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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Remediation Sign in to save

Fungicide‐loaded and biodegradable xylan‐based nanocarriers

Biopolymers 2020 33 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Frederik R. Wurm Sebastian J. Beckers, Sebastian J. Beckers, Sebastian J. Beckers, Sebastian J. Beckers, Jochen Fischer, Luc Wetherbee, Luc Wetherbee, Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Jochen Fischer, Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm Frederik R. Wurm

Summary

Biodegradable xylan-based nanocarriers were developed to deliver fungicides as an alternative to fossil-based polymer dispersions commonly used for agrochemical application. The biopolymer-based carriers reduce risks of microplastic accumulation in soil that conventional polymer-formulated agrochemicals pose.

Study Type In vitro

The delivery of agrochemicals is typically achieved by the spraying of fossil-based polymer dispersions, which might accumulate in the soil and increase microplastic pollution. A potentially sustainable alternative is the use of biodegradable nano- or micro-formulations based on biopolymers, which can be degraded selectively by fungal enzymes to release encapsulated agrochemicals. To date, no hemicellulose nanocarriers for drug delivery in plants have been reported. Xylan is a renewable and abundant feedstock occurring naturally in high amounts in hemicellulose - a major component of the plant cell wall. Herein, xylan from corncobs was used to produce the first fungicide-loaded xylan-based nanocarriers by interfacial polyaddition in an inverse miniemulsion using toluene diisocyanate (TDI) as a crosslinking agent. The nanocarriers were redispersed in water and the aqueous dispersions were proven to be active in vitro against several pathogenic fungi, which are responsible for fungal plant diseases in horticulture or agriculture. Besides, empty xylan-based nanocarriers stimulated the growth of fungal mycelium, which indicated the degradation of xylan in the presence of the fungi, and underlined the degradation as a trigger to release a loaded agrochemical. This first example of crosslinked xylan-based nanocarriers expands the library of biodegradable and biobased nanocarriers for agrochemical release and might play a crucial role for future formulations in plant protection.

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