The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Institute puts focus on future after investing £1.75m in new lab kit

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More than £1.75 million has been invested by the James Hutton Institute in new state-of-the-art laboratory equipment to enhance its research capabiliti­es across food, plant and soil health and quality.

Believed to the largest investment of its kind in Scotland, the scientific and research organisati­on has introduced a combined ultra highperfor­mance liquid chromatogr­aphy (UHLC) and high-resolution mass spectromet­er (MS).

The high-precision instrument, based at the Invergowri­e campus, near Dundee, allows scientists to perform extremely detailed analysis on individual plant and organic compounds faster.

A second machine, based at the institute’s Craigiebuc­kler campus in Aberdeen, is an advanced scanning electron microscope (SEM), which can image down to nanometre-scale – or a billionth of a metre – plant tissues and other materials.

Dr William Allwood, metabolomi­cs facility lead at the institute, said the ThermoFish­er UHLC Orbitrap IQ-X highresolu­tion MS is the most powerful of its type currently available.

It allows scientists to separate plant, fruit, vegetable or processed food extracts into their individual biochemica­l components.

“With this system we can compare the content of health beneficial metabolite­s, such as vitamins and antioxidan­ts, as well as flavour relevant compounds, such as those that provide bitter or sweet flavour,” he said.

“That means we can compare the nutritiona­l and flavour quality of fruits, cereal grains and vegetables that have been grown in different ways, we can assess the effects of storage and processing on foods and we can also assess the effects of different agricultur­al practices on the growing plants.

“We can also assess the biochemica­l impacts of environmen­tal stress, such as drought, flooding or heat, and also plant pests and diseases, helping to identify plant varieties that are resistant or less susceptibl­e to these stressors.”

The new Gemini 300 Zeiss SEM is sensitive enough to allow scientists to obtain high-resolution images of parts of plants down to a nanometre scale. This means they can see how plants react to changes in their environmen­t, from heat stress from climate change to the fertiliser they use, so that plants can be bred for future conditions.

They can also look at what minerals are present and where they are in plants to understand the nutritiona­l value of its different parts. Scientists can also use this to observe interactio­ns of microplast­ics with components of the soil.

Additional investment­s by the James Hutton Institute include a carbon and nitrogen analyser, used for understand­ing the content of these elements in soils and plants, which can help to understand how much carbon is being stored in or lost from soil.

 ?? ?? Dr William Allwood at the James Hutton Institute.
Dr William Allwood at the James Hutton Institute.

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