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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 Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Nanoplastic alters soybean microbiome across rhizocompartments level and symbiosis via flavonoid-mediated pathways

Frontiers in Plant Science 2025 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Muhammad Shoaib, Muhammad Arshad, Muhammad Arshad, Muhammad Shoaib, Muhammad Shoaib, Muhammad Shoaib, Huijuan Zhang Gen Li, Huijuan Zhang Huijuan Zhang Gen Li, Xinru Liu, Marián Brestič, Muhammad Arshad, Shixiang Zhang, Muhammad Shoaib, Shixiang Zhang, Huijuan Zhang Muhammad Shoaib, Muhammad Shoaib, Muhammad Arshad, Marián Brestič, Muhammad Shoaib, Muhammad Asif, Huijuan Zhang Marián Brestič, Xinru Liu, Xinru Liu, Muhammad Arshad, Marián Brestič, Marián Brestič, Marián Brestič, Shixiang Zhang, Xinru Liu, Muhammad Asif, Huixin Li, Milan Skalický, Xinru Liu, Huixin Li, Jun Wu, Shixiang Zhang, Fengping Hu, Shixiang Zhang, Huixin Li, Shixiang Zhang, Fengping Hu, Shixiang Zhang, Huixin Li, Huixin Li, Fengping Hu, Huixin Li, Huixin Li, Huixin Li, Huijuan Zhang Fengping Hu, Fengping Hu, Huixin Li, Huixin Li, Huijuan Zhang Huixin Li, Huijuan Zhang

Summary

Researchers applied polypropylene and polyethylene nanoplastics to soybean growing conditions and found that the particles altered soil chemistry, changed bacterial communities, and unexpectedly accelerated root nodule formation and nitrogen-fixing activity at lower doses. The effects varied by plastic type, with polyethylene nanoplastics having a stronger impact on soil enzyme activity. The study reveals that nanoplastic pollution can reshape the soil microbiome and influence how plants form beneficial partnerships with nitrogen-fixing bacteria.

Polymers

Plastic pollution, particularly its breakdown into nanoplastics (NPs), poses a significant threat to ecosystem services, with notable effects on soil-plant-microbe interactions in agricultural systems. However, there is limited understanding of how NPs influence the soil microbiome and plant symbiotic functions. In this study, we applied polypropylene (PP) and polyethylene (PE) NPs, measuring 20 to 50 nm, to soybean growing conditions. We evaluated soil physicochemical properties, nodule counts, nitrogenase activity, and bacterial community composition in nodule, rhizosphere, and bulk soil under different concentrations of these NPs (200, 500, and 1000 mg/kg of soil w/w). Our results revealed that the impact of NPs on soil physicochemical properties was type-dependent, with PE-NPs exerting a more pronounced effect on soil enzyme activities than PP-NPs. Both NPs treatments accelerated nodulation and increased nitrogenase activity, with lower doses inducing more significant effects. Furthermore, PE and PP-NPs enriched bacterial species such as <i>Ensifer</i> and <i>Arthrobacter</i>, which positively interact with diazotrophs such as <i>Bradyrhizobium</i>, supporting symbiosis and biological nitrogen fixation. NPs treatments also significantly affected the bacteriome assembly process in the bulk soil, rhizosphere, and nodule, with an increased source ratio from the rhizosphere to the nodule and homogenous selection in the nodule bacteriome, likely benefiting bacteria involved in nodulation. Exposure to 500 mg/kg of both NPs caused alterations in the metabolic exudation profile of the plant rhizosphere, particularly influencing the biosynthesis pathways of flavonoids and isoflavonoids. Metabolites such as genistein and naringenin emerged as key mediators of plant-microbe interactions, further enhancing plant symbiotic processes under NPs exposure. This study demonstrates that NPs influence plants' symbiotic potential both directly, by altering the composition of the soil bacteriome, and indirectly, by affecting exudation potential. It provides strong evidence that NPs, especially those smaller than a micrometer, can have long-term effects on the stability and functionality of agricultural ecosystems.

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