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Understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production

The fast-growing use of nano-based products without proper care has led to a major public health concern. Nanomaterials contaminating the environment pose serious threat to the productivity of plants and via food chain to human health. Realizing these, four vegetable crops, radish, cucumber, tomato,...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ahmed, Bilal, Rizvi, Asfa, Zaidi, Almas, Khan, Mohammad Saghir, Musarrat, Javed
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9060428/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35520185
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra09305a
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author Ahmed, Bilal
Rizvi, Asfa
Zaidi, Almas
Khan, Mohammad Saghir
Musarrat, Javed
author_facet Ahmed, Bilal
Rizvi, Asfa
Zaidi, Almas
Khan, Mohammad Saghir
Musarrat, Javed
author_sort Ahmed, Bilal
collection PubMed
description The fast-growing use of nano-based products without proper care has led to a major public health concern. Nanomaterials contaminating the environment pose serious threat to the productivity of plants and via food chain to human health. Realizing these, four vegetable crops, radish, cucumber, tomato, and alfalfa, were exposed to varying concentrations of heavy metal oxide (TiO(2), ZnO, Al(2)O(3) and CuO) submicron or bulk (BPs) and nanoparticles (NPs) to assess their impact on relative seed germination (RSG), seed surface adsorption, root/shoot tolerance index (RTI/STI), bioaccumulation, and metallothioneins (MTs) production. The results revealed a clear inhibition of RSG, RTI, and STI, which, however, varied between species of metal-specific nanoparticles and plants. SEM and EDX analyses showed significant adsorption of MONP agglomerates on seed surfaces. The concentration of metals detected by EDX differed among vegetables. Among the metals, Al, Cu, Ti, and Zn were found maximum in alfalfa (12.46%), tomato (23.2%), cucumber (6.32%) and radish (21.74%). Of the four metal oxides, ZnO was found most inhibitory to all vegetables and was followed by CuO. The absorption/accumulation of undesirable levels of MONPs in seeds and seedlings differed with variation in dose rates, and was found to be maximum (1748–2254 μg g(−1) dry weight) in ZnO-NPs application. Among MONPs, the uptake of TiO(2) was minimum (2 to 140 μg g(−1)) in radish seedlings. The concentration of MTs induced by ZnO-NPs, ZnO-BPs, and CuO-NPs ranged between 52 and 136 μ mol MTs g(−1) FW in vegetal organs. Conclusively, the present findings indicated that both the nanosize and chemical composition of MONPs are equally dangerous for vegetable production. Hence, the accumulation of MONPs, specifically ZnO and CuO, in edible plant organs in reasonable amounts poses a potential environmental risk which, however, requires urgent attention to circumvent such toxic problems.
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spelling pubmed-90604282022-05-04 Understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production Ahmed, Bilal Rizvi, Asfa Zaidi, Almas Khan, Mohammad Saghir Musarrat, Javed RSC Adv Chemistry The fast-growing use of nano-based products without proper care has led to a major public health concern. Nanomaterials contaminating the environment pose serious threat to the productivity of plants and via food chain to human health. Realizing these, four vegetable crops, radish, cucumber, tomato, and alfalfa, were exposed to varying concentrations of heavy metal oxide (TiO(2), ZnO, Al(2)O(3) and CuO) submicron or bulk (BPs) and nanoparticles (NPs) to assess their impact on relative seed germination (RSG), seed surface adsorption, root/shoot tolerance index (RTI/STI), bioaccumulation, and metallothioneins (MTs) production. The results revealed a clear inhibition of RSG, RTI, and STI, which, however, varied between species of metal-specific nanoparticles and plants. SEM and EDX analyses showed significant adsorption of MONP agglomerates on seed surfaces. The concentration of metals detected by EDX differed among vegetables. Among the metals, Al, Cu, Ti, and Zn were found maximum in alfalfa (12.46%), tomato (23.2%), cucumber (6.32%) and radish (21.74%). Of the four metal oxides, ZnO was found most inhibitory to all vegetables and was followed by CuO. The absorption/accumulation of undesirable levels of MONPs in seeds and seedlings differed with variation in dose rates, and was found to be maximum (1748–2254 μg g(−1) dry weight) in ZnO-NPs application. Among MONPs, the uptake of TiO(2) was minimum (2 to 140 μg g(−1)) in radish seedlings. The concentration of MTs induced by ZnO-NPs, ZnO-BPs, and CuO-NPs ranged between 52 and 136 μ mol MTs g(−1) FW in vegetal organs. Conclusively, the present findings indicated that both the nanosize and chemical composition of MONPs are equally dangerous for vegetable production. Hence, the accumulation of MONPs, specifically ZnO and CuO, in edible plant organs in reasonable amounts poses a potential environmental risk which, however, requires urgent attention to circumvent such toxic problems. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9060428/ /pubmed/35520185 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra09305a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Ahmed, Bilal
Rizvi, Asfa
Zaidi, Almas
Khan, Mohammad Saghir
Musarrat, Javed
Understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production
title Understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production
title_full Understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production
title_fullStr Understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production
title_short Understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production
title_sort understanding the phyto-interaction of heavy metal oxide bulk and nanoparticles: evaluation of seed germination, growth, bioaccumulation, and metallothionein production
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9060428/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35520185
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra09305a
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