| Literature DB >> 31897741 |
Ryosuke Nakamura1, Jean-Thomas Cornelis2, Felix de Tombeur2, Michiko Nakagawa3, Kaoru Kitajima4.
Abstract
Studies of plant-silicon (Si) interaction benefit from safe, affordable and accurate methods to measure acid-insoluble silica (phytoliths) for a large number of plant samples. This study aimed to evaluate the comparability between two chemical methods to dissolve leaf silica, borate fusion and 1% sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) extraction, in combination of two detection methods (ICP, molybdenum-blue colorimetry).We compared the results obtained by these methods, using dried leaf samples of five tropical tree species that differ widely in Si concentrations (4 to 100 mg g DW-1). Leaf Si concentration values determined after the two extraction methods were highly correlated (y = 0.79x, R2 = 0.998). However, compared to the extraction with borate fusion, the 1% Na2CO3 method resulted in lower Si concentration per unit dry mass by 16% to 32% (mean of 24.2%). We also found that molybdenum-blue colorimetry method may interfere with certain extraction methods. A simple equation can be used to correct for systematic underestimation of Si contents determined after extraction with 1% Na2CO3, which is the least expensive and safest among commonly used methods for extraction of Si from land plants.Entities:
Keywords: Borate fusion; ICP; Silicon; Sodium carbonate extraction; Tropical tree phytoliths
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31897741 DOI: 10.1007/s10265-019-01162-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Plant Res ISSN: 0918-9440 Impact factor: 2.629