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NanoSIMS Analysis of NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore Katie Moore 3 3 rd rd year D.Phil year D.Phil Department of Materials – University of Department of Materials – University of Oxford Oxford
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NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grainsand Selenium in Cereal Grains

Supervisor: Chris GrovenorSupervisor: Chris Grovenor

Katie MooreKatie Moore33rdrd year D.Phil year D.Phil

Department of Materials – University of OxfordDepartment of Materials – University of Oxford

Page 2: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Motivation

Why is a materials scientist looking at plants?

Interdisciplinary collaborations allow critical problems in the life sciences, difficult to solve with traditional analysis techniques, to be explored with established physical science techniques.

Page 3: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

The Arsenic Problem• Arsenic contamination

of groundwater

• Contaminated groundwater is used to irrigate rice paddy fields

• Resulting in rice grain containing elevated levels of arsenic

• A major problem in Bangladesh, India, China and America.

Ref: X. Y, Xu et al., Environ. Sci. Technol., 42(15), 2008

• Arsenic is a toxic and carcinogenic element

Page 4: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

The Selenium Problem• Between 0.5 and 1

billion people worldwide may be deficient in selenium including populations in developed countries.

• In the UK this is caused by a reduction in the amount of wheat imported from America and a fall in the consumption of cereals

• Selenium is an important trace elementDaily selenium intake in the UK is

now about ½ of the reference amount

M. R. Broadley et al., Proc. Nutr. Soc. (65) 2006M. S. Fan et al., Sci. Total Environ. (389), 2008MAFF, Food Surveillance Information Sheet, (126), 1997

Refs:

Page 5: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Agricultural Solutions

• To increase Se:– Add a selenium fertiliser to the soil (practiced in Finland)

• To decrease As:– Polish the grain to remove the high As parts

• Both of these solutions require knowledge of where the trace elements are located in the grain.

• Determining where these very low concentrations are located with sub-cellular resolution is a serious analytical challenge

Ref: M. H. Eurola et al., J. Sci. Food Agric., (56), 1991

Page 6: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS)

• Sample is bombarded by positively charged primary ion beam

• This results in sputtering of the top few atomic layers and ejection of atoms, ions and clusters

• Secondary ions are collected and mass analysed

Image adapted from Ref:http://www.eaglabs.com/training/tutorials/sims_theory_tutorial/index.php

Page 7: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

The NanoSIMS 50

The Oxford NanoSIMS

Schematic of the NanoSIMS

Ref: CAMECA, http://www.cameca.fr/doc_en_pdf/ns50_instrumentation_booklet.pdf, Instrumentation booklet, June 2007.

Page 8: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Characteristics of SIMS• SIMS

– High sensitivity (down to ppb for some elements)

– Detection of all elements from Hydrogen to Uranium including all isotopes

– High mass resolution

• NanoSIMS – High lateral resolution (50 nm)– Parallel detection of 5 ionic species

Ref: CAMECA, http://www.cameca.fr/doc_en_pdf/ns50_instrumentation_booklet.pdf, Instrumentation booklet, June 2007.

Page 9: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

SIMS Sample Preparation

• Sample needs to be flat, conducting, and dry

• Bulk chemical analysis (ICP-MS) showed

trace levels of 2.5 ppm arsenic in the rice and 17 ppm selenium in the wheat

• Rice samples were

grown at Rothamsted Research

• Wheat samples were grown

in a field trial in Nottingham

Page 10: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Structure of Wheat GrainAleurone layer

Starchy endosperm

80µm Embryo

Cross section

Page 11: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Selenium in Wheat Grain

Max selenium counts: 4Max CN- counts: 105,000

31P16O- 80Se-

32S-12C14N-16O-

SE

30µm

Ref: K. L. Moore et al., New Phytol., (185), 2010

Page 12: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Selenium in Wheat GrainAleurone cell Starch grains

31P16O- 80Se- 32S-

12C14N-16O- 12C14N-16O-

80Se-

Ref: K. L. Moore et al., New Phytol., (185), 2010

Page 13: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Selenium in Wheat Grain

High resolution, sub-cellular, localisation of ppm concentrations

Selenium is localised in the protein region around the starch grains

Selenium hotspots are found in the aleurone cells

Starchgrain

31P16O- 80Se- 32S-

16O- 12C14N-16O-

80Se-

32S-

Ref: K. L. Moore et al., New Phytol., (185), 2010

Page 14: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Arsenic in Rice Grain

Arsenic is localised in the sub-aleurone protein

Ref: K. L. Moore et al., New Phytol., (185), 2010

Page 15: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Rice Roots – Experiment setup

Fe plaque No Fe plaque

Variables:•Arsenate or arsenite•With or without Fe plaque•Wild type or lsi2 mutant

Hydroponically grown rice plants

Lsi2 transporter

Ref: Zhao, F.J., et al., New Phytol., 181(4), 2009

Page 16: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Rice Roots – Fe Plaque

25 µm

EPEPExEx

ScSc

SESE

12C14N-

56Fe16O-

31P-28Si-

75As-

Page 17: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Rice Roots – Lsi2 mutant12C14N-

75As-

31P-

SE

28Si-

25 µm

XyXy

EnEn

Colour merge: Red = As, Green = CN, Blue = Si

Page 18: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

Conclusions• The NanoSIMS has successfully been used to provide a detailed

analysis of the distribution of trace elements selenium and arsenic in wheat and rice respectively and the distribution of As in roots.

• Selenium is localised in the protein regions around the wheat starch grains with hotspots in the bran layer

• Arsenic is concentrated in the sub-aleurone protein of the rice rather than in the aleurone.

• The Fe plaque has a strong adsorption affinity for As

• The Lsi2 mutant blocks As uptake in the endodermis

• These experiments have demonstrated the unique potential of state-of-the-art SIMS instrumentation to analyse the distribution of ppm levels of important trace elements with sub-cellular resolution

Page 19: NanoSIMS Analysis of Arsenic and Selenium in Cereal Grains Supervisor: Chris Grovenor Katie Moore 3 rd year D.Phil Department of Materials – University.

AcknowledgementsSupervisor: Chris GrovenorNanoSIMS postdoc: Markus Schröder

EPSRC:D.Phil funding

Root Sample Preparation: Barry Martin, Chris Hawes

Collaborators:Fang-jie Zhao, Steve McGrath,Malcolm Hawkesford, Peter Shewry

IOM3:For this opportunity