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Benchmarking organic electrochemical transistors for plant electrophysiology
Linköping University, Department of Science and Technology, Laboratory of Organic Electronics. Linköping University, Faculty of Science & Engineering.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-1598-5784
Linköping University, Department of Science and Technology, Laboratory of Organic Electronics. Linköping University, Faculty of Science & Engineering.
Linköping University, Department of Science and Technology, Laboratory of Organic Electronics. Linköping University, Faculty of Science & Engineering.
Linköping University, Department of Science and Technology, Laboratory of Organic Electronics. Linköping University, Faculty of Science & Engineering. (Wallenberg Wood Science Center)ORCID iD: 0000-0001-5154-0291
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2022 (English)In: Frontiers in Plant Science, E-ISSN 1664-462X, Vol. 13, article id 916120Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Plants are able to sense and respond to a myriad of external stimuli, using different signal transduction pathways, including electrical signaling. The ability to monitor plant responses is essential not only for fundamental plant science, but also to gain knowledge on how to interface plants with technology. Still, the field of plant electrophysiology remains rather unexplored when compared to its animal counterpart. Indeed, most studies continue to rely on invasive techniques or on bulky inorganic electrodes that oftentimes are not ideal for stable integration with plant tissues. On the other hand, few studies have proposed novel approaches to monitor plant signals, based on non-invasive conformable electrodes or even organic transistors. Organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) are particularly promising for electrophysiology as they are inherently amplification devices, they operate at low voltages, can be miniaturized, and be fabricated in flexible and conformable substrates. Thus, in this study, we characterize OECTs as viable tools to measure plant electrical signals, comparing them to the performance of the current standard, Ag/AgCl electrodes. For that, we focused on two widely studied plant signals: the Venus flytrap (VFT) action potentials elicited by mechanical stimulation of its sensitive trigger hairs, and the wound response of Arabidopsis thaliana. We found that OECTs are able to record these signals without distortion and with the same resolution as Ag/AgCl electrodes and that they offer a major advantage in terms of signal noise, which allow them to be used in field conditions. This work establishes these organic bioelectronic devices as non-invasive tools to monitor plant signaling that can provide insight into plant processes in their natural environment.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Frontiers Media SA , 2022. Vol. 13, article id 916120
Keywords [en]
plant electrophysiology; organic electrochemical transistor (OECT); organic electronics; Venus flytrap; Arabidopsis thaliana
National Category
Plant Biotechnology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-187736DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.916120ISI: 000837122100001PubMedID: 35937381OAI: oai:DiVA.org:liu-187736DiVA, id: diva2:1691509
Available from: 2022-08-30 Created: 2022-08-30 Last updated: 2026-04-02
In thesis
1. Multimodal Bioelectronic Sensing to Elucidate Plant Stress Signalling
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Multimodal Bioelectronic Sensing to Elucidate Plant Stress Signalling
2026 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

With global food demand rising alongside accelerating climate change, agriculture faces the twin challenge of increasing yields while safeguarding crop health under more frequent drought, heat, salinity, and pathogen pressure. Unlike animals, plants cannot escape unfavourable environments. Instead, they depend on rapid long-distance signalling to detect threat, coordinate defence, and reprogram physiology at the scale of the whole organism.

Plants orchestrate these responses through tightly coupled electrical and chemical signalling networks. Electrophysiological events can propagate rapidly across tissues and are intertwined with ionic fluxes that shape downstream responses. Despite their importance for systemic communication, stress adaptation, and growth regulation, the mechanisms governing signal initiation, propagation, and coupling to ionic dynamics remain poorly understood. A key limitation has been the lack of plant tissue interface technology that can resolve fast, spatially distributed signals across heterogeneous plant tissues while simultaneously reporting the associated biochemical processes.

This thesis develops and applies an integrated bioelectronic platform to map plant electrical activity and its ionic basis in intact leaves. First, a conformable, multielectrode array (MEA) is introduced that inter-faces reliably with the full leaf architecture and enables high-resolution, multi-site electrophysiological recording. Using this inter-face, electrical signal propagation across leaves is quantified, including stress-dependent changes in spatiotemporal dynamics.

Next, the platform is extended to a multimodal framework by integrating MEA recording technology with genetically encoded fluorescent indicators of key signalling species, including calcium (GCaMP3: genetically encoded calcium indicator) and glutamate (iGluSnFR: intensity-based glutamate-sensing fluorescent reporter). This enables simultaneous electrophysiology and optical biosensing on a shared time axis, allowing direct correlation between electrical transients and the accompanying ionic dynamics. Combined with measurements in mutant lines, this approach benchmarks how dis-tinct signalling pathways contribute to systemic signal initiation, amplification, and self-propagation.

To enable causal interrogation of pathway contributions, the trans-parent MEAs are further integrated with optogenetic actuation, allowing selective activation of defined membrane conductances and direct testing of how specific ionic mechanisms shape the observed electrical responses. Finally, organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) are incorporated to provide local, on-site amplification and improve sensitivity to low-amplitude plant signals.

Together, these approaches reveal spatiotemporally distinct propagation patterns and highlight how tissue architecture, cellular microenvironment, and intrinsic feedback regulation jointly govern signal onset, amplitude, speed, and coordination. Overall, this work establishes a robust experimental and analytical framework for studying plant systemic signalling in real time, bridging electrical recordings with molecular readouts. Beyond advancing fundamental understanding of communication within a plant, the methodology provides a foundation for future bioelectronic interfaces and sensing technologies that could support precision agriculture, sustainable biohybrid systems, and broader biological diagnostics.

 

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Linköping: Linköping University Electronic Press, 2026. p. 116
Series
Linköping Studies in Science and Technology. Dissertations, ISSN 0345-7524 ; 2513
Keywords
Plant electrophysiology, Multielectrode array, Multimodal sensing, Calcium imaging, Glutamate sensor, Organic Bioelectronics
National Category
Botany
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-222439 (URN)10.3384/9789181185003 (DOI)9789181184990 (ISBN)9789181185003 (ISBN)
Public defence
2026-04-23, K4, Kåkenhus, Campus Norrköping, Norrköping, 10:00 (English)
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Supervisors
Available from: 2026-04-02 Created: 2026-04-02 Last updated: 2026-04-07Bibliographically approved

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