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Interaction of Carbohydrate Coated Cerium-Oxide Nanoparticles with Wheat and Pea: Stress Induction Potential and Effect on Development

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2019
1200.pdf (4.172Mb)
Authors
Milenković, Ivana
Mitrović, Aleksandra
Algarra, Manuel
Lazaro-Martinez, Juan M.
Rodriguez-Castellon, Enrique
Maksimović, Vuk
Spasić, Slađana
Beskoski, Vladimir P.
Radotić, Ksenija
Article (Published version)
Metadata
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Abstract
Reports about the influence of cerium-oxide nanoparticles (nCeO(2)) on plants are contradictory due to their positive and negative effects on plants. Surface modification may affect the interaction of nCeO(2) with the environment, and hence its availability to plants. In this study, the uncoated and glucose-, levan-, and pullulan-coated nCeO(2) were synthesized and characterized. The aim was to determine whether nontoxic carbohydrates alter the effect of nCeO(2) on the seed germination, plant growth, and metabolism of wheat and pea. We applied 200 mgL(-1) of nCeO(2) on plants during germination (Ger treatment) or three week-growth (Gro treatment) in hydroponics. The plant response to nCeO(2) was studied by measuring changes in Ce concentration, total antioxidative activity (TAA), total phenolic content (TPC), and phenolic profile. Our results generally revealed higher Ce concentration in plants after the treatment with coated nanoparticles compared to uncoated ones. Considering all obt...ained results, Ger treatment had a stronger impact on the later stages of plant development than Gro treatment. The Ger treatment had a stronger impact on TPC and plant elongation, whereas Gro treatment affected more TAA and phenolic profile. Among nanoparticles, levan-coated nCeO(2) had the strongest and positive impact on tested plants. Wheat showed higher sensitivity to all treatments.

Keywords:
total phenolic content / total antioxidative activity / plant / phenolic profile / nanomaterial / growth / germination / characterization
Source:
Plants-Basel, 2019, 8, 11
Publisher:
  • MDPI, Basel
Funding / projects:
  • Synthesis, processing and characterization of nanostructured materials for application in the field of energy, mechanical engineering, environmental protection and biomedicine (RS-45012)
  • Simultaneous Bioremediation and Soilification of Degraded Areas to Preserve Natural Resources of Biologically Active Substances, and Development and Production of Biomaterials and Dietetic Products (RS-43004)
  • The membranes as sites of interaction between the intracellular and apoplastic environments: studies of the bioenergetics and signaling using biophysical and biochemical techniques. (RS-173040)
  • Study of structure-function relationships in the plant cell wall and modifications of the wall structure by enzyme engineering (RS-173017)
  • Fishes as water quality indicators in open waters of Serbia (RS-173045)

DOI: 10.3390/plants8110478

ISSN: 2223-7747

PubMed: 31698836

WoS: 000502258800042

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85074654761
[ Google Scholar ]
10
3
URI
http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1203
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Institution/Community
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanja
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Milenković, Ivana
AU  - Mitrović, Aleksandra
AU  - Algarra, Manuel
AU  - Lazaro-Martinez, Juan M.
AU  - Rodriguez-Castellon, Enrique
AU  - Maksimović, Vuk
AU  - Spasić, Slađana
AU  - Beskoski, Vladimir P.
AU  - Radotić, Ksenija
PY  - 2019
UR  - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1203
AB  - Reports about the influence of cerium-oxide nanoparticles (nCeO(2)) on plants are contradictory due to their positive and negative effects on plants. Surface modification may affect the interaction of nCeO(2) with the environment, and hence its availability to plants. In this study, the uncoated and glucose-, levan-, and pullulan-coated nCeO(2) were synthesized and characterized. The aim was to determine whether nontoxic carbohydrates alter the effect of nCeO(2) on the seed germination, plant growth, and metabolism of wheat and pea. We applied 200 mgL(-1) of nCeO(2) on plants during germination (Ger treatment) or three week-growth (Gro treatment) in hydroponics. The plant response to nCeO(2) was studied by measuring changes in Ce concentration, total antioxidative activity (TAA), total phenolic content (TPC), and phenolic profile. Our results generally revealed higher Ce concentration in plants after the treatment with coated nanoparticles compared to uncoated ones. Considering all obtained results, Ger treatment had a stronger impact on the later stages of plant development than Gro treatment. The Ger treatment had a stronger impact on TPC and plant elongation, whereas Gro treatment affected more TAA and phenolic profile. Among nanoparticles, levan-coated nCeO(2) had the strongest and positive impact on tested plants. Wheat showed higher sensitivity to all treatments.
PB  - MDPI, Basel
T2  - Plants-Basel
T1  - Interaction of Carbohydrate Coated Cerium-Oxide Nanoparticles with Wheat and Pea: Stress Induction Potential and Effect on Development
IS  - 11
VL  - 8
DO  - 10.3390/plants8110478
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Milenković, Ivana and Mitrović, Aleksandra and Algarra, Manuel and Lazaro-Martinez, Juan M. and Rodriguez-Castellon, Enrique and Maksimović, Vuk and Spasić, Slađana and Beskoski, Vladimir P. and Radotić, Ksenija",
year = "2019",
abstract = "Reports about the influence of cerium-oxide nanoparticles (nCeO(2)) on plants are contradictory due to their positive and negative effects on plants. Surface modification may affect the interaction of nCeO(2) with the environment, and hence its availability to plants. In this study, the uncoated and glucose-, levan-, and pullulan-coated nCeO(2) were synthesized and characterized. The aim was to determine whether nontoxic carbohydrates alter the effect of nCeO(2) on the seed germination, plant growth, and metabolism of wheat and pea. We applied 200 mgL(-1) of nCeO(2) on plants during germination (Ger treatment) or three week-growth (Gro treatment) in hydroponics. The plant response to nCeO(2) was studied by measuring changes in Ce concentration, total antioxidative activity (TAA), total phenolic content (TPC), and phenolic profile. Our results generally revealed higher Ce concentration in plants after the treatment with coated nanoparticles compared to uncoated ones. Considering all obtained results, Ger treatment had a stronger impact on the later stages of plant development than Gro treatment. The Ger treatment had a stronger impact on TPC and plant elongation, whereas Gro treatment affected more TAA and phenolic profile. Among nanoparticles, levan-coated nCeO(2) had the strongest and positive impact on tested plants. Wheat showed higher sensitivity to all treatments.",
publisher = "MDPI, Basel",
journal = "Plants-Basel",
title = "Interaction of Carbohydrate Coated Cerium-Oxide Nanoparticles with Wheat and Pea: Stress Induction Potential and Effect on Development",
number = "11",
volume = "8",
doi = "10.3390/plants8110478"
}
Milenković, I., Mitrović, A., Algarra, M., Lazaro-Martinez, J. M., Rodriguez-Castellon, E., Maksimović, V., Spasić, S., Beskoski, V. P.,& Radotić, K.. (2019). Interaction of Carbohydrate Coated Cerium-Oxide Nanoparticles with Wheat and Pea: Stress Induction Potential and Effect on Development. in Plants-Basel
MDPI, Basel., 8(11).
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants8110478
Milenković I, Mitrović A, Algarra M, Lazaro-Martinez JM, Rodriguez-Castellon E, Maksimović V, Spasić S, Beskoski VP, Radotić K. Interaction of Carbohydrate Coated Cerium-Oxide Nanoparticles with Wheat and Pea: Stress Induction Potential and Effect on Development. in Plants-Basel. 2019;8(11).
doi:10.3390/plants8110478 .
Milenković, Ivana, Mitrović, Aleksandra, Algarra, Manuel, Lazaro-Martinez, Juan M., Rodriguez-Castellon, Enrique, Maksimović, Vuk, Spasić, Slađana, Beskoski, Vladimir P., Radotić, Ksenija, "Interaction of Carbohydrate Coated Cerium-Oxide Nanoparticles with Wheat and Pea: Stress Induction Potential and Effect on Development" in Plants-Basel, 8, no. 11 (2019),
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants8110478 . .

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