4.7 Article

Mitigation of the salinity stress in rapeseed (Brassica napus L.) productivity by exogenous applications of bio-selenium nanoparticles during the early seedling stage

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 310, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119815

Keywords

Bio-selenium nanoparticles; Nanopriming; Gene expression; Antioxidant enzyme; Salinity stress; Rapeseed

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFD1000900]
  2. Hubei Hongshan Laboratory Research Fund [2021HSZD004]
  3. Key Research and Development Program in Hubei Province [2020BBB061]

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In recent years, nanoparticles have gained attention as an effective strategy to improve plant growth under salt stress conditions. In this study, bio-SeNPs were used to prime rapeseed seeds, leading to improved expression of aquaporin genes, seed microstructure, germination, growth traits, physiochemical attributes, and mineral uptake under salinity stress. The bio-SeNPs enhanced water uptake during seed imbibition, increased seedlings biomass, promoted rapid seed germination, and improved the efficiency of the plants' defense system. Additionally, the bio-SeNPs modulated the uptake of Na+ and K+, which improved rapeseed growth and prevented oxidative damage due to salt stress.
In recent years, much attention has been directed toward using nanoparticles (NPs) as one of the most effective strategies to improve plant growth, especially under salt stress conditions. Further research has been conducted to develop NPs using various chemical ways; accordingly, knowledge about the beneficial effect of bioSeNPs in rapeseed is obscure. Selenium (Se) is a vital micronutrient with a series of physiological and antioxidative properties. Seed priming is emerging as a low-cost, efficient, and environment-friendly seed treatment in nanotechnology. The current study was carried out to examine the promising effects of nanopriming via bio-SeNPs on the expression level of aquaporin genes, seed microstructure, seed germination, growth traits, physi-ochemical attributes, and minerals uptake of two rapeseed cultivars under salinity stress conditions. Our investigation monitored the positive effects of bioSeNPs on the expression level of aquaporin genes (BnPIP1-1 and BnPIP2-1) and water uptake during the seed imbibition (4 and 8 h of priming), which indicated higher imbibition potential and germination promotion with bioSeNPs application (most effective at 150 mu mol/L). The total performance index was significantly enhanced with nano-treatments in rapeseed seedlings. Collectively, nano-application improved seed microstructure, seed germination, and photosynthetic efficiency directly correlated with higher seedlings biomass, especially with a higher concentration of bioSeNPs. The enhancement in alpha-amylase and free amino acid contents in nanoprimed seeds resulted in rapid seed germination. Moreover, bioSeNPs increased the osmotic adjustment and enhanced the efficiency of the plant's defense system by improving the activity of enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidants, thus enhancing ROS scavenging under salt stress. The obtained results may indicate the strengthening of seed vigor, improving seedling growth and physiochemical attributes via bioSeNPs. Our findings displayed that bioSeNPs modulated the Na+ and K+ uptake, which improved the rapeseed growth and showed a close relationship with the low contents of toxic Na+ ion; thus, it prevented oxidative damage due to salt stress. This comprehensive data can add more knowledge to understand the mechanisms behind plant-bioSeNPs interaction and provide physiological evidence for the beneficial roles of nanopriming using bioSeNPs on rapeseed germination and seedling development under salinity stress conditions. Such studies can be used to develop simple prepackaged nano primer products, which can be used before sowing to boost seed germination and crop productivity under stress conditions.

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