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A lack of mechanistic understanding of nanomaterial interactions with plants and algae cell walls limits the advancement of nanotechnology-based tools for sustainable agriculture. We systematically investigated the influence of nanoparticle charge on the interactions with model cell wall surfaces built with cellulose or pectin and performed a comparative analysis with native cell walls of Arabidopsis plants and green algae (Choleochaete). The high affinity of positively charged carbon dots (CDs) (46.0 ± 3.3 mV, 4.3 ± 1.5 nm) to both model and native cell walls was dominated by the strong ionic bonding between the surface amine groups of CDs and the carboxyl groups of pectin. In contrast, these CDs formed weaker hydrogen bonding with the hydroxyl groups of cellulose model surfaces. The CDs of similar size with negative (−46.2 ± 1.1 mV, 6.6 ± 3.8 nm) or neutral (−8.6 ± 1.3 mV, 4.3 ± 1.9 nm) ζ-potentials exhibited negligible interactions with cell walls. Real-time monitoring of CD interactions with model pectin cell walls indicated higher absorption efficiency (3.4 ± 1.3 10−9) and acoustic mass density (313.3 ± 63.3 ng cm–2) for the positively charged CDs than negative and neutral counterparts (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively). The surface charge density of the positively charged CDs significantly enhanced these electrostatic interactions with cell walls, pointing to approaches to control nanoparticle binding to plant biosurfaces. Ca2+-induced cross-linking of pectin affected the initial absorption efficiency of the positively charged CD on cell wall surfaces (∼3.75 times lower) but not the accumulation of the nanoparticles on cell wall surfaces. This study developed model biosurfaces for elucidating fundamental interactions of nanomaterials with cell walls, a main barrier for nanomaterial translocation in plants and algae in the environment, and for the advancement of nanoenabled agriculture with a reduced environmental impact.more » « less
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Mechanisms of nanomaterial delivery to plant chloroplasts have been explored to improve plant stress tolerance, promote photosynthesis, facilitate genetic engineering, and manufacture self-repairing biomaterials, fuels, and biopharmaceuticals. However, the molecular interactions of nanomaterials with chloroplast membranes are not well understood. In this study, we examine the interactions of an important set of chloroplast membrane lipids including sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerols with carbon nanodots varying in functional group charge. To accomplish this objective, we constructed a novel model chloroplast membrane and interrogated the influence of carbon nanodot functional group charge, model chloroplast membrane composition, and ionic strength on the carbon nanodot-chloroplast membrane interactions using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring. We further examined the interaction of carbon nanodots with native chloroplasts isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana using confocal laser-scanning microscopy. Our results indicate that carbon nanodot–chloroplast membrane interactions are dictated primarily by electrostatics. Despite being the least abundant lipids in chloroplast membranes, we find that the relative abundance of sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerol in model membranes is a critical factor governing both the affinity and capacity of the membrane for positively charged carbon nanodots. Rates of carbon nanodot attachment to model chloroplast membranes varied with ionic strength in a manner consistent with electrical double layer compression on carbon nanodots. Our findings elucidate chemical interactions between nanomaterials and plant biosurfaces at the molecular level and potentially contribute to establishing structure–property–interaction relationships of sustainable nanomaterials with plant organelle membranes.more » « less
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Targeted delivery of nanomaterials with chemical cargoes in plants enabled by a biorecognition motifAbstract Current approaches for nanomaterial delivery in plants are unable to target specific subcellular compartments with high precision, limiting our ability to engineer plant function. We demonstrate a nanoscale platform that targets and delivers nanomaterials with biochemicals to plant photosynthetic organelles (chloroplasts) using a guiding peptide recognition motif. Quantum dot (QD) fluorescence emission in a low background window allows confocal microscopy imaging and quantitative detection by elemental analysis in plant cells and organelles. QD functionalization with β-cyclodextrin molecular baskets enables loading and delivery of diverse chemicals, and nanoparticle coating with a rationally designed and conserved guiding peptide targets their delivery to chloroplasts. Peptide biorecognition provides high delivery efficiency and specificity of QD with chemical cargoes to chloroplasts in plant cells in vivo (74.6 ± 10.8%) and more specific tunable changes of chloroplast redox function than chemicals alone. Targeted delivery of nanomaterials with chemical cargoes guided by biorecognition motifs has a broad range of nanotechnology applications in plant biology and bioengineering, nanoparticle-plant interactions, and nano-enabled agriculture.more » « less
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Engineered nanomaterials interfaced with plant seeds can improve stress tolerance during the vulnerable seedling stage. Herein, we investigated how priming seeds with antioxidant poly(acrylic acid)-coated cerium oxide nanoparticles (PNC) impacts cotton ( Gossypium hirsutum L.) seedling morphological, physiological, biochemical, and transcriptomic traits under salinity stress. Seeds primed with 500 mg L −1 PNC in water (24 h) and germinated under salinity stress (200 mM NaCl) retained nanoparticles in the seed coat inner tegmen, cotyledon, and root apical meristem. Seed priming with PNC significantly ( P < 0.05) increased seedling root length (56%), fresh weight (41%), and dry weight (38%), modified root anatomical structure, and increased root vitality (114%) under salt stress compared with controls (water). PNC seed priming led to a decrease in reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation in seedling roots (46%) and alleviated root morphological and physiological changes induced by salinity stress. Roots from exposed seeds exhibited similar Na content, significantly decreased K (6%), greater Ca (22%) and Mg content (60%) compared to controls. A total of 4779 root transcripts were differentially expressed by PNC seed priming alone relative to controls with no nanoparticles under non-saline conditions. Under salinity stress, differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in PNC seed priming treatments relative to non-nanoparticle controls were associated with ROS pathways (13) and ion homeostasis (10), indicating that ROS and conserved Ca 2+ plant signaling pathways likely play pivotal roles in PNC-induced improvement of salinity tolerance. These results provide potential unifying molecular mechanisms of nanoparticle-seed priming enhancement of plant salinity tolerance.more » « less
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