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Equipment and protocol for measurement of extracellular electrical signals, gas exchange and turgor pressure in plants

•Following the step by step described in this protocol is it is possible to measure long-distance electrical signaling induced by several stimuli, including wounding, current application, irrigation, and others.•Extracellular electrical signal measurements were associated to gas exchange measurement...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:MethodsX 2021-01, Vol.8, p.101214-101214, Article 101214
Main Authors: Macedo, Francynês da Conceiçao Oliveira, Daneluzzi, Gabriel Silva, Capelin, Diogo, Barbosa, Fábia da Silva, da Silva, Aldeir Ronaldo, de Oliveira, Ricardo Ferraz
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Following the step by step described in this protocol is it is possible to measure long-distance electrical signaling induced by several stimuli, including wounding, current application, irrigation, and others.•Extracellular electrical signal measurements were associated to gas exchange measurements using an infra-red gas analyzer (IRGA, model Li-6400, Li-Cor) and turgor pressure measurements using a patch clamp pressure probe (ZIM-probe, YARA ZIM-plant Technology).•The technique is interesting to study electrical signaling in association with other physiological parameters in plants.•We present results that validate the protocol and discuss the troubleshooting that may compromise measurements and data collection. We present a detailed protocol for measuring extracellular electrical signals in plants using the electrode insertion technique. Using this approach, it is possible to measure long-distance electrical signaling induced by several stimuli, including wounding, current application, irrigation, burning, and others. Additionally, we describe how to associate gas exchange measurements using an infra-red gas analyzer (IRGA, Model Li-6400, Li-Cor) and turgor pressure measurements using a patch clamp pressure probe (ZIM-probe, YARA ZIM-plant Technology) to measure extracellular electrical signals. • The method requires a complete electrical circuit that includes a measuring device (amplifier and voltmeter) and electrodes that provide a contact between the biological material and the equipment. • The infra-red gas analyzer (IRGA), needs to be grounded because it is an important source of noise for electrophysiological measurements. • The ZIM-probe did not cause any interference in electrical signal measure. • Our approach is useful for plant physiologists wishing to implement the technique of measuring electrical signals in plants, in association with other parameters of plant physiology. In addition, our text was written for agricultural and biological scientists who are not electronics specialists. [Display omitted]
ISSN:2215-0161
2215-0161
DOI:10.1016/j.mex.2021.101214