Unravelling the interactions between nano-hydroxyapatite and the roots of phosphorus deficient barley plants

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Unravelling the interactions between nano-hydroxyapatite and the roots of phosphorus deficient barley plants. / Szameitat, Augusta E.; Sharma, Anurag; Minutello, Francesco; Pinna, Andrea; Er-Rafik, Meriem; Hansen, Thomas H.; Persson, Daniel P.; Andersen, Birgit; Husted, Søren.

In: Environmental Science: Nano, Vol. 8, No. 2, 2021, p. 444-459.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Szameitat, AE, Sharma, A, Minutello, F, Pinna, A, Er-Rafik, M, Hansen, TH, Persson, DP, Andersen, B & Husted, S 2021, 'Unravelling the interactions between nano-hydroxyapatite and the roots of phosphorus deficient barley plants', Environmental Science: Nano, vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 444-459. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0en00974a

APA

Szameitat, A. E., Sharma, A., Minutello, F., Pinna, A., Er-Rafik, M., Hansen, T. H., Persson, D. P., Andersen, B., & Husted, S. (2021). Unravelling the interactions between nano-hydroxyapatite and the roots of phosphorus deficient barley plants. Environmental Science: Nano, 8(2), 444-459. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0en00974a

Vancouver

Szameitat AE, Sharma A, Minutello F, Pinna A, Er-Rafik M, Hansen TH et al. Unravelling the interactions between nano-hydroxyapatite and the roots of phosphorus deficient barley plants. Environmental Science: Nano. 2021;8(2):444-459. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0en00974a

Author

Szameitat, Augusta E. ; Sharma, Anurag ; Minutello, Francesco ; Pinna, Andrea ; Er-Rafik, Meriem ; Hansen, Thomas H. ; Persson, Daniel P. ; Andersen, Birgit ; Husted, Søren. / Unravelling the interactions between nano-hydroxyapatite and the roots of phosphorus deficient barley plants. In: Environmental Science: Nano. 2021 ; Vol. 8, No. 2. pp. 444-459.

Bibtex

@article{a0f448a4f4a544e8bd7f7dae9993f7a2,
title = "Unravelling the interactions between nano-hydroxyapatite and the roots of phosphorus deficient barley plants",
abstract = "The recent introduction of nanotechnology in plant science has paved the way for the development of more efficient fertilizers. However, progress in research is currently hampered by a poor understanding of the interactions between nanomaterials and plant tissue. The present study investigates the potential of nano-hydroxyapatite (nHAP) as a phosphorus (P) fertilizer and the mechanisms involved during plant utilization of such nanoparticles. Using a combination of techniques to assay P functionality in metabolism and for bioimaging of P with cellular resolution, we demonstrate that contact between citrate-stabilized nHAP and roots of P deficient barley plants (grown hydroponically for 21 days) leads to a significant increase in leaf P concentration (from <2000 to >6000 ppm) and to a subsequent restoration of plant P functionality in less than 48 hours. Within the first 24 hours, intact nHAP adheres to the root epidermis without dissolving. Within the following 24 hours, nHAP penetrates the roots through the apoplast of mature epidermal and cortical cells, and dissolve here due to the acidic environment of the cell wall matrix. The mucilage layer surrounding the root cap prevents, in this specific region, the entrance of nHAP, which gradually dissolves without penetrating into deeper cell layers. In parallel, we investigate citrate-stabilized nano-rock phosphate (nRP), and demonstrate that it possesses equivalent plant bioavailability as synthetic nHAP. Since nRP was prepared through simple mechanical grinding of mined and flotated rock phosphate, this underlines its potential for direct use in agriculture, provided that contact between root tissue and nanoparticles is established. Overall, the results provide the first mechanistic evidence showing how nutrient deficient plants interact with intact nanoparticles to restore functionality in metabolism.",
author = "Szameitat, {Augusta E.} and Anurag Sharma and Francesco Minutello and Andrea Pinna and Meriem Er-Rafik and Hansen, {Thomas H.} and Persson, {Daniel P.} and Birgit Andersen and S{\o}ren Husted",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1039/d0en00974a",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "444--459",
journal = "Environmental Science: Nano",
issn = "2051-8153",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Unravelling the interactions between nano-hydroxyapatite and the roots of phosphorus deficient barley plants

AU - Szameitat, Augusta E.

AU - Sharma, Anurag

AU - Minutello, Francesco

AU - Pinna, Andrea

AU - Er-Rafik, Meriem

AU - Hansen, Thomas H.

AU - Persson, Daniel P.

AU - Andersen, Birgit

AU - Husted, Søren

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The recent introduction of nanotechnology in plant science has paved the way for the development of more efficient fertilizers. However, progress in research is currently hampered by a poor understanding of the interactions between nanomaterials and plant tissue. The present study investigates the potential of nano-hydroxyapatite (nHAP) as a phosphorus (P) fertilizer and the mechanisms involved during plant utilization of such nanoparticles. Using a combination of techniques to assay P functionality in metabolism and for bioimaging of P with cellular resolution, we demonstrate that contact between citrate-stabilized nHAP and roots of P deficient barley plants (grown hydroponically for 21 days) leads to a significant increase in leaf P concentration (from <2000 to >6000 ppm) and to a subsequent restoration of plant P functionality in less than 48 hours. Within the first 24 hours, intact nHAP adheres to the root epidermis without dissolving. Within the following 24 hours, nHAP penetrates the roots through the apoplast of mature epidermal and cortical cells, and dissolve here due to the acidic environment of the cell wall matrix. The mucilage layer surrounding the root cap prevents, in this specific region, the entrance of nHAP, which gradually dissolves without penetrating into deeper cell layers. In parallel, we investigate citrate-stabilized nano-rock phosphate (nRP), and demonstrate that it possesses equivalent plant bioavailability as synthetic nHAP. Since nRP was prepared through simple mechanical grinding of mined and flotated rock phosphate, this underlines its potential for direct use in agriculture, provided that contact between root tissue and nanoparticles is established. Overall, the results provide the first mechanistic evidence showing how nutrient deficient plants interact with intact nanoparticles to restore functionality in metabolism.

AB - The recent introduction of nanotechnology in plant science has paved the way for the development of more efficient fertilizers. However, progress in research is currently hampered by a poor understanding of the interactions between nanomaterials and plant tissue. The present study investigates the potential of nano-hydroxyapatite (nHAP) as a phosphorus (P) fertilizer and the mechanisms involved during plant utilization of such nanoparticles. Using a combination of techniques to assay P functionality in metabolism and for bioimaging of P with cellular resolution, we demonstrate that contact between citrate-stabilized nHAP and roots of P deficient barley plants (grown hydroponically for 21 days) leads to a significant increase in leaf P concentration (from <2000 to >6000 ppm) and to a subsequent restoration of plant P functionality in less than 48 hours. Within the first 24 hours, intact nHAP adheres to the root epidermis without dissolving. Within the following 24 hours, nHAP penetrates the roots through the apoplast of mature epidermal and cortical cells, and dissolve here due to the acidic environment of the cell wall matrix. The mucilage layer surrounding the root cap prevents, in this specific region, the entrance of nHAP, which gradually dissolves without penetrating into deeper cell layers. In parallel, we investigate citrate-stabilized nano-rock phosphate (nRP), and demonstrate that it possesses equivalent plant bioavailability as synthetic nHAP. Since nRP was prepared through simple mechanical grinding of mined and flotated rock phosphate, this underlines its potential for direct use in agriculture, provided that contact between root tissue and nanoparticles is established. Overall, the results provide the first mechanistic evidence showing how nutrient deficient plants interact with intact nanoparticles to restore functionality in metabolism.

U2 - 10.1039/d0en00974a

DO - 10.1039/d0en00974a

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85101615951

VL - 8

SP - 444

EP - 459

JO - Environmental Science: Nano

JF - Environmental Science: Nano

SN - 2051-8153

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 258400295