4.7 Article

Silicon Dioxide Nanoparticles Induce Innate Immune Responses and Activate Antioxidant Machinery in Wheat Against Rhizoctonia solani

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10122758

Keywords

Rhizoctonia solani; wheat; nanoparticles; silicon dioxide; root rot; damping-off; ROS; antioxidant

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Funding

  1. King Khalid University, KSA [RGP 2/165/42]

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The study investigated the biosynthesis of silicon dioxide nanoparticles using saffron extract to protect wheat seedlings against Rhizoctonia solani. The nanoparticles showed strong fungistatic activity and significantly reduced fungal growth while also improving wheat seedling growth. The nanoparticles activated multiple defense mechanisms, enhanced antioxidant defense, and promoted accumulation of photosynthetic pigments, demonstrating their potential therapeutic role against R. solani infection.
The phytopathogenic basidiomycetous fungus, Rhizoctonia solani, has a wide range of host plants including members of the family Poaceae, causing damping-off and root rot diseases. In this study, we biosynthesized spherical-shaped silicon dioxide nanoparticles (SiO2 NPs; sized between 9.92 and 19.8 nm) using saffron extract and introduced them as a potential alternative therapeutic solution to protect wheat seedlings against R. solani. SiO2 NPs showed strong dose-dependent fungistatic activity on R. solani, and significantly reduced mycelial radial growth (up to 100% growth reduction), mycelium fresh and dry weight, and pre-, post-emergence damping-off, and root rot severities. Moreover, the impact of SiO2 NPs on the growth of wheat seedlings and their potential mechanism (s) for disease suppression was deciphered. SiO2 NPs application also improved the germination, vegetative growth, and vigor indexes of infected wheat seedlings which indicates no phytotoxicity on treated wheat seedlings. Moreover, SiO2 NPs enhanced the content of the photosynthetic pigments (chlorophylls and carotenoids), induced the accumulation of defense-related compounds (particularly salicylic acid), and alleviated the oxidative stress via stimulation of both enzymatic (POD, SOD, APX, CAT, and PPO) and non-enzymatic (phenolics and flavonoids) antioxidant defense machinery. Collectively, our findings demonstrated the potential therapeutic role of SiO2 NPs against R. solani infection via the simultaneous activation of a multilayered defense system to suppress the pathogen, neutralize the destructive effect of ROS, lipid peroxidation, and methylglyoxal, and maintain their homeostasis within R. solani-infected plants.

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