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Method Article
* Wspomniani autorzy wnieśli do projektu równy wkład.
This work presents a protocol for establishing a cell suspension culture derived from tea (Camellia sinensis L.) leaves that can be used to study the metabolism of external compounds that can be taken up by the whole plant, such as insecticides.
A platform for studying insecticide metabolism using in vitro tissues of tea plant was developed. Leaves from sterile tea plantlets were induced to form loose callus on Murashige and Skoog (MS) basal media with the plant hormones 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D, 1.0 mg L-1) and kinetin (KT, 0.1 mg L-1). Callus formed after 3 or 4 rounds of subculturing, each lasting 28 days. Loose callus (about 3 g) was then inoculated into B5 liquid media containing the same plant hormones and was cultured in a shaking incubator (120 rpm) in the dark at 25 ± 1 °C. After 3−4 subcultures, a cell suspension derived from tea leaf was established at a subculture ratio ranging between 1:1 and 1:2 (suspension mother liquid: fresh medium). Using this platform, six insecticides (5 µg mL-1 each thiamethoxam, imidacloprid, acetamiprid, imidaclothiz, dimethoate, and omethoate) were added into the tea leaf-derived cell suspension culture. The metabolism of the insecticides was tracked using liquid chromatography and gas chromatography. To validate the usefulness of the tea cell suspension culture, the metabolites of thiamethoxan and dimethoate present in treated cell cultures and intact plants were compared using mass spectrometry. In treated tea cell cultures, seven metabolites of thiamethoxan and two metabolites of dimethoate were found, while in treated intact plants, only two metabolites of thiamethoxam and one of dimethoate were found. The use of a cell suspension simplified the metabolic analysis compared to the use of intact tea plants, especially for a difficult matrix such as tea.
Tea is one of the most widely consumed non-alcoholic beverages in the world1,2. Tea is produced from the leaves and buds of the woody perennial Camellia sinensis L. Tea plants are grown in vast plantations and are susceptible to numerous insect pests3,4. Organophosphorus and neonicotinoid insecticides are often used as systemic insecticides5 to protect tea plants from pests such as whiteflies, leaf hoppers, and some lepidopteran species6,7. After application, these insecticides are absorbed or translocated into the plant. Within the plant, these systemic insecticides may be transformed through hydrolysis, oxidation or reduction reactions by plant enzymes. These transformation products can be more polar and less toxic than the parent compounds. However, for some organophosphates, the bioactivities of some products are higher. For example, acephate is metabolized into the more toxic methamidophos8,9, and dimethoate into omethoate10,11. Plant metabolic studies are thus important for determining the fate of a pesticide within a plant12.
Plant tissue cultures have been proven to be a useful platform for investigating the pesticide metabolism, with the identified metabolites similar to those found in intact plants13,14,15. The use of tissue cultures, particularly cell suspension cultures, has several advantages. Firstly, experiments can be carried out free of microorganisms, thus avoiding the interference of pesticide transformation or degradation by microbes. Secondly, tissue culture provides consistent materials for use at any time. Thirdly, the metabolites are easier to extract from tissue cultures than from intact plants, and tissue cultures often have fewer interring compounds and lower complexity of compounds. Finally, tissue cultures can more easily be used to compare a series of pesticides metabolism in a single experiment16.
In this study, a cell suspension derived from the leaves of sterile-grown tea plantlet was successfully established. The tea cell suspension culture was then used to compare the dissipation behaviors of six systemic insecticides.
This detailed protocol is intended to provide some guidance so that researchers can establish a plant tissue culture platform useful for studying the metabolic fate of xenobiotics in tea.
1. Tea callus culture
NOTE: Sterile leaves were derived from in vitro-grown plantlet lines first developed in the research group17. All procedures up to section 5 were carried out in a sterile laminar flow hood, except for the culture time in an incubator.
2. Tea cell suspension culture
3. Triphenyl tetrazolium chloride assay of cell viability
4. Treatment and sampling of tea cell suspension cultures with insecticides
5. Sample preparation of intact tea plant with insecticides
NOTE: The intact tea plant trial was conducted in a hydroponic system using tea seedlings grown in 50 mL of a nutrient solution (30 NH4+, 10 NO3-, 3.1 PO4-, 40 K+, 20 Ca2+, 25 Mg2+, 0.35 Fe2+, 0.1 B3+, 1.0 Mn2+, 0.1 Zn2+, 0.025 Cu2+, 0.05 Mo+, and 10 Al3+, in mg L-1)18. An experimental greenhouse was under a light-dark cycle (12 h of light and 12 h of darkness) at 20 °C at Anhui Agricultural University.
6. Instrument analysis
The induction of callus from leaves harvested from field-grown tea trees and from leaves excised from tea plantlets grown in vitro in a sterile environment was compared by measuring contamination, browning, and induction after 28 days of cultivation on MS media (Figure 1A). Callus growth was recorded at 20, 37, 62 and 90 days of culture (Figure 1B). The callus derived from the in vitro-grown leaves showed more vigorous growth tha...
This article presents the detailed process of establishing a model of pesticide metabolism in tea plant tissue, including the selection of explants, the determination of cell viability, and the establishment of a tea cell suspension culture with high metabolic activity. Any parts of a plant tissue could be used to initiate callus in a sterilized environment25. Tea leaves were chosen for callus initiation in this study, not only because leaves to tend to be less contaminated than the parts below gr...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by the National Key Research & Development Program (2016YFD0200900) of China, the National Natural Scientific Foundation of China (No. 31772076 and No. 31270728), China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2018M630700), and Open Fund of State Key Laboratory of Tea Plant Biology and Utilization (SKLTOF20180111).
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Acetamiprid (99.8%) | Dr. Ehrenstorfer | 46717 | CAS No: 135410-20-7 |
Acetonitrile (CAN, 99.9%) | Tedia | AS1122-801 | CAS No: 75-05-8 |
Agar | Solarbio Science & Technology | A8190 | CAS No: 9002-18-0 |
Clothianidin (99.8%) | Dr. Ehrenstorfer | 525 | CAS No: 210880-92-5 |
Dimethoate (98.5%) | Dr. Ehrenstorfer | 109217 | CAS No: 60-51-5 |
Imidacloprid (99.8%) | Dr. Ehrenstorfer | 91029 | CAS No: 138261-41-3 |
Imidaclothiz (99.5%) | Toronto Research Chemical | I275000 | CAS No: 105843-36-5 |
Kinetin (KT, >98.0%) | Solarbio Science & Technology | K8010 | CAS No: 525-79-1 |
Omethoate (98.5%) | Dr. Ehrenstorfer | 105491 | CAS No: 1113-02-6 |
Polyvinylpolypyrrolidone (PVPP) | Solarbio Science & Technology | P8070 | CAS No: 25249-54-1 |
Sucrose | Tocris Bioscience | 5511 | CAS No: 57-50-1 |
Thiamethoxam (99.8%) | Dr. Ehrenstorfer | 20625 | CAS No: 153719-23-4 |
Triphenyltetrazolium Chloride (TTC, 98.0%) | Solarbio Science & Technology | T8170 | CAS No: 298-96-4 |
2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid (2,4-D, >98.0%) | Guangzhou Saiguo Biotech | D8100 | CAS No: 94-75-7 |
chiral column | Agilent CYCLOSIL-B | 112-6632 | Chromatography column (30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 μm) |
Gas chromatography (GC) | Shimadu | 2010-Plus | Paired with Flame Photometric Detector (FPD) |
High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) | Agilent | 1260 | Paired with Ultraviolet detector (UV) |
HSS T3 C18 column | Waters | 186003539 | Chromatography column (100 mm × 2.1 mm × 1.8 μm) |
Ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) | Agilent | 1290-6545 | Tandem quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer (QTOF) |
Ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) | Thermo Scientific | Ultimate 3000-Q Exactive Focus | Connected to a Orbitrap mass spectrometer |
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