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Nitrogen fertilizer delivery inefficiencies limit crop productivity and contribute to environmental pollution. Herein, we developed Zn- and Fe-doped hydroxyapatite nanomaterials (ZnHAU, FeHAU) loaded with urea (∼26% N) through hydrogen bonding and metal-ligand interactions. The nanomaterials attach to the leaf epidermal cuticle and localize in the apoplast of leaf epidermal cells, triggering a slow N release at acidic conditions (pH 5.8) that promote wheat (Triticum aestivum) growth and increased N uptake compared to conventional urea fertilizers. ZnHAU and FeHAU exhibited prolonged N release compared to urea in model plant apoplast fluid pH in vitro (up to 2 days) and in leaf membranes in plants (up to 10 days) with a high N retention (32% to 53%) under simulated high rainfall events (50 mm). Foliar N delivery doses of up to 4% as ZnHAU and FeHAU did not induce toxicity in plant cells. The foliar-applied ZnHAU and FeHAU enhanced fresh and dry biomass by ∼214% and ∼161%, and N uptake by ∼108% compared to foliar-applied urea under low soil N conditions in greenhouse experiments. Controlled N release by leaf-attached nanomaterials improves N delivery and use efficiency in crop plants, creating nanofertilizers with reduced environmental impact.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available January 28, 2026
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Lowry, Gregory V; Giraldo, Juan Pablo; Steinmetz, Nicole F; Avellan, Astrid; Demirer, Gozde S; Ristroph, Kurt D; Wang, Gerald J; Hendren, Christine O; Alabi, Christopher A; Caparco, Adam; et al (, Nature Nanotechnology)
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Ristroph, Kurt; Zhang, Yilin; Nava, Valeria; Wielinski, Jonas; Kohay, Hagay; Kiss, Andrew M.; Thieme, Juergen; Lowry, Gregory V. (, ACS Agricultural Science & Technology)
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