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Growth-Promoting Gold Nanoparticles Decrease Stress Responses in Arabidopsis Seedlings

Nanomaterials 2021 71 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Eleonora Ferrari, Francesco Barbero, Martí Busquets‐Fité, Mirita Franz‐Wachtel, Heinz‐R. Köhler, Víctor Puntes, Birgit Kemmerling

Summary

Researchers found that gold nanoparticles unexpectedly promoted plant growth in Arabidopsis seedlings rather than causing toxicity, resulting in longer roots, more lateral roots, and larger rosettes. Transcriptomic and proteomic analyses revealed that gold nanoparticles downregulated oxidative stress responses while upregulating growth-promoting genes. The study provides insight into how certain engineered nanomaterials can have positive rather than harmful effects on plant biology.

Body Systems

The global economic success of man-made nanoscale materials has led to a higher production rate and diversification of emission sources in the environment. For these reasons, novel nanosafety approaches to assess the environmental impact of engineered nanomaterials are required. While studying the potential toxicity of metal nanoparticles (NPs), we realized that gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) have a growth-promoting rather than a stress-inducing effect. In this study we established stable short- and long-term exposition systems for testing plant responses to NPs. Exposure of plants to moderate concentrations of AuNPs resulted in enhanced growth of the plants with longer primary roots, more and longer lateral roots and increased rosette diameter, and reduced oxidative stress responses elicited by the immune-stimulatory PAMP flg22. Our data did not reveal any detrimental effects of AuNPs on plants but clearly showed positive effects on growth, presumably by their protective influence on oxidative stress responses. Differential transcriptomics and proteomics analyses revealed that oxidative stress responses are downregulated whereas growth-promoting genes/proteins are upregulated. These omics datasets after AuNP exposure can now be exploited to study the underlying molecular mechanisms of AuNP-induced growth-promotion.

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