Issue 5, 2006

A model considering light reabsorption processes to correct in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence spectra in apples

Abstract

Chlorophyll-a contained in the peel of Granny Smith apples emits fluorescence upon excitation with blue light. The observed emission, collected by an external detector and corrected by its spectral response, is still distorted by light reabsorption processes taking place in the fruit skin and differs appreciably from the true spectral distribution of fluorescence emerging from chlorophyll molecules in the biological tissue. Reabsorption processes particularly affect the ratio of fluorescence intensities at 680 nm and at 730 nm. A model to obtain the correct spectral distribution of the emission, from the experimental fluorescence recorded at a fluorometer detector and corrected for the detector spectral sensitivity, is developed in the present work. Measurements of the whole fruit reflectance, the peel transmittance and the flesh reflectance allow the calculation of the reabsorption-corrected spectra. The model is validated by comparing the corrected emission spectra with that obtained for a thin layer of apple-peel-chloroplasts, where no reabsorption takes place. It is recommended to correct distortions in emission spectra of intact fruits due to light reabsorption effects whenever a correlation between the physiological state of the fruit and its fluorescence spectra is investigated.

Graphical abstract: A model considering light reabsorption processes to correct in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence spectra in apples

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Oct 2005
Accepted
29 Mar 2006
First published
13 Apr 2006

Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2006,5, 508-512

A model considering light reabsorption processes to correct in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence spectra in apples

M. E. Ramos and M. G. Lagorio, Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2006, 5, 508 DOI: 10.1039/B514248B

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