| Literature DB >> 28487709 |
Shiheng Lyu1,2, Xiangying Wei1,2, Jianjun Chen1,2, Cun Wang2,3, Xiaoming Wang4, Dongming Pan1.
Abstract
Titanium (Entities:
Keywords: beneficial elements; ferric chelate reductase; ferritins; iron; metal transporter; nano-TiO2 particles (TiO2NPs); titanium
Year: 2017 PMID: 28487709 PMCID: PMC5404504 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.00597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Concentration of titanium in plants grown in soils where titanium was not applied via roots or leaves.
| Red maple | Leaves | 175 | Guha and Mitchell, | |
| Stem | 90 | |||
| Sycamore | Leaves | 53 | Guha and Mitchell, | |
| Inflorescence | 19 | |||
| Petiole | 7 | |||
| Horse chestnut | Leaves | 32 | Guha and Mitchell, | |
| Cordiera concolor | Leaves | 15 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Bulb onion | Bulb | 41 | Connor and Shacklette, | |
| Garden aspargus | Stem | 180 | Connor and Shacklette, | |
| Bauhinia | Leaves | 5 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Red beet | Beetroot | 27 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Silver birch or Warty birth | Leaves | 6 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Maria-Black color or Murtinha | Leaves | 6 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Headed cabbage | Leaves | 120 | Connor and Shacklette, | |
| Sweet pepper | Fruit | 110 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Gray hair-grass | Leaves | 2 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Species name was not given | Leaves | 17 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Tapertip hawksbeard | Leaves | 40 | Cook et al., | |
| Cucumber | Fruit | 19 | Connor and Shacklette, | |
| Rosewood | Leaves | 7 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Carrot | Roots | 28 | Connor and Shacklette, | |
| Wavy hair-grass | Above ground part | 2 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Diadrostachia | Leaves | 5 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Horesetail | Above ground part | 460 | Cannon et al., | |
| Coca plant | Leaves | 1 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Beach | Leaves | 15 | Guha and Mitchell, | |
| Cleavers or Goosegrass | Above ground part | 6 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Candeia or Cambara | Leaves | 27 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Moss | Leaves | 53 | Berg and Steinnes, | |
| Beach morning glory | Leaves | 578 | Ramakrishna et al., | |
| False piqui | Leaves | 32 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Leandra | Leaves | 4 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Ryegrass | Leaves | 11 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Purple moor-grass | Above ground part | 3 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Chinese violet cress | Leaves | 43 | Cao et al., | |
| Inflorescence | 15 | |||
| Roots | 12 | |||
| Snap bean | Green pods | 72 | Connor and Shacklette, | |
| Pine | Needless | 8 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Scots pine | Needless | 5 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Polytrichum moss | Above ground part | 6 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Black cherry | Leaves | 155 | Connor and Shacklette, | |
| Stem | 120 | |||
| Brake or Eagle fern | Leaves | 20 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Brazilian savanna | Leaves | 20 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Pedunculate oak | Wood | 1,900 | Dumon and Ernst, | |
| Sheep's sorrel or Red sorrel | Leaves | 5 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Peat moss | Above ground part | 10 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Barbatimao | Leaves | 12 | Ceccantini et al., | |
| Lowbush blueberry | Leaves | 4 | Sheppard and Evenden, | |
| Lingonberry or Cowberry | Leaves | 5 | Markert and Haderlie, | |
| Lowbush blueberry | Leaves | 4 | Sheppard and Evenden, | |
| Lingonberry or Cowberry | Leaves | 5 | Markert and Haderlie, |
Dry weight (DW).
Figure 1A schematic illustration of Ti effects on crop performance. Ti applied via roots or leaves at appropriately low concentrations has been shown to promote seed germination, enhance root uptake of other nutrient elements, stimulate the activity of some enzymes, increase chlorophyll biosynthesis and photosynthesis, strengthen stress tolerance, and improve crop quality and yield.
Effects of titanium compounds applied via roots or leaves on plant performance.
| Treated with 10−8
| Increased biomass production, enhanced photosynthetic oxygen evolution and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatease activity | Kiss et al., | |
| Foliar application of 0–100 mg L−1 Ti-ascorbate | Increased plant height and leaf number | Whitted-Haag et al., | |
| Ti-ascorbate used in a hydroponic experiment with Ti in 0–18 mg L−1 | Increased tissue Fe and Mg contents, stimulated nitrate reductase activity, and enhanced chlorophyll a and b contents | Hrubý et al., | |
| Foliar spray of a chelated-Ti solution at 2 mg L−1 | Increased yield by an average of 15.7% | Pais, | |
| Foliar spray of a 2 mg Ti L−1 solution at 35 ml per plant | Increased biomass production | Lopez-Moreno et al., | |
| Foliar application of 0.042 mM Ti-ascorbate | Enhanced the activity of Fe-dependent enzymes | Carvajal et al., | |
| Foliar application of 2 mg L−1 Ti-ascorbate | Increased fruit quality | Martinez-Sanchez et al., | |
| Foliar application of 0.042 mM Ti-ascorbate | Improved N uptake | Frutos et al., | |
| Foliar spray of chelated-Ti solutions 3 and 6 mg L−1 three times | Yield increased from 32 to 95.3% | Pais, | |
| Foliar application of 0.02% Tytanit | Increased total anthocyanin content | Skupień and Oszmiański, | |
| Foliar application of 2 g Ti ha−1 | Improved plant growth vigor | Wojcik, | |
| Foliar spray of a chelated-Ti solution at 3 mg L−1 three times | Increased yield by 16.6% | Pais, | |
| Foliar application of Ti-ascorbate | Increased crop yield | István et al., | |
| Foliar spray of 0.5 mg Ti (TiCl4) per plant | Increased biomass and the uptake of P, Fe, Mn, and Zn, and enhanced chlorophyll biosynthesis | Wojcik and Wojcik, | |
| Foliar application of 0–100 mg L−1 Ti-ascorbate | Increased plant growth and quality | Whitted-Haag et al., | |
| Foliar spray of a chelated-Ti solution at 5 mg L−1 | Increased yield by 18.3%, and reduced P deficiency | Pais, | |
| Foliar application of Ti (TiCl4) at 0–1 mg L−1 | Increased chlorophyll contents and crop yield | Ram et al., | |
| Foliar application of 0.2–0.8 L of Tytanit per hectare | Increased seed yield, thousand grain weight, and seed germination | Radkowski et al., | |
| Foliar application of Ti-ascorbate | Increased the uptake of essential elements and crop yield | István et al., | |
| Foliar spray of 0.042 mM Ti-ascorbate at 5 L per tree | Improved plant growth and increased Ca, Fe, Cu, and Zn concentrations in peel and flesh | Alcaraz-Lopez et al., | |
| Foliar application of 0.042 mM Ti4+ | Extended the storability of fruits | Serrano et al., | |
| Foliar spray of a chelated-Ti solution at 1 mg L−1 | Increased yield by 22.1% | Pais, | |
| Foliar application of 0.042 mM Ti4+ | Extended the storability of fruits | Serrano et al., | |
| Foliar spray of a chelated-Ti solution at 1 mg L−1 | Increased yield by 19.8% | Pais, | |
| Foliar application of 0.04–0.1% Tytanit | Increased yield and fruits quality | Grajkowski and Ochmian, | |
| Foliar spray of a chelated-Ti solution at 5 mg L−1 | Fruit weight increased from 11% to 25% | Pais, | |
| Foliar spray of a chelated-Ti solution at 5 mg L−1 | Fruit weight increased from 11% to 25% | Pais, | |
| Tytanit dissolved in nutrient solutions with Ti equivalent to 0–960 g Ti·ha−1 yr−1 | Increased yield, improved fruits quality including vitamin C content, and promoted macronutrient uptake | Kleiber and Markiewicz, | |
| A hydroponic culture containing 1–2 mg L−1 Ti | Improved plant growth when N in nutrient solutions was low | Haghighi et al., | |
| Treatment of plants with Ti concentrations from 0 to 60 10−5M | Increased the activity of lipoxygenase | Daood et al., | |
| Tytanit dissolved in nutrient solutions with Ti equivalent to 0–960 g Ti·ha−1 yr−1 | Increased Fe, Mn, and Zn uptake and lycopene content. | Markiewicz and Kleiber, | |
| Foliar spray of a 2 mg L−1 chelated Ti solution | Increased yield by 10.2% | Ram et al., | |
| Foliar application of 0.02–0.08% Tytanit | Increased yield and essential element uptake | Marcinek and Hetman, | |
| Foliar application of Ti-ascorbate | Increased crop yield | István et al., | |
| Ti-ascorbate (5 mg L−1) in hydroponic solutions | Reduced heavy metal damage | Leskó et al., | |
| Foliar application of Mg- Titanit | Increased chlorophyll content and crop yield | Kovacik et al., |
Beneficial effects of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO.
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 100, 200, and 400 mg L−1) | Promoted seed germination | Haghighi and Teixeira da Silva, | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 250, 500, and 1,000 μg mL−1) | Increased seedling root growth | Andersen et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 10, 20, 40, and 80 mg.L−1) | Enhanced seed germination | Hatami et al., | |
| Seeds were immersed in 100, 250, 500, and 1,000 mg.L−1 nanoparticle solutions | Enhanced root growth | Szymanska et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 250, 500, and 1,000 μg mL−1) | Promoted seed germination and seedling root growth | Andersen et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 10, 100, 1,000, 1,200, 1,500, 1,700, and 2,000 mg L−1) | Promoted seed germination and seedling growth | Mahmoodzadeh et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 250, 500, and 1,000 μg L−1) | Promoted seed germination and root growth | Andersen et al., | |
| Alga treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 1, 3, 10, 30, and 100 mg L−1) | Reduced Cd toxicity | Yang et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle (0, 2, 5, and 10 mg L−1) | Increased cold tolerance | Mohammadi et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle (0, 2, 5, and 10 mg L−1) | Increased cold tolerance | Mohammadi et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0–4,000 mg L−1) | Increased root length | Servin et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 250, 500, and 1,000 μg mL−1) | Promoted seed germination and seedling root growth | Andersen et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 5, 20, 40, 60, and 80 mg L−1) | Enhanced seed germination and seedling growth | Feizi et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle (0, 0.01, 0.03, and 0.05%) | Increased crop seed yield and oil content | Rezaei et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 250, 500, and 1,000 μg mL−1) | Promoted seed germination | Andersen et al., | |
| Soil application of nanoparticle solutions (0–300 mg kg−1) | Increased Cd uptake and minimized Cd stress | Singh and Lee, | |
| Nanoparticle added to MS medium (0, 10, 30, and 60 mg.L−1) | Increased callugenesis and the size of calli. | Mandeh et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle (0, 0.01, 0.02, and 0.03%) | Increased crop yield | Moaveni et al., | |
| Nanoparticle solutions (0, 25, 50, 75, and 100 mg kg−1) applied to a sandy loam soil | Increased P uptake and plant growth | Hanif et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solution (0, 250, 500, and 1,000 μg mL−1) | Promoted seedling root growth | Andersen et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle solutions (0, 10, 100, and 500 mg L−1) | Increased drought tolerance | Aghdam et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle (0, 0.01, 0.02, 0.03, 0.04, and 0.06% g L−1) | Increased crop yield | Dolatabadi et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 100, 200, and 300 mg L−1) | Increased root length | Samadi et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solution (0, 10, 20, 40, and 80 mg.L−1) | Promoted seed germination | Hatami et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle solution (0, 0.01, and 0.03%) | Increased tolerance of drought stress | Kiapour et al., | |
| Nanoparticle added to MS medium (10, 20, 30, and 40 mg mL−1) | Promoted seed germination and seedling growth | Dehkourdi and Mosavi, | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 100, 200, and 400 mg L−1) | Promoted seed germination | Haghighi and Teixeira da Silva, | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 10, 20, 40, and 80 mg.L−1) | Increased seed germination | Hatami et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 10, 20, 40, and 80 mg L−1) | Enhanced seed germination | Hatami et al., | |
| Soil or foliar application of nanoparticle solutions (0–1,000 mg kg−1) | Improved plant growth | Raliya et al., | |
| Nanoscale TiO2 doped applied with zinc (500–800 mg kg−1) | Reduced disease | Paret et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle solutions (0, 0.05, 0.1, and 0.2 g L−1) | Improved photosynthesis under mild heat stress | Qi et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 100, 200, and 400 mg L−1) | Promoted seed germination | Haghighi and Teixeira da Silva, | |
| Seeds soaked with a 0.25% nanoparticle solution, plants sprayed with a 0.25% nanoparticle solution | Enhanced the expression of Rubisco mRNA and activity of Rubisco | Xuming et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with a 0.25% nanoparticle solution, and plants sprayed with the same solution | Enhanced photosynthesis and improved plant growth | Lei et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with a 0.25% nanoparticle solution, and plants sprayed with the same solution | Decreased oxidative stress to chloroplast caused by UV-B radiation | Lei et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with a 0.03% nanoparticle solution, and plants sprayed with the same solution | Increased activity of Rubisco activase | Gao et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with a 0.25% nanoparticle solution | Promoted seed germination and seedling growth | Zheng et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with a 0.25% nanoparticle solution, and plants sprayed with the same solution | Ti bound to the PS α reaction center complex and intensify the function of the PS α electron donor | Hong et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with 0–0.6% nanoparticle solutions | Enhanced photosynthesis | Hong et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 1, 2, 10, 100, and 500 mg L−1) | Promoted seed germination and seedling growth | Feizi et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle solutions (0.01, 0.02, and 0.03%) | Increased crop yield under drought stress | Jaberzadeh et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with 0–1,200 mg L−1 nanoparticle solutions | Promoted seed germination | Mahmoodzadeh and Aghili, | |
| Soil application of nanoparticle (0, 20, 40, 60, 80, 100 mg kg−1) | Improved plant growth | Rafique et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0–1,000 mg L−1) | Promoted seedling growth | Gogos et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0–1,000 mg L−1) | Promoted seedling growth | Gogos et al., | |
| Foliar spray of a nanoparticle at 10 mg L−1 | Improved crop growth | Raliya et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle solutions (0, 0.01, and 0.03%) | Increased crop yield | Morteza et al., | |
| Foliar spray of nanoparticle solutions (0, 0.01, 0.02, and 0.03%) | Increased crop yield | Moaveni and Kheiri, | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 250, 500, and 1,000 μg mL−1) | Promoted root growth of germinated seedling | Andersen et al., |
Negative or neutral effects of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO.
| Roots treated with nanoparticle solution (0, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 mM) | Caused DNA damages | Ghosh et al., | |
| Seedlings were grown in medium containing nanoparticles | Caused the reorganization and elimination of microtubules | Wang et al., | |
| Roots immersed in a 100 mg L−1 nanoparticle solution | No significant effects on seed germination and root elongation | Larue et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 100, 500, 1,000, 2,500, and 5,000 mg L−1) | No effect on seed germination | Song et al., | |
| Roots immersed in a 100 mg.L−1 nanoparticle solution | No significant effects on seed germination and root growth | Larue et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 250, 500, and 1,000 μg L−1) | No effects on seed germination | Andersen et al., | |
| Plants grown in a soil mixed with nanoparticle at 0, 100 or 200 mg kg−1 | Decreased plant growth | Burke et al., | |
| Caryopses exposed to nanoparticle solutions (0, 500, 1,000, and 2,000 mg L−1) | No significant effects on seed germination and root elongation | Mattiello et al., | |
| Nanoparticles applied in a hydroponic culture (0, 100, 150, 200, 400, 600, and 1,000 mg L−1) | No significant effects on plant growth | Kořenková et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 100, 500, 1,000, 2,500, and 5,000 mg L−1) | No effect on seed germination | Song et al., | |
| Plant growth media treated with nanoparticle (0, 10, 50, 100, 200, 1,000, and 2,000 mg L−1) | Inhibited plant growth | Song et al., | |
| Nanoparticles applied to plant growth media (31, 50, and 100 mg L−1) | Caused growth inhibition | Kim et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0.01–100 mg L−1) | High concentration inhibited seed germination, root lengths, and seedling growth | Clement et al., | |
| Roots treated with nanoparticle solutions (0, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 mM) | Caused DNA damages | Ghosh et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0.1, 1, 2.5, and 5 %) | Decreased germination rate, root length, and seedling growth | Frazier et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (100, 500, and 1,000 mg L−1) | No significant effects on seed germination | Boonyanitipong et al., | |
| Seeds soaked with nanoparticle solutions (0, 50, 100, 1,000, 2,500, and 5,000 mg L−1) | Reduced seed germination and seedling growth | Song et al., | |
| Nanoparticles applied in a hydroponic solution | Decreased plant growth | Moll et al., | |
| Plants grown in a soil mixed with nanoparticle (10 g nanoparticle mixed with 110 kg soil) | Reduced plant growth | Du et al., | |
| Nanoparticles applied into sand medium at 100 mg L−1 | No significant effects on plant growth | Larue et al., | |
| Seedlings treated with a nanoparticle solution at 100 mg L−1 | Not significantly | Larue et al., | |
| Foliar application of 0.1, 0.2, and 0.4% nanoparticle solutions | Reduced photosynthetic rate | Gao et al., | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0.02, 0.1, 0.2, and 0. 4%) | Reduced seed germination, root lengths, and seedling biomass | Ruffini Castiglione et al., | |
| Roots immersed in nanoparticle solutions at 0.3 or 1.0 g L−1 | Interfered with water transport | Asli and Neumann, | |
| Seeds treated with nanoparticle solutions (0.02, 0.1, 0.2, and 0. 4%) | Reduced seed germination, root lengths, and seedling biomass | Ruffini Castiglione et al., |