An optimized method for extraction and purification of inorganic phosphate from plant material for oxygen isotope ratio analysis

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Compound-specific stable isotope ratio analysis of oxygen isotopes in inorganic phosphate can be used to study biological phosphorus cycling and the transformation processes controlling the fate of phosphorus. However, methods for extraction of inorganic phosphate from plant tissue for oxygen isotope ratio analysis are not consistent. Further, the purification into solid silver phosphate can be challenging and laborious. In this work, a detailed and optimized method to provide a more consistent, easily implementable and reproducible extraction using trichloroacetic acid and subsequent purification of inorganic phosphate from plant material for oxygen isotope ratio analysis is presented. Key focus points were: uniform extraction of inorganic phosphate from barley leaves, removal of dissolved organic material, flexibility in regards to the amount of inorganic phosphate extracted for the purification into silver phosphate, reduced use of chemicals and, removal of co-precipitated oxygen-bearing compounds before analysis. Most notable optimizations to the method and associated effects were: • Drying of plant material before inorganic phosphate extraction increases the method applicability to a broader range of plant sample types. • Removal of dissolved organic matter improves inorganic phosphate purification. • Sample volume adjustment according to inorganic phosphate content is vital for effective and quantitative precipitations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102541
JournalMethodsX
Volume12
Number of pages10
ISSN2215-0161
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

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© 2024 The Authors

    Research areas

  • Compound-specific, Oxygen, Phosphate, Phosphorus, Plants, Stable isotopes

ID: 381886543