Manchester,
27
July
2016
|
13:55
Europe/London

How do pesticides protect crops?

wheat-crop.jpg

Scientists from the University of Manchester have created a new tool to study how pesticides cross the wax barrier on the leaves of crops such as wheat and barley. This could be a step towards fine-tuning the chemicals used in agriculture to optimise crop yields without damaging the plants, in an attempt to meet the demands of feeding the world's growing population.

The team have created a model of a leaf’s wax surface similar to those found in wheat crops, in a project supported by the agrochemical company, Syngenta. They are now using the model at the Science and Technology Facilities Council’s ISIS Neutron and Muon Source research facility to study how surfactants, a key component in pesticide formulations, interact with the leaf surface to get into the plant and take effect. This is the first time anyone has used extracted waxes to recreate the wax shield plants use for protection against pests and water loss.

Waxy cuticles are essential for the well-being of plants. The cuticle, made up of a thin coating of wax on plant leaves, acts as a protective shield against attack from pests, prevents the loss of nutrients and water from the plant and is involved in transporting water and nutrients across the plant surface for plant growth. However, their structure, and the way pesticides modify the barrier to get inside and protect the plant are not fully understood.

“We’re finding out important information about plants that we previously didn’t have the tools to study. By understanding how pesticides interact with plants, you can fine-tune their ingredients to increase crop yield and take away potentially negative side effects, including the removal of some of the waxes which leaves the plant susceptible to disease and attack from bacteria and microbes. This opens the door to crop-safe formulations which will reversibly interact with plant waxes."
Elias Pambou, lead author of the study

To make the model of the leaf surface, scientists first extracted real plant wax from barley and wheat leaves. This was made possible by a new technique called supercritical carbon dioxide extraction, where scientists dissolve the wax off the surface of the leaf using a carbon dioxide solvent under its supercritical condition at a very high temperature and pressure. When the pressure and temperature is reduced, the carbon dioxide evaporates, leaving behind the wax. This technique was developed in the Green Chemistry Department at the University of York.

The team from The University of Manchester then took the extracted wax and spin coated it onto a flat a silicon support in order to model the leaf surface. Imaging techniques allowed the team to see that the wax model was very similar to the structure of the wax on a real leaf, meaning the model could be used to realistically study how pesticides cross the wax barrier to get into the plant.

In a technique known as neutron reflectometry, the team used ISIS instrument, INTER to bounce neutrons off the surface of the wax model. They found that the wax was made up of a thin underlying film covered by large crystalline structures.

Professor Robert McGreevy, Director of the STFC ISIS Facility said: “Neutrons offer a unique tool for seeing deep into all sorts of materials. The Manchester team used the INTER instrument here at ISIS to see what the wax film was made up of and how water crossed the barrier at the molecular level. But we can also use the same technique to study new magnetic materials for computer data storage.”

The project is being supported by the agrochemical company, Syngenta. Dr Gordon Bell, a senior scientist at Syngenta said: “This research has furthered our understanding of the kinetics of plant uptake. It has shown that water can penetrate into leaf wax. This simple observation explains a lot of the basic science behind pesticide uptake into plants.”

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