Uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize

Nanomaterials are widely used in many different products, such as electronics, cosmetics, industrial goods, biomedical uses, and other material applications. The heavy emission of nanomaterials into the environment has motived increasing concern regarding the effects on ecosystems, food chains, and,...

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Main Author: Moradi Shahmansouri, Nastaran
Other Authors: Schnoor, Jerald L.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1488
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5564&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-55642019-11-09T09:26:53Z Uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize Moradi Shahmansouri, Nastaran Nanomaterials are widely used in many different products, such as electronics, cosmetics, industrial goods, biomedical uses, and other material applications. The heavy emission of nanomaterials into the environment has motived increasing concern regarding the effects on ecosystems, food chains, and, human health. Plants can tolerate a certain amount of natural nanomaterials, but large amounts of ENMs released from a variety of industries could be toxic to plants and possibly threaten the ecosystem. Employing phytoremediation as a contamination treatment method may show promise. However a pre-requisite to successful treatment is a better understanding of the behavior and effects of nanomaterials within plant systems. This study is designed to investigate the uptake, translocation, bioavailability, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize plants. Maize is an important food and feed crop that can be used to understand the potential hazardous effects of nanoparticle uptake and distribution in the food chain. The findings could be an important contribution to the fields of phytoremediation, agri-nanotechnology, and nanoparticle toxicity on plants. In the first experiment, hydroponically grown maize seedlings were exposed to similar doses of commercial non-coated gold nanorods in three sizes, 10x34 nm, 20x75 nm, and 40x96 nm. The three nanorod species were suspended in solutions at concentrations of 350 mg/l, 5.8 mg/l, and 14 mg/l, respectively. Maize plants were exposed to all three solutions resulting in considerably lower transpiration and wet biomass than control plants. Likewise, dry biomass was reduced, but the effect is less pronounced than that of transpiration and wet biomass. The reduced transpiration and water content, which eventually proved fatal to exposed plants, were most likely a result of toxic effect of gold nanorod, which appeared to physically hinder the root system. TEM images proved that maize plants can uptake gold particles and accumulate them in root and leaf cells. However, the translocation factor of gold nanorods from root to leaf was very low in this experiment. In the second experiment, maize seedlings were exposed to different (lower) concentrations of gold nanorods measured at 4.5x10-3 mg/l, 0.45 mg/l, and 2.25 mg/l for 10 days. Transpiration and biomass measurements demonstrated that the higher concentration of gold nanorods caused lower water uptake and growth, but lower concentrations did not show a significant toxic effect. According to ICP-MS results, root systems of the exposed plants were surrounded by high concentrations of sorbed nanorods, which physically interfered with uptake pathways and, thus, inhibited plant growth and nutritional uptake. 2014-12-01T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1488 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5564&context=etd Copyright © 2014 Nastaran Moradi Shahmansouri Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaSchnoor, Jerald L. publicabstract Gold nanorod Maize nano-agriculture Phytoremediation Civil and Environmental Engineering
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic publicabstract
Gold nanorod
Maize
nano-agriculture
Phytoremediation
Civil and Environmental Engineering
spellingShingle publicabstract
Gold nanorod
Maize
nano-agriculture
Phytoremediation
Civil and Environmental Engineering
Moradi Shahmansouri, Nastaran
Uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize
description Nanomaterials are widely used in many different products, such as electronics, cosmetics, industrial goods, biomedical uses, and other material applications. The heavy emission of nanomaterials into the environment has motived increasing concern regarding the effects on ecosystems, food chains, and, human health. Plants can tolerate a certain amount of natural nanomaterials, but large amounts of ENMs released from a variety of industries could be toxic to plants and possibly threaten the ecosystem. Employing phytoremediation as a contamination treatment method may show promise. However a pre-requisite to successful treatment is a better understanding of the behavior and effects of nanomaterials within plant systems. This study is designed to investigate the uptake, translocation, bioavailability, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize plants. Maize is an important food and feed crop that can be used to understand the potential hazardous effects of nanoparticle uptake and distribution in the food chain. The findings could be an important contribution to the fields of phytoremediation, agri-nanotechnology, and nanoparticle toxicity on plants. In the first experiment, hydroponically grown maize seedlings were exposed to similar doses of commercial non-coated gold nanorods in three sizes, 10x34 nm, 20x75 nm, and 40x96 nm. The three nanorod species were suspended in solutions at concentrations of 350 mg/l, 5.8 mg/l, and 14 mg/l, respectively. Maize plants were exposed to all three solutions resulting in considerably lower transpiration and wet biomass than control plants. Likewise, dry biomass was reduced, but the effect is less pronounced than that of transpiration and wet biomass. The reduced transpiration and water content, which eventually proved fatal to exposed plants, were most likely a result of toxic effect of gold nanorod, which appeared to physically hinder the root system. TEM images proved that maize plants can uptake gold particles and accumulate them in root and leaf cells. However, the translocation factor of gold nanorods from root to leaf was very low in this experiment. In the second experiment, maize seedlings were exposed to different (lower) concentrations of gold nanorods measured at 4.5x10-3 mg/l, 0.45 mg/l, and 2.25 mg/l for 10 days. Transpiration and biomass measurements demonstrated that the higher concentration of gold nanorods caused lower water uptake and growth, but lower concentrations did not show a significant toxic effect. According to ICP-MS results, root systems of the exposed plants were surrounded by high concentrations of sorbed nanorods, which physically interfered with uptake pathways and, thus, inhibited plant growth and nutritional uptake.
author2 Schnoor, Jerald L.
author_facet Schnoor, Jerald L.
Moradi Shahmansouri, Nastaran
author Moradi Shahmansouri, Nastaran
author_sort Moradi Shahmansouri, Nastaran
title Uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize
title_short Uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize
title_full Uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize
title_fullStr Uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize
title_full_unstemmed Uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize
title_sort uptake, translocation, and toxicity of gold nanorods in maize
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2014
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1488
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5564&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT moradishahmansourinastaran uptaketranslocationandtoxicityofgoldnanorodsinmaize
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