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Root architecture-informed nano-remediation strategy for nanoplastics toxicity in maize and soybean

Plant Physiology and Biochemistry 2025
Feng Yan, Enpei Zhao, Bin Yan, Bo Wang, Hao Liang, Shufeng Fan, Xin Gu

Summary

Researchers tested manganese ferrite nanomaterials as a remediation strategy for nanoplastic-stressed maize and soybean crops, finding that soil application better protected fibrous-rooted maize while foliar application better protected taproot soybean — demonstrating that effective nano-remediation strategies must be tailored to crop root architecture.

The pervasive accumulation of nano-plastics (NPs) in agroecosystems poses critical threats to crop productivity and food security. However, effective and targeted remediation strategies remain limited, particularly those that account for crop-specific traits such as root architecture, which may critically influence both nano-plastic uptake and the efficacy of nano-remedies. This study establishes a root architecture-informed nano-remediation strategy using manganese ferrite nanomaterials (MnFeO NMs) to mitigate nano-plastics toxicity in maize and soybean. Through factorial experiments integrating foliar and soil NM delivery, we demonstrate that nano-plastics reduce biomass by 7.9-14.7 % via oxidative damage, photosynthetic inhibition, and metabolic disruption, with maize exhibiting greater susceptibility due to its shallow taproot system. Crucially, iron-based NMs reversed NPs-induced stress by 8.5-23.3 %, where soil-applied NMs optimized maize recovery (17.3 % shoot biomass increase) through direct root interaction and antioxidant activation, while foliar NMs maximized soybean resilience (23.9 % POD enhancement) via leaf antioxidant coordination. Metabolomic and physiological analyses revealed species-specific mechanisms: maize depended on NMs-mediated restoration of nitrogen assimilation and TCA cycle intermediates, whereas soybean leveraged architectural buffering and flavonoid-based stress mitigation. Structural equation modeling identified antioxidant capacity, photosynthetic efficiency, and root morphology as primary biomass regulators (path coefficients: 0.7-0.9). We further link these responses to rhizosphere metabolic reprogramming, where NMs upregulated nitrogen metabolism by 16-24 %, countering NPs-induced suppression of nutrient cycling. Our findings advance precision nano-agriculture by tailoring NM delivery to root architecture-soil application for fibrous-dominant crops and foliar strategies for tap-root species-providing a mechanistic framework for sustainable crop protection in contaminated soils.

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