Read Full Story
Researchers have created a new type of optical device small enough to fit millions on a computer chip that could lead to faster...
Read Full Story
Researchers from Purdue and Harvard universities have created a new type of transistor made from a material that could replace...
Read Full Story
Researchers have demonstrated a new imaging tool for tracking structures called carbon nanotubes in living cells and the bloodstream...
Read Full Story
Researchers are making progress in developing a system that measures the mechanical properties of living cells, a technology...
Read Full Story
Purdue University scientists have developed a method for stacking synthetic DNA and carbon nanotubes onto a biosensor electrode...
Read Full Story
The merging of two technologies under development - plasmonics and nanophotonics - is promising the emergence of new "quantum...
Read Full Story
A leading researcher advancing efforts in thermoelectric energy conversion at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has been...
Read Full Story
Researchers are developing a new type of computer memory that could be faster than the existing commercial memory and use far...
Read Full Story
Researchers have created and tested miniature devices that are implanted in tumors to generate oxygen, boosting the killing power...
Read Full Story
Alexandra Boltasseva, a Purdue University assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, has been named one of the...
Read Full Story
A team of Purdue University researchers is among a small group in the world that has successfully created ultrapure material...
Read Full Story
Robert and Anne Burnett Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Vlad Shalaev has been appointed as Scientific Director...
Read Full Story
Researchers are developing new technologies that combine a laser and electric fields to manipulate fluids and tiny particles...
Read Full Story
Researchers have developed a method for creating single-crystal arrays of a material called graphene, an advance that opens up...
Read Full Story
For the second consecutive year, top high school students will travel to Purdue University to participate June 5-17 in the ninth...
Read Full Story
John R. Weaver, facility manager at Purdue University's Birck Nanotechnology Center, has been named a recipient of the 2011 Monroe...
Read Full Story
The fascinating, tiny world of nanotechnology will take center stage during the second annual NanoDays on April 15 and 16 at...
Read Full Story
Researchers are developing a new type of biological and chemical sensor that has few moving parts, is low-cost and yet highly...
Read Full Story
Researchers are developing a new class of "plasmonic metamaterials" as potential building blocks for advanced optical technologies...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers have reproduced portions of the female breast in a tiny slide-sized model dubbed "breast on-a-chip"...
Read Full Story
Every Friday, Purdue Today's "Did You Know?," a new feature, will explore unusual, unique and fascinating details that make this...
Read Full Story
Researchers are creating a new type of solar cell designed to self-repair like natural photosynthetic systems in plants by using...
Read Full Story
Researchers are creating a system that harvests heat from an engine's exhaust to generate electricity, reducing a car's fuel...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University and three other U.S. universities have announced a multiyear partnership aimed at strengthening...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers have developed a new type of pump for drug-delivery patches that might use arrays of "microneedles"...
Read Full Story
A biosensor utilizing black platinum and carbon nanotubes developed at Purdue University will help give scientists a better understanding...
Read Full Story
Researchers have shown that an advanced cooling technology being developed for high-power electronics in military and automotive...
Read Full Story
Nine top Purdue University graduate students at the Birck Nanotechnology Center will form the inaugural class in the Discovery...
Read Full Story
Purdue University will lead a new research center to improve photovoltaic solar cells as part of a national effort to bring alternative...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers have developed a miniature device capable of converting ultrafast laser pulses into bursts of radio-frequency...
Read Full Story
Longtime Purdue University professor James Cooper has been named interim director of the Birck Nanotechnology Center, a Discovery...
Read Full Story
Researchers have overcome a major obstacle in efforts to use tiny structures called carbon nanotubes to create a new class of...
Read Full Story
A simulation of electrical current moving through a futuristic electronic transistor has been modeled atom-by-atom in less than...
Read Full Story
Online courses covering the fundamentals of nanotechnology will be offered beginning in 2012 by the science portal nanoHUB, the...
Read Full Story
The use of a piezoelectric element (acoustic excitation) to vibrate the base of a microcantilever is a popular way to perform...
Read Full Story
Fifty-nine Purdue University faculty, staff and students whose discoveries received patents during the 2010-2011 fiscal year...
Read Full Story
Researchers at Purdue University and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have created a device small enough...
Read Full Story
Researchers are making progress in creating digital transistors using a material called graphene, potentially sidestepping an...
Read Full Story
A new tool developed by nuclear engineers at Purdue University will be hitched to an experimental fusion reactor at Princeton...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A Purdue University biochemist has demonstrated a process using nanotechnology to better assess whether...
Read Full Story
Researchers have overcome a fundamental obstacle in developing breath-analysis technology to rapidly diagnose patients by detecting...
Read Full Story
Researchers have invented a technique that uses inexpensive paper to make "microfluidic" devices for rapid medical diagnostics...
Read Full Story
Researchers have overcome a fundamental obstacle in developing breath-analysis technology to rapidly diagnose patients by detecting...
Read Full Story
A Purdue University research team developed a nanoparticle that can hold and release an antimicrobial agent as needed for extending...
Read Full Story
Purdue University has been awarded $1.5 million to study quantum information science, a new field paving the way for quantum...
Read Full Story
Purdue University and several Colombian agencies have signed an agreement establishing the Colombia-Purdue Institute for Advanced...
Read Full Story
A new technology enabling tiny machines called micro electromechanical systems to "self-calibrate" could make possible super-accurate...
Read Full Story
Researchers have overcome a fundamental obstacle in using new "metamaterials" for radical advances in optical technologies, including...
Read Full Story
An interactive Web site called nanoHUB.org, which makes available scientific simulations, seminars, interactive courses and other...
Read Full Story
A new approach in the design of miniature, insectlike robots could lead to "microids" the size of ants that move their tiny legs...
Read Full Story