| Literature DB >> 30800601 |
Anshu Rastogi1, Durgesh Kumar Tripathi2, Saurabh Yadav3, Devendra Kumar Chauhan4, Marek Živčák5, Mansour Ghorbanpour6, Nabil Ibrahim El-Sheery7, Marian Brestic5.
Abstract
The beneficial effects of silicon and its role for plants are well established; however, the advantages of silicon nanoparticles over its bulk material are an area that is less explored. Silicon nanoparticles have distinctive physiological characteristics that allow them to enter plants and influence plant metabolic activities. The mesoporous nature of silicon nanoparticles also makes them good candidates as suitable nanocarriers for different molecules that may help in agriculture. Several studies have shown the importance of silicon nanoparticles in agriculture, but an overview of the related aspects was missing. Therefore, this review brings together the literature on silicon nanoparticles and discusses the impact of silicon nanoparticles on several aspects of agricultural sciences. The review also discusses the future application of silicon nanoparticles in plant growth, plant development, and improvement of plant productivity.Entities:
Keywords: Fertilizers; Mesoporous; Nanocarrier; Silicon
Year: 2019 PMID: 30800601 PMCID: PMC6385075 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-019-1626-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
Fig. 1Si-NP in agriculture: The illustration presents the potential use of Si-NP in agriculture
Impact of Si-NPs on plants, where (–) indicates data are not available
| Composition; origin; size (nm) | Concentration, treatment | Composition; origin; size (nm) | Plant | Impact (in comparison to control group) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SiO2; commercial; (–) | 62, 125, 250, 500, 1000 µL/L, seedling soaked with NP solution | SiO2; commercial; (–) |
| 500 µL/L showed the best results with an increase in mean height, root length, number of lateral roots, and chlorophyll concentration | Bao-shan et al. ( |
| Nano-Si; commercial; (–) | 1, 2 mM, seeds germinated in Petri plate | Nano-Si; commercial; (–) |
| 1 mM NPs were observed to act better (in comparison to 2 mM) in the adaptation of plants under salinity stress, with improvements in root and shoot growth | Haghighi et al. ( |
| Nano-Si; commercial; 20–35 | 1, 2 mM, seedlings though nutrient solution | Nano-Si; commercial; 20–35 |
| Si and Si-NP alleviated the effect of salinity stress on the fresh weight, chlorophyll concentration, photosynthetic rate, and leaf water content of the plant | Haghighi and Pessarakli ( |
| SiO2; biological; 20–40 | 15 kg/ha, soil in field | SiO2; biological; 20–40 |
| Si-NP-treated maize was observed to contain higher silica than micro-Si-treated maize or the control | Suriyaprabha et al. ( |
| SiO2; commercial; < 50 | 1 mM, seeds germinated in Petri plate | SiO2; commercial; < 50 |
| NP improves the germination and early growth of plants under salinity stress | Sabaghnia and Janmohammadi ( |
| SiO2; commercial; 12 | 2,4,6,8,10,12,14 g/L, seeds germinated in Petri plate | SiO2; commercial; 12 |
| 8 g/L was observed to significantly enhance seed germination, mean germination time, seed germination index, seed vigor index, seedling fresh weight, and dry weight | Siddiqui and Al-Whaibi ( |
| Si-NP; (–), (–) | 10 ml/L, sprayed on plant | Si-NP; (–), (–) |
| NPs alleviated the impact of salinity stress | Kalteh et al. ( |
| SiO2; commercial; 10–30 | 10, 50, 100 mg/L, seedling through irrigation | SiO2; commercial; 10–30 |
| A dose-dependent impact on alleviating drought stress was observed by increases in plant growth properties and photosynthetic pigment concentrations and decreases in xylem water potential and MDA content | Ashkavand et al. ( |
| Nano-Si; commercial; (–) | 1.5, 3 mM, seeds grown in pot | Nano-Si; commercial; (–) |
| Si-NPs were observed to slightly improve flowering when compared with Si or the control | Roohizadeh et al. ( |
| Nano-Si; chemical; 75–125 | 10 µM, seed and seedlings, in petri plate or hydroponic | Nano-Si; chemical; 75–125 |
| Addition of Si-NPs together with Cr(VI) was observed to protect pea seedlings against Cr(VI) phytotoxicity | Tripathi et al. ( |
| Mesoporous nano-Si; chemical; 20 | 200, 500, 1000, 2000 mg/L, seed and seedlings, in Petri plate or hydroponic | Mesoporous nano-Si; chemical; 20 | Wheat | NPs facilitated photosynthetic activity and plant growth | Sun et al. ( |
| Nano-Si; biological; (–) | 7.5 g/pot, seeds in pot with soil and NP | Nano-Si; biological; (–) | Rice | The expression rate of the silicon uptake genes Lsi1 and Lsi2 increased in nano-Si in comparison to the control, but was less than that in plants treated with Si ions | Abdel-Haliem et al. ( |
| Nano-Si; chemical; 19, 48, and 202 | 1 mM, tissues, NP added in culture solution | Nano-Si; chemical; 19, 48, and 202 | Rice | Under cadmium toxicity, the survival of rice cells was observed to be dependent on the size of NPs | Cui et al. ( |
| SiO2; commercial; 20–30 | 0-2.5 mM, seedlings, hydroponic | SiO2; commercial; 20–30 |
| Can modulate the PST transporter and, therefore, can increase the translocation of NPs/Si | Nazaralian et al. ( |
| Nano-Si; chemical; 75–125 | 10 µM, seedlings, hydroponic | Nano-Si; chemical; 75–125 |
| Si and Si-NPs were observed to alleviate the negative impact of UVB radiation | Tripathi et al. ( |
| Nano-Si; chemical; 14, 50, and 200 | 250, 1000 mg/L, seedlings, hydroponic | Nano-Si; chemical; 14, 50, and 200 |
| Size-dependent uptake of silica by plants was observed | Slomberg and Schoenfisch ( |
| Nontransgenic and Bt-transgenic cotton | A decrease in plant height and root and shoot biomass was observed in both transgenic and nontransgenic cotton | Le et al. ( |
TGA thermogravimetric analysis, ICP inductively coupled plasma, XRD X-ray diffractometry, FTIR Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy
The role of Si-NPs as pesticides
| Composition; Size (nm) | Concentration; species effective against | Impact | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| SiO2; 20–60 | 1, 1.5, 2, and 2.5 g/kg; | Kills insect and larvae in a dose-dependent manner | Rouhani et al. ( |
| Si-NPs; (-) | 200, 300, 400, and 500 ppm; | Kills larvae in a dose-dependent manner | El-Helaly et al. ( |
| SiO2; 12, 20–30 | 50, 100, 200, and 300 ppm; | Kills insects in a dose- and size-dependent manner | Ziaee and Ganji ( |
Si-NP as fertilizers
| Composition | Herbicide/fertilizer | Benefits | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| SiO2 NP, Size 20–30 nm, 180–600 m2 g−1 | Farmyard manure (FYM), and NPK fertilizers (applied with 20 mM SiO2 NP) | The fertilizers were observed to be significantly effective to improve growth traits in presence of NP | Janmohammadi et al. ( |
| Si-NP; surface area (~ 1000 m2 g−1); pore size (25 nm) | Urease (encapsulated) | Adsorption of urease increased | Hossain et al. ( |
| Si-NP; surface area (1013 m2 g−1); pore size (2.5 nm) | Urease (encapsulated) | A burst release of entrapped urea was observed within 24 h; however, slow release was observed in subsequent period | Wanyika et al. ( |