DOI:
10.1039/C8EN00645H
(Critical Review)
Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2019,
6, 41-59
Uptake, translocation, and transformation of metal-based nanoparticles in plants: recent advances and methodological challenges†
Received
15th June 2018
, Accepted 22nd October 2018
First published on 31st October 2018
Abstract
Interactions between engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) and plants represent one of the fundamental problems we must face in the rapid development of nanotechnology. Hundreds of studies have addressed this issue in the past decade. This review summarizes recent research progress on the uptake, translocation and transformation of metal-based ENPs in higher plants. The integrated uptake and transport pathways of ENPs in plants are summarized and the key physiological barriers to plant uptake of ENPs are proposed. Transformation of ENPs in the soil–plant system is discussed, paying particular attention to the effects of phyllosphere and rhizosphere processes on the transformation and plant uptake of ENPs. The advances, limitations and challenges of analytical techniques for the qualitative and quantitative analysis for ENPs in plants are addressed. Furthermore, the key challenges in each field are thoroughly assessed and future perspectives are proposed. This review is intended to provide an unambiguous assessment of the present knowledge on the uptake, translocation and transformation of NPs in higher plants, and also to provide guidance for future research.
Environmental significance
Interactions between engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) and plants is one of the fundamental issues we must face in the development of nanotechnology, because ENPs released into the environment will inevitably interact with plants, a basic component of ecosystems. Although hundreds of studies have addressed plant uptake, translocation, accumulation, transformation, and phytotoxicity of ENPs and even their transmission in the food chain, there remain some critical issues present in the field of NP–plant interactions. In this critical review, mechanisms regarding the uptake and translocation pathways and transformations of ENPs in plants are systematically reviewed. In particular, the analytical technique developments, methodological challenges and future perspectives for related fields are proposed.
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1. Introduction
The rapid development of nanotechnology and extensive commercial applications of engineered nanomaterials raise the risk of discharge of engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) into the environment and especially the soil–plant system.1–4 Briefly, there are two main routes by which ENPs can enter the soil–plant system. One is through the agricultural application of sewage sludges which often contain SiO2, TiO2, ZnO, and Ag NPs.5–8 The other route is through application of nano-agrochemicals such as nano-pesticides, nano-fertilizers and nano-amendments, resulting in the direct entry of SiO2, TiO2, Zn/ZnO, Fe/FeOx, Cu/CuO/Cu(OH)2, CeO2 and Ag NPs into the soil–plant system.9–11
After entering the soil–plant system, NPs will inevitably interact with plants and thereby potentially influence plant physiology and possibly food security. Nano-phytotoxicity is the most widely studied aspect of studies related to the interactions between plants and ENPs (over 430 papers have been published in the past decade), and both harmful and beneficial effects on plants at the physiological, biochemical and genetic levels have been reported.12–21 The uptake, translocation and accumulation of ENPs in plants play critical roles in the determination of ENP phytotoxicity and may also further influence human food security. Plant uptake of NPs is usually studied in combination with their phytotoxicity, and papers focusing on phytotoxicity, uptake, translocation and accumulation of ENPs in plants have been reviewed from different perspectives.17,22–25 Frankly speaking, present knowledge on the uptake and translocation mechanisms of ENPs in plants remains very limited and is not systematic. Schwab et al. have comprehensively reviewed the various physiological barriers to the uptake and transport of ENPs in plants.23 However, they are concerned only with the influence of plant physiology on plant uptake and transport of ENPs. Another important aspect is that ENPs are highly unstable and abiotic or biotic transformations of ENPs such as redox reactions, aggregation and dissolution of ENPs may occur in the rhizosphere or inside plants, and this will greatly alter the bioavailability, toxicity and fate of the ENPs.26–31 A timely and integrated review of current knowledge on the uptake, translocation, accumulation, and transformation of ENPs in the soil–plant system is therefore needed.
Furthermore, understanding of the uptake, translocation and transformation of NPs in plants or other organisms is highly dependent on the development of specialized analytical techniques. In the past decade various advanced analytical techniques have been used to detect the speciation and location of NPs in organisms at tissue, cellular and sub-cellular levels, but great challenges remain in this field especially for quantitative analysis and in situ detection of NPs in complex matrices such as soils, plants and other organisms.32 Here, state-of-the-art developments in the available and potential techniques for the analysis of interactions between NPs and plants are reviewed, and critical challenges and future needs are proposed.
2. Uptake and translocation pathways of NPs in plants
2.1 Foliar exposure to and uptake of NPs
2.1.1 Foliar uptake and top-down translocation of NPs in plants.
There are two different exposure modes of plants to NPs, namely foliar exposure and root exposure. Present knowledge on foliar uptake and translocation pathways of NPs under foliar exposure is summarized in the schematic diagram shown in Fig. 1. The cuticle is considered the first natural barrier against NPs entering into substrate tissue because the leaves of higher plants are protected by the waxy cuticle against water loss and uncontrolled exchange of other solutes.33 There are two routes for the uptake of solutes across the cuticle (cuticular pathway), namely nonpolar solutes via diffusion and permeation (lipophilic pathway) and polar solutes via polar aqueous pores (hydrophilic pathway) with estimated effective size ranging from about 0.6 to 4.8 nm.34–36 Accordingly, NPs below 4.8 nm in size may penetrate through the cuticle via the cuticular pathway directly, whereas many studies have reported foliar uptake and accumulation of NPs larger than 5 nm. However, the pathway by which these NPs are taken up is still unclear. Therefore, particular attention should be paid to the issue of whether NPs, especially those larger than 5 nm, can be taken up by leaves through the cuticular pathway. It is also worth noting that there will be changes in leaf cuticles with life stage, climatic conditions, and pest and disease damages; the first barrier of cuticles against NPs can therefore be bypassed in some cases.
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| Fig. 1 Schematic diagram of the uptake and translocation pathways of NPs in plants. | |
In addition to the cuticular pathway, studies have demonstrated the uptake of hydrophilic substances through stomatal openings (stomatal pathway) (Fig. 1). The morphological size of stomatal apertures is approximately 25 μm in length and 3–10 μm in width.36 However, due to the unique geometric construction and physiological function of stomata, the actual size exclusion limit (SEL) of stomatal aperture for NP penetration is still far from known. Eichert and Goldbach, using an indirect calculation method, estimated the equivalent pore radius of this pathway to be larger than 20 nm.34 This stomatal pathway is the only confirmed pathway of foliar uptake of NPs from the leaf surface to the internal tissues. Numerous studies support this pathway of NP uptake, including the observation of various NPs or their aggregates in leaf stomata and the deeper tissues of different plant species including Citrullus lanatus, Cucurbita pepo, Allium porrum, Lactuca sativa, and Arabidopsis thaliana using TEM, CLSM or μ-XRF.36–40 Eichert et al. investigated the SEL and lateral heterogeneity of the stomatal foliar uptake pathway for water-suspended fluorescent polystyrene NPs.36 The uptake of 43 nm NPs through the stomatal pathway was detected by CLSM, whereas no uptake of 1.1 μm particles was observed. They also observed the distribution of fluorescent NPs in the leaf apoplast once they entered the substomatal cavern. The experimental results indicate that the pore radius of the stomatal pathway estimated by Eichert and Goldbach was an underestimate. Kim et al. found that nano-zerovalent iron (nZVI) induced the activation of plasma membrane H+-ATPase activity and promoted stomatal aperture opening.41 In addition, plant species with different leaf morphology, stomatal size and density are expected to have different capacities for foliar uptake of NPs.37 In a recent study, foliar exposure of the vegetables lettuce, collard greens and kale to CuO NPs (20–100 nm) was studied using single-particle inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (SP-ICP-MS).42 The results indicated that most of the NPs and their aggregates could be rinsed with water, and the retained capacity of the NPs for leaf tissues was dependent on their hydrophobicity and surface roughness.42 Further studies are encouraged to systematically investigate the stomatal pathway of NP uptake by different plant species.
NPs may undergo long-distance transport via the vascular system after entering the leaf apoplast through the stomatal pathway. Traditionally photosynthate, sugars and macromolecules in the leaf, including small RNA and proteins, are able to transport downward via the phloem system to shoots and roots.43 In general, the long-distance transport of liquids in higher plants occurs via the vascular system, which is composed of the xylem and phloem conductive tissues. In the xylem system the direction of flow is from bottom to top (from root to shoot), while in the phloem system the flow direction is from top to bottom (from shoot to root) (Fig. 1). This plant vascular system is noncirculatory in nature, which means that materials moving downward in the phloem do not circulate back to their original sites through the xylem.43 Therefore, the phloem system is the only possible foliar uptake pathway for NPs to translocate from leaf to root. Although many studies have identified the foliar uptake of NPs, no study has provided direct evidence to support the subsequent phloem translocation pathway of NPs in plants. Wang et al. studied the foliar uptake of four metal oxide NPs of size range 24–47 nm by watermelon. They found that the small NPs could penetrate watermelon leaves following the stomatal pathway using TEM, and the metal elements were detected in the shoots and roots, therefore they concluded that NPs passed through the shoots and finally reached the roots through the phloem sieve tubes.44 Hong et al. investigated foliar uptake of CeO2 NPs of primary size 8 ± 1 nm by cucumber (Cucumis sativus). Ce was detected by ICP-OES in all the tissues of the CeO2 NP treated plants and Ce containing particles in roots were also observed using TEM.45 Quantified by ICP-MS, Zhao et al. found that 97–99% of Cu was sequestered in the leaves and only 1–3% of Cu accumulated in root tissues after the exposure of lettuce plants to Cu(OH)2 NPs (∼50 to 1000 nm) through foliar spray for one month. They suggested that leaf exudates could form weak acids in the presence of water and thus accelerated the dissolution of Cu(OH)2 NPs, resulting in a pathway for Cu ions to penetrate the epidermal cells and translocate to other tissues.46 One important concern is that no evidence was provided to confirm whether the metal contents detected by elemental analysis or particles detected by TEM in shoots and roots were from NPs or from dissolved metallic ions. This is a common disadvantage of using only elemental analysis to track NP delivery to plants. Wang et al., using split-root experiments and high-resolution TEM observation, found that 20–40 nm CuO NPs were translocated from maize roots to shoots via the xylem and then from the shoots back to the roots via the phloem.47 During this translocation, CuO NPs may be reduced from Cu(II) to Cu(I). Ma et al. also observed the xylem- and phloem-based transport of 25 nm CeO2 NPs in cucumber using split-root experiments. They further found, using μ-XRF and μ-XANES, that CeO2 NPs were transported from roots to shoots through the xylem and 15% of the NPs were reduced to Ce(III), while only CeO2 NPs were transported back from shoots to roots through the phloem.48 These results support the notion that NPs can transport upward through the xylem and downward through the phloem, although how the NPs transport between the xylem and phloem remains unknown. The NPs and their transformed products translocated in roots may subsequently be exuded into the rhizosphere, and the ones translocated in leaves may be exuded into the phyllosphere, which can further influence the microbial community in the rhizosphere or the phyllosphere.
2.1.2 Phyllosphere factors affecting foliar uptake of NPs by plants.
In the natural environment there are many symbiotic or pathogenic microorganisms in the phyllosphere.49 Phyllosphere microorganisms can secrete extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) or special chemicals as quorum sensing signal molecules.50 These exudates may induce the dissolution of NPs and further the uptake of metal ions by plant leaves, or they may form a mucous layer to protect leaf surfaces against the uptake of NPs.46 How the phyllosphere microorganisms influence foliar uptake of NPs by plants or whether NPs influence the growth of phyllospheric microorganisms has not been studied. Further, the organ development levels for plants are very different at different life stages and this may also influence the foliar uptake of NPs. For example, undeveloped cuticles in newly-growing leaves and flowers or natural senescence of the cuticles of old leaves may provide a high possibility for NPs to enter leaves.51 In addition, some common leaf diseases such as leaf mold, blight, chlorosis, and necrosis may destroy the protective tissues of leaves such as the cuticle, the epidermis and even the mesophyll.52 Therefore, the barriers of leaves against NPs can be disabled when pest or disease damage occurs in plant leaves. In particular, some NPs such as Cu(OH)2,20,46 TiO2,53 and Ag/SiO254 are used as nanopesticides to be sprayed on diseased leaf surfaces, thus increasing the risks of NP foliar uptake and then transport to other tissues.
2.1.3 Potential of using plant leaves as captors of atmospheric NPs.
Many studies have reported that plants, especially trees and shrubs, play important roles in the filtration and entrapment of airborne particles such as PM10 and PM2.5, and therefore improve air quality.55,56 In fact, nano-scale ultrafine particles are also present as airborne particles and may have a higher health risk than larger particles because they can readily enter the human body by inhalation.57,58 However, no study has reported whether and to what extent plants can filter and capture atmospheric NPs. As discussed above, laboratory experiments partly indicate that plant leaves can capture NPs. We therefore expect that plants are potential captors or filters of airborne particles including NPs because the global leaf surface area is vast with an estimated value of 1017260200 km2, approximately twice as large as the land surface.49 Experiences of PM2.5 indicate that the filtration effectiveness of atmospheric NPs may be highly dependent on plant species.55,56 In order to evaluate the effects of plants on the remediation of air pollution and especially as atmospheric NP captors, experiments involving systematic simulation and on-line field monitoring of atmospheric NPs are required.
2.2 Root uptake and translocation of NPs in plants
2.2.1 Factors affecting root uptake of NPs by plants.
There are more published reports on root exposure of plants to NPs than on foliar exposure. However, some contradictory results have been obtained and the topic of plant root uptake of NPs is still controversial. One important explanation is that plant uptake of NPs is affected by multiple factors such as particle size, surface functionalization, morphology, exposure conditions, plant species, plant growth stage, root integrity (damage or disease) and rhizosphere processes. We summarize the current information from available studies on NP features, plant species, exposure conditions, analytical methods, and the main results on root uptake, translocation, and transformation of typical NPs in plants, including Ag, Au, Cu, metallic oxide, and rare-earth oxide NPs in Tables S1–S3.†
One of the most important properties impacting plant root uptake of NPs is particle size. It is certain that size selection exists in the uptake of NPs by plants, but inconsistent results have been reported in the literature. Sabo-Attwood et al. using μ-XRF and TEM observed root uptake of 3.5 nm Au NPs by tobacco but 18 nm AuNPs remained agglomerated on the root outer surfaces.59 However, Taylor et al. using TEM found that Au NPs (from 7 to 108 nm) were not directly taken up by Arabidopsis thaliana roots.60 Moreover, Slomberg and Schoenfisch using TEM observed that SiO2 NPs up to 200 nm were able to be taken up into the roots of Arabidopsis thaliana, although fewer particles were observed as the particle size increased (14, 50, 200 nm).61 Larue performed an elegant experiment to reveal the size-dependent uptake and transport of TiO2 NPs in wheat (Triticum aestivum) using TEM and μ-XRF, which provides evidence that NPs with primary diameters less than 36 nm accumulated in roots and were distributed throughout the whole plant tissues without dissolution or transformation, while NPs with primary diameters in the range 36–140 nm accumulated in wheat root parenchyma but did not reach the stele and consequently did not translocate to the shoots, and NPs larger than 140 nm did not accumulate in wheat roots.62 It is still impossible from current studies to estimate the SEL for NP uptake by roots. One factor is that the SEL is different for different plant species and growth stages. Another important factor is that the sizes of NPs in the rhizosphere are entirely different from their original ones and highly dynamic and broadly distributed. However, the particle sizes used in most studies have been based on the average size of the original NPs. In fact, the uptake of NPs by plants is dependent on the minimum, but not the average, size of NPs.
Surface charge is another factor impacting the root uptake and translocation of NPs in plants. Generally, the plant root cap is protected by a border cell mucilage layer consisting of negatively charged root secretions. Avellan et al. using X-ray computed nanotomography (nano-CT) and hyperspectral imaging microscopy (HSI) found that Arabidopsis thaliana roots secreted mucilages that were adsorbed to positively charged Au NPs (∼12 nm) and prevented the translocation of Au NPs into the root tissues. However, negatively charged Au NPs (∼12 nm) did not adsorb the mucilages and were able to translocate into the apoplast of roots.63 Koelmel et al. using laser ablation-inductively coupled-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) further found that surface functionalization greatly affected the root uptake and translocation of AuNPs (core diameter 2 nm) in rice (Oryza sativa L.). The accumulated Au concentrations in roots followed the order: Au NPs(+) > Au NPs(0) > Au NPs(−), while the reverse order was obtained in shoots, indicating preferential translocation of negatively charged NPs through the vascular system.64 Similar effects were observed in wheat (Triticum aestivum) exposed to positively charged, neutral and negatively charged CeO2 NPs (∼4 nm).65 In some cases the surface charges of NPs can be reversed due to the formation of nano-coronas by coatings of negatively charged root exudates on the surfaces of the positively charged NPs. These nano-coronas may transport through the vascular system like negatively charged NPs. More complicated scenarios include root exudates possibly inducing aggregation, partial dissolution or transformation of NPs and further impacting on their root uptake and bioavailability, and which mechanism is the dominant one in the rhizosphere is dependent on the chemical properties of the NPs and the exudates as well as the rhizosphere microenvironment. In addition, different plant species and plants at different growth stages secrete different root exudates, further affecting the size, surface charge and speciation of NPs. Therefore, the influence of plant species and growth stage on plant root uptake of NPs is complicated.
Few studies have focused on the influence of physiological factors such as plant species, disease and rhizosphere microorganisms on the uptake, accumulation and transformation of NPs in the soil–plant system.66 Different plant species display different uptake capacities for NPs, likely due to differences in plant physiology and metabolic function. For example, a higher Ce translocation rate was observed in dicotyledons than in monocotyledons.67 Glenn et al. using TEM and ICP-MS analysis found that root uptake of Au NPs was also plant species dependent; both 4 nm and 18 nm Au NPs were taken up by Azolla caroliniana Willd, whereas only 4 nm Au NPs were taken up by Myriophyllum simulans Orch, and Egeria densa Planch did not take up Au NPs of either size.68 Judy et al. using μ-XRF and LA-ICP-MS found that 10–50 nm Au NPs were taken up by tobacco roots but not by wheat.69 Understanding species-dependent NP uptake by plants is helpful to agricultural risk management. Mycorrhizal fungi can form symbiotic partnerships with higher plants and increase effective plant root surfaces by up to 10 times.23 This promotes plant uptake of water and nutrients and may influence the uptake and bioavailability of NPs.23 Studies indicate that tomato plants colonized by mycorrhizal fungi accumulate lower concentration of Ag in their tissues when exposed to 2 nm Ag NPs than do non-mycorrhizal plants, but this effect was not evident when the plants were exposed to 15 nm Ag NPs.70 Another study found that symbiotic mycorrhizal colonization lowered Zn accumulation in tissues of maize when exposed to ZnO NPs (90 ± 10 nm).71 Root diseases such as root rot, root knot and rhizopus disease also influence the uptake of NPs due to the damage to the physiological barriers of roots against NP entry.72 More work is needed to investigate the influence of rhizosphere biotic and abiotic processes on the bioavailability and fate of NPs in the plant–soil system.
2.2.2 Integrated root uptake and translocation pathways of NPs in plants.
After approaching plant roots, NPs are firstly adsorbed onto the root surface. Plant roots have a rough surface due to the presence of root hairs which can secrete mucilage or small molecules such as organic acids, and therefore the root surface generally exhibits a negative charge. These features lead to NPs with positive surface charge being more likely to be adsorbed and to accumulate on the root surface.73 For uptake and translocation to occur, NPs must traverse a series of physiological root barriers from the surface to the xylem vessels, including the root surface cuticle, epidermis, cortex, endodermis, Casparian strip and finally transport upward to the shoots via the xylem (Fig. 1). The role and composition of the root surface cuticle are similar to those of the leaf surface cuticle. Whether NPs can permeate the root surface cuticle is still unknown. However, the cuticle is underdeveloped on the surface of root hairs and developing root tips of main and secondary roots, thus NPs may therefore be directly exposed to the epidermis in these regions.23
When approaching the root epidermis there are two basic pathways for root uptake and transport of NPs in higher plants. Most studies have proposed the apoplastic pathway (Fig. 1) in which NPs firstly penetrate the pores of the cell wall and then diffuse into the space between the cell wall and the plasma membrane or pass through the intercellular space without crossing the cell membrane. A large number of studies have observed NPs or their aggregates in the root apoplastic space using TEM or CLSM, and therefore suggest the existence of an apoplastic pathway for NPs in plant roots. For example, 20 nm ZnO NPs in ryegrass roots,74 12 nm Au NPs in Arabidopsis thaliana roots,63 20–80 nm Ag NPs in Arabidopsis thaliana roots,75 43 nm CuO NPs in Elsholtzia splendens roots,76 and 22 nm La2O3 NPs in cucumber roots.29 An intractable problem is that the pore diameters of the plant cell walls are estimated to be in the range 5 to 20 nm.12 Logically, only NPs smaller than 20 nm can pass through the cell walls. However, many NPs larger than 20 nm have been observed in intercellular spaces. One possible mechanism is that NPs may induce the destruction of the cell wall and enlarge the pore size.77 Another plausible hypothesis is that NPs enter the intercellular spaces or even the xylem through diseased roots or physical wounding as a consequence of belowground herbivores and mechanical injuries, such as accidents during seedling transplantation.17 In all, by the apoplastic pathway, NPs can pass through the epidermis, cortex and reach the endodermis, but are prevented by the Casparian strip, a belt of specialized cell wall material sealed by lipophilic hydrocarbons located in adjacent cells of the endodermis around the vascular system, to prevent the entry of macromolecules and NPs into the vascular cylinder.78 However, under some special conditions NPs may enter the vascular system and avoid the Casparian strip through the root apoplast, for example through the root tip region where the Casparian strip has not yet formed,31,79 or the lateral root junction where the Casparian strip is disconnected.17,31,80 Experimental evidence of this pathway was provided by Lv et al. who found using TEM, μ-XRF and fluorescence tracking that 30 nm ZnO NPs gathered at the lateral root junction of maize and inside the connected xylem cylinder (Fig. 2).31 Therefore, the lateral root junction may be an important apoplastic pathway by which NPs enter the vascular system, and future studies are needed to confirm whether this pathway occurs in other plant species, and to specify the size selectivity of this pathway.
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| Fig. 2 Combining micro-X-ray fluorescence microscopy (μ-XRF), X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES), extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS), fluorescence microscopy (FM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to study the uptake, translocation and transformation of ZnO NPs in maize plants.31 | |
The other hypothesized pathway is the symplastic route, which is a cell-to-cell transport pathway (Fig. 1). In addition to the traverse across the cell wall there are two barriers by which NPs may be transported through the symplastic pathway. One is penetration by NPs of the cell membrane and entry into the cytoplasm. The other is transport of NPs to the adjacent cells after entering the cell through plasmodesmata. Several hypotheses have been proposed for the transmembrane transport of NPs by plant cells, e.g. through aquaporins, interconnected ion channels, endocytosis and broken membrane intubation. However, ion channels work for specific ions, and although aquaporins are non-selective in nature, the protein channels of aquaporins are generally below 1 nm in diameter.81 The hypothesis of a water or ion channel pathway for NP cellular internalization must face challenges from the basic principles of plant physiology.82 Broken membranes have been observed in cellular internalization of carbon nanotubes but this is a destructive invasion that may induce membranolysis and cell death.83,84 According to the literature, the highest feasibility transmembrane pathway for NPs is through endocytosis. Plant cell endocytosis is poorly understood compared with that in animal systems. However, recent studies on NP internalization using isolated plant cells suggest that endocytosis pathways are involved. For example, Onelli et al. using CLSM observed both clathrin independent and clathrin dependent pathways for the endocytosis of Au NPs into tobacco protoplasts.85 Etxeberria et al. using CLMS observed the fluid phase endocytic uptake of 40 nm polystyrene nano-spheres and 20 nm CdSe/ZnS quantum dots (DQ) by cultured sycamore cells,86 and polystyrene nano-spheres were delivered to the central vacuole while CdSe/ZnS nano-dots were sequestered into cytoplasmic vesicular structures.86 Torney et al. further confirmed that the surface properties of NPs play a crucial role in plant cell endocytosis, and endocytic uptake of triethylene glycol (TEG) functionalized mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSN) by tobacco mesophyll protoplasts took place, but un-functionalized MSN were not taken up. The internalized NPs remained in endocytotic vesicles in the cytoplasm, with sizes ranging from 0.2 to 3 μm.87 However, at present, direct evidence for the endocytic uptake of NPs in situ in plant roots is still lacking, except for some indirect TEM evidence supported by the observations of vesicles containing nano-dots in the cytoplasm of plant roots.47,88,89
Cell walls separate individual plant cells. Symplastic transport takes place intercellularly through plasmodesmata (PD). Plasmodesmata are channels that span the plant cell wall and enable intercellular communication by linking the cytoplasm between adjacent cells (Fig. 1).90 Botanists have provided abundant evidence that PD facilitate the cell-to-cell trafficking of biological macromolecules such as proteins, nucleic acids, and RNA, and the roles of PD as intercellular channels for macromolecular transport in plants have been well reviewed.90–93 Specifically, non-targeted traffic of proteins by diffusion in the range of approximately 3–20 kDa with maximum size of about 3 nm was demonstrated,93,94 providing a model for intercellular NP traffic. Geisler-Lee, using TEM, for the first time directly observed Ag0 containing NPs and aggregated clumps inside root cell PD and middle lamella in the first 1–2 mm of Arabidopsis thaliana root tips (plant root exposure to 20, 40 and 80 nm Ag NPs).75 Zhai et al. using TEM observed the presence of Au NPs or their aggregates in root cell cytoplasm, cell walls, plastids, mitochondria, and especially the PD of poplar plants (Populus deltoides × nigra) exposed to 15, 25 and 50 nm Au NPs.95 Notably, both studies also observed Ag0 or Au0-containing black dots in Ag+-treated or Au+-treated root cells.75,95 Thus, whether NPs observed by TEM in root cells were taken up intact or reduced or assimilated Ag+ or Au+ released from NPs in vivo is unclear. It should be noted that numerous studies have demonstrated a natural source for the synthesis of Ag or Au NPs inside plants96–98 which requires particular attention when using Ag or Au NPs as models to study the NP uptake pathway in plants. Until now, there has been no direct observation of other NPs inside PD except for Ag or Au NPs. It is still difficult to clarify whether this is due to the special physico-chemical properties of Ag or Au NPs providing them with the capacity to shuttle through PD or merely due to the reduction of Ag+in situ. Therefore, the hypothesis of intercellular NP transport through the PD channel still lacks sufficient evidence. Future studies are needed to provide more solid evidence to support this hypothesis using inactive NPs, and microinjection strategies that have been used to establish the transport of proteins via PD are worth pursuing to reveal the SEL of NPs for PD channels.
Some physiological and technological challenges still need to be resolved to clarify the integrated mechanisms of root uptake and translocation of NPs by plants, such as identifying the apoplastic and symplastic pathways, the energy source of phloem-based transport and the precise particle size analysis of NPs in the rhizosphere and plant tissues. Future studies of plant NP uptake and translocation must be concerned more about how this occurs rather than just that it occurs. Effective cooperation between plant physiologists, material scientists, environmental scientists and analysts is necessary to solve these problems.
3. Transformation of NPs in the rhizosphere and in plants
3.1 Transformation of NPs in rhizosphere
NPs are highly dynamic and unstable in the environment compared with their bulk counterparts due to their small size, high surface-to-volume ratio and reactivity.99 Many biotic and abiotic processes may occur when NPs are released into the environment, resulting in changes in their agglomeration state, surface chemistry or speciation.26 Therefore, NPs exposed to plants in the real environment may not maintain the properties of pristine NPs. Numerous studies have focused on the transformation of NPs in soils, sediments, wastewater and activated sludge in the past few years.5,100–106 For example, Ag NPs were found to convert to Ag2S in sludge;100 ZnO NPs were transformed to Zn3(PO4)2, ZnS and Zn associated Fe oxy/hydroxides (Zn–FeOOH) in sludge and biosolids.102 More information on the transformation and fate of various NPs in the environment can be found in previous reviews.26,107–109
Here, we focus on the transformation of NPs in the rhizosphere environment. The rhizosphere is a chemically and biologically active region enriched with root exudates and microorganisms110 which can induce the transformation of NPs prior to their approach to root surfaces. For example, Huang et al. found that the strong binding capacity of Cu NPs (∼40 nm) and a synthetic root exudate influenced the oxidation and reduction transformations of Cu NPs to Cu(I) and Cu(II), and also significantly decreased Cu uptake and bioaccumulation in cucumber (Cucumis sativus).111 Gao et al. investigated the dissolution of CuO NPs (∼40 nm) in wheat (Triticum aestivum) rhizosphere soil, and found that Cu in the readily available fraction (extracted by CaCl2) increased and the labile fraction of Cu (extracted by DTPA) decreased in the rhizosphere soil compared to the bulk soil.112 Rico et al. investigated the transformation of CeO2 NPs (67 nm × 8 nm) using synchrotron-based μ-XRF and μ-XANES to analyze their spatial localization and speciation in thin sections of intact roots of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) at the soil–root interface. Their results showed that 84–90% of Ce was localized as CeO2 in the soil and at root surfaces, while a few Ce accumulation “hot spots” on root surfaces revealed highly significant reduction (56–98%) of CeO2 NPs to Ce(III) species.113 The mechanism inducing NP dissolution and transformation at the soil–root surface is complicated. The rhizosphere process is not only affected by, but also induces, the changes in soil pH, organic matter, mineral constituents, and microbial community.114,115 The changes in these soil factors can further result in either opposite or negative effects on NP transformations.116
In addition, most of the reactions between NPs and soil matrices are thermodynamically feasible but kinetically slow, therefore kinetics is one of most important factors determining the transformation of NPs in the rhizosphere. For example, after 14 d of cultivation of wheat (Triticum aestivum), the extractable Cu in the rhizosphere soil spiked with Cu NPs pre-aged for 28 d was found to be higher than that of those without aging,112 which was opposite to the trend observed in soil spiked with CuSO4.112 The aging process is also affected by surface coatings and the particle size of NPs. For example, Coutris et al. have observed that 20 nm uncoated Ag NPs in soil are more resistant to aging than Ag ions or 5 nm citrate-coated Ag NPs, but they can act as continuous sources of bioaccessible Ag ions during a 70 d aging process.117 Although related studies are still in their infancy they remind us that aged NPs in soils may be quite different from their ionic form, and this needs to be considered in the risk assessment of NPs in soils. More field experiments, long-term studies and systematic projects are urgently needed in order to explore the dissolution and transformation of NPs in soils and especially those representing high exposure risks to plants such as Cu-based NPs and ZnO, TiO2, CeO2 and Ag NPs.
3.2 Plant uptake of transformation products of NPs
Transformation of NPs at the rhizosphere soil–root interface will influence the phytotoxicity and bioavailability of NPs.112,113 However, to date the majority of studies have focused only on plant uptake and phytotoxicity of pristine NPs, and very few studies have attempted to address the behaviors of their transformation products. Wang et al. investigated the uptake, accumulation and toxicity of Ag2S NPs, a widespread transformation product of Ag NPs in the environment, in cucumber and wheat and found that Ag2S NPs with sizes up to 120 nm were taken up by plant roots and subsequently delivered as Ag2S NPs into leaf tissues without transformation.118 However, the interesting problem as to whether sulfuration increases or decreases the bioavailability and accumulation of Ag NPs in plants was not addressed. Stegemeier et al. further compared the bioavailability of AgNO3, Ag NPs (6.3 nm) and Ag2S NPs (7.8 nm). They suggested that despite accumulating a similar total amount of Ag in roots (>99%) and shoots (<1%), different forms of Ag interacted with the roots in different manners. For example, Ag+ accumulated uniformly throughout roots, Ag NPs accumulated mainly in the (columella) border cells and elongation zones, and Ag2S NPs remained largely adhering to the root exteriors.119 Spielman-Sun et al. investigated the impacts of speciation and solubility of Cu-based NPs on Cu uptake and translocation in roots of wheat (Triticum aestivum). Their results showed that Cu(OH)2 NPs with a high solubility were quickly taken up by roots and further reduced and/or sulfidized, while CuO or CuS NPs with low solubility were more persistent over the 48 h post-exposure period with as much as 80% of the NPs nontransformed.120 In order to better understand and predict the fate, bioavailability and risk of NPs in environmental and agricultural ecosystems, future work needs to focus on the uptake, accumulation and toxicity of not only the ENPs but also the environmentally abundant NP transformation products.
3.3 Biotransformation of ENPs in plants
In addition to transformation in rhizosphere environments, transformation of NPs has also been found to occur inside or on the surface of plant tissues, resulting in different accumulated elemental speciation in plants. Yin et al. found for the first time that Ag was partially oxidized in the root tissues of Lolium multiflorum. Two hypotheses were proposed to explain this observation: (i) direct uptake of the Ag NPs by roots followed by oxidative transformation in root tissues and (ii) dissolution of Ag NPs outside the root surface followed by the uptake of ionic species by roots.121 Wang et al. identified the cellular internalization and intracellular biotransformation of NPs to Ag2S and Ag-thiolates in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii;122 but similar transformation of Ag NPs inside higher plant tissues has not been observed. Au NPs are less active than Ag NPs and no study has reported the oxidative transformation of Au NPs inside plants. In contrast, both Ag+ and Au+ were able to be reduced by plants to form NPs in plant roots and shoots.96–98 Distinguishing the pristine Ag or Au NPs from phytosynthesized NPs is a major challenge, and measuring the values of Ag or Au isotope ratios may offer some prospect of distinguishing them more clearly.123
Metal oxide NPs such as TiO2 and SiO2 NPs are the most stable of the commonly studied NPs and are present in their pristine speciation in plants.61,124,125 By contrast, NPs such as ZnO, CuO, NiO, CeO2, Yb2O3 and La2O3 were found to be able to transform, resulting in changes in the accumulated speciation in plants. The transformations of ZnO NPs exposed to various plants have been determined using synchrotron X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS). Lv et al. found that the majority of Zn accumulated in maize roots and shoots was in forms such as Zn phosphate under hydroponic exposure of ZnO NPs, mainly due to the enhanced dissolution of ZnO NPs in the rhizosphere and the plant uptake and translocation of Zn in the ionic form (Fig. 2).31 Similar Zn accumulated speciation was also found in wheat cultivated in soil.126,127 Other types of accumulated speciation such as Zn-citrate and Zn-nitrate in soybean,128,129 Zn-citrate, Zn-histidine, and Zn-phytate in cowpea,30 and Zn-nitrate in velvet mesquite130 have also been reported. Although different Zn speciation has been found in plants, a consistent conclusion obtained is that no ZnO has been observed in shoots when roots have been exposed to ZnO NPs, thus Zn uptake, transport and accumulation in plants are mainly in the form of Zn2+ released from ZnO NPs. Exposure to CuO NPs and Cu2+ resulted in similar Cu accumulated speciation in wheat, except that for CuO part of the Cu(II) was reduced to Cu(I) inside the plants and formed Cu(I)–sulfur complexes.126,127 Similar reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) in plants was also observed in soil-cultivated rice and maize.47,131 Peng et al. further found that 40 nm CuO NPs were transported from rice roots to shoots and dissolved Cu(II) was mainly combined with cysteine, citrate, and phosphate ligands and some of the Cu(II) was reduced to Cu2O.132
In early studies, rare earth oxide (REO) NPs such as CeO2 NPs were considered to be highly stable and not to undergo transformation in the surrounding environment and plants.133–135 However, Zhang and his colleagues have conducted systematic studies on plant uptake and accumulation of REO NPs and they found that REO NPs such as CeO2, Yb2O3 and La2O3 NPs were able to be biologically transformed in plants and the rhizosphere. For example, Zhang et al. found that after hydroponic exposure of cucumber plants to 7 nm CeO2 NPs for 21 days, part of the CeO2 was reduced to Ce(III) and formed needle-like clusters of CePO4 in intercellular regions and the epidermis of cucumber roots, and formed Ce(III) complexes with carboxylates during translocation to the shoots (Fig. 3).28 They speculated that organic acids in root exudates promoted the dissolution of CeO2 NPs, and the reducing root exudates did induce the reduction of Ce(IV) to Ce(III) in the rhizosphere (Fig. 3).28 Similar reduction and transformation of CeO2 NPs were also observed in agar-cultivated asparagus lettuce136 and soil-cultivated soybean.128 Ma et al. further investigated the transformation sites of CeO2 NPs in cucumber plants. They found that in the root exposure mode, Ce was present as a mixture of Ce(IV) and Ce(III) in all the plant tissues, while Ce(III) was absent from plant tissues in petiole exposure mode, supporting the role of the rhizosphere in the reduction of CeO2 NPs.137 By using a split-root exposure mode of 25 nm CeO2 NPs to cucumber, Ma et al. further found that Ce was transported from roots to shoots through the xylem as a mixture of Ce(IV) and Ce(III), but Ce transported from the shoots back to the roots through the phloem was almost completely in the form of CeO2.48 Similar to the dissolution and transformation processes of ZnO NPs, 22 nm La2O3 NPs or 15 nm Yb2O3 NPs exposed to hydroponic cultivated cucumber were observed to be partially dissolved due to organic acids exuded from the roots, and transformed to needle-like LaPO4 or YbPO4 nanoclusters in the intercellular regions of the cucumber roots.29,138
|
| Fig. 3 Uptake and biological transformation of CeO2 NPs in cucumber plants detected by TEM (A and E) and STXM (B–D and F–H); (B and F), Ce maps of rectangular area in panels A and E. Panels D and H are, respectively, the XAFS spectra extracted from the image sequences of panels C and G.28 I is the proposed schematic diagram of CeO2 NP uptake and transformation in cucumber plants. | |
4. Advanced analytical techniques and future needs to investigate NPs in plants or other organisms
In order to obtain objective knowledge on the uptake, translocation and transformation of NPs in plants, comprehensive information is needed including the size distribution, concentration, speciation, and locations of NPs in plants and this presents an unprecedented challenge to analytical techniques.139 In recent years many advanced techniques have been proposed to obtain the above information. Here, we provide a comprehensive summary of the techniques available for quantitative and qualitative analysis of NPs in plants (Table 1). The main features of the techniques are introduced, and some potential techniques which have been used in organisms or complex environmental matrices are also proposed.
Table 1 Available techniques for quantitative or qualitative analysis of NPs in plants
Technique |
Content required |
Limit of quantitation |
Speciation |
Lateral resolution |
Particle size |
Sample treatment |
Element information |
Special information |
Testing environment |
ICP-MS |
10−9 |
10−9 |
Unable |
Unable |
Unable |
Acid digestion |
Yes |
No |
Solution |
SP-ICP-MS |
10−9 |
10−9 |
Unable |
Unable |
Yes |
Enzyme digestion |
Yes |
No |
Solution |
MC-ICP-MS |
10−9 |
10−9 |
Unable |
Unable |
Unable |
Acid digestion |
Yes |
Isotope |
Solution |
LA-ICP-MS |
10−9 |
10−9 |
Unable |
1–10 μm |
Unable |
Tissue section or living body |
Yes |
No |
Unconstrained |
(HR)TEM |
— |
Unable |
Unable |
nm |
Yes |
Tissue section |
No |
Crystalline |
Anhydrous/vacuum |
STEM |
10−3 |
Rel. |
Unable |
nm |
Yes |
Tissue section |
Yes |
No |
Anhydrous/vacuum |
μ-XRF |
10−5 |
Rel. |
Unable |
μm |
Unable |
Tissue section |
Yes |
No |
Unconstrained |
μ-XANES |
10−5 |
Unable |
Yes |
Yes |
Unable |
Tissue section or living body |
Yes |
No |
Unconstrained |
STXM |
10−5 |
Rel. |
Yes |
10 nm |
Unable |
Tissue section |
Yes |
No |
Unconstrained |
NanoSIMS |
10−5 |
Rel. |
Unable |
50 nm |
Unable |
Tissue section |
Yes |
Isotope |
Anhydrous/vacuum |
CLSM |
10−6 |
Unable |
Unable |
μm |
Unable |
Living body |
No |
Fluorescence |
Unconstrained |
SR-FTIR |
— |
Unable |
Unable |
μm |
Unable |
Tissue section |
No |
Infrared |
Anhydrous |
CRM |
— |
Unable |
Unable |
μm |
Unable |
Tissue section or living body |
No |
Raman |
Unconstrained |
HSI |
— |
Unable |
Unable |
2.5 nm |
Unable |
Tissue section or living body |
No |
VNIR |
Unconstrained |
4.1 Quantitative analysis
To date, precise quantitative information on metal or rare-earth based NPs is still dependent on the analysis of their metallic element concentration by methods such as those based on inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Although the lateral resolution of laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) is lower than that of electron or X-ray microanalysis, it allows an accurate determination of metal distribution in biological materials in situ.140 LA-ICP-MS has been used to investigate the tissue level distribution of elemental Au in rice and tobacco under exposure to Au NPs,64,69 but whether the observed Au element exists as ions or NPs needs to be confirmed using other techniques. With the help of enzyme digestion, single-particle ICP-MS (SP-ICP-MS) can provide concentrations of NPs with different sizes in plant tissues.141,142 It should be noted that the enzyme digestion procedure may induce the dissolution of, and changes in, the speciation of NPs. Until now the vast majority of applications of SP-ICP-MS have been limited to inactive NPs such as Au, Ag, CeO2, CuO and TiO2 NPs,42,141,143–145 and further studies are needed to establish the digestion procedures applicable to more types of NPs as well as NPs in non-biodegradable plant components. Combined with special separation techniques such as capillary electrophoresis (CE),146,147 size exclusion chromatography (SEC),148,149 hydrodynamic chromatography (HDC),150 and field-flow fractionation (FFF),151,152 NPs with different particle sizes and ions can be distinguished and quantified. However, most of these techniques have been used only in simple solutions or environmental waters at the most. Only FFF-ICP-MS has been used to analyze and characterize natural colloids and NPs in complex environmental media such as wastewaters and soil pore water.153 Although not reported, we expect that these techniques can be used to detect NPs in the rhizosphere and root exudates. Similar to SP-ICP-MS, detecting NPs in biological samples by these hyphenated analytical techniques needs digestion or enzymolysis pretreatment of biological tissues or extraction of NPs from biological tissues, and this is a key issue to overcome for their application. Future studies are encouraged to extend these techniques to detect NPs in more complex matrices including biological media.
4.2 Speciation and location analysis
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is the most widely used technique for direct detection of distributions of NPs or aggregates inside plants at the subcellular level. The crystalline structure of NPs can be determined using high resolution TEM (HRTEM) combined with selected area electron diffraction (SAED).47,122 Furthermore, the nanoscale distribution of elements in plants at the subcellular level can be obtained using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM),68 but with low sensitivity. Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) or fluorescence microscopy (FM) has been used to track the distribution of fluorescence-labeled NPs and quantum dots (QD) in plant tissues.31,134,154 One advantage of CLSM is that living cells or plant tissues can be observed directly, providing the possibility to detect NP internalization by plant cells in situ, but it has the disadvantage of low lateral resolution and the necessity of labeling using fluorescent dyes for most NPs.
High resolution secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) is a nanoscale ion microprobe that is able to map most of the elements in the periodic table with high lateral resolution (down to 50 nm) and high elemental isotope sensitivity.155 We have used NanoSIMS to detect Ag NP-exposed algae and observed the overlap between the mappings of 32S− and 107Ag− in the cell walls and cytoplasm, suggesting combined accumulation of Ag and S in algal cells, which indirectly confirms the presence of Ag–sulfur complexes inside algal cells.122 Using NanoSIMS, Aubert found that nanosized molybdenum octahedral clusters were abundantly present in the apoplast and symplast of the root epidermis, endodermis (cortex) and stele, with a concentration gradient decreasing from the epidermis to the stele.156
All the above techniques except for CLSM require complicated sample preparation and a rigorous testing environment (anhydrous and high vacuum) and this is not conducive to obtaining information on undisturbed samples. In particular, the chemical speciation of NPs cannot be addressed using electronic and secondary ion beam-based techniques. Synchrotron radiation (SR) based techniques display a unique advantage in their minimal sample preparation, non-destructive testing, and optimum balance between sensitivity, chemical specificity and spatial resolution.32 In addition, a convenient combination with other techniques can provide comprehensive chemical information for the majority of the elements in the periodic table. The combination of microbeam X-ray fluorescence mapping (μ-XRF) and X-ray absorption near edge structure spectroscopy (μ-XANES) is a powerful technique. μ-XRF provides multi-elemental (heavier elements) mapping with μm lateral resolution, and μ-XANES provides the elemental speciation of hotspots. This technique has been widely used to study plant uptake and transformation of NPs such as Ag, Au, ZnO, TiO2, and CeO2.31,48,59,125,128,157 The newly developed full spectral XANES (FS-XANES) imaging technique using the Maia detector array allows one to obtain XANES spectroscopic information at each pixel over the entire mapping area at the microscale (down to 0.6 μm).158 The greatest disadvantage of these techniques used in NP–plant interactions is that the lateral resolution of most μ-XRF/μ-XAS beamlines in the world is above 1 μm or a few hundred nm. Fortunately, some advanced nano-XRF/nano-XAS beamlines with spatial resolution down to a few tens of nm have been set up.159 Castillo-Michel et al. recently wrote a comprehensive review on the application of synchrotron-based μ-XRF and μ-XAS in plant–NP interaction research and optimized sample preparation methods were also proposed.32 Zhu et al. reviewed the recent advances in XRF-based sub-100 nm resolution cell imaging and projected the future development of this technique,160 which provides the opportunity of using nano-XRF to reveal the subcellular distribution and speciation of NPs in plant tissues.
In addition to synchrotron-based hard X-ray (energy above 4 keV) μ-XRF and μ-XAS, soft X-ray (energy below ∼2 keV) scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM) has the potential to provide high spatial resolution down to a few nm and is able to characterize samples at the sub-cellular level.161 Many of the heavy elements' L or M edge energies are in the soft X-ray range, e.g. Ag (M), Ce (M), Fe (L), Zn (L), and Cu (L), and the speciation and nanoscale distribution of NPs containing these elements in plant cells or tissues can be detected using STXM. Zhang and his colleagues have used STXM to study the uptake, translocation and transformation of rare earth oxide NPs including CeO2, La2O3 and Yb2O3 NPs in plants.28,29,137,138 Peng et al., using multiple synchrotron radiation based techniques, demonstrated the translocation and transformation of CuO NPs in rice; specifically, CuO NPs and Cu-citrate were observed in root cells using STXM.131 Gilbert et al., using STXM, studied the fate of ZnO NPs administered to human bronchial epithelial cells,162 and this technique may also be feasible for studies of plant cells.
Other techniques such as synchrotron Fourier transform infrared (SR-FTIR) microspectroscopy,163–165 confocal Raman microspectroscopy (CRM)166,167 and hyperspectral imaging (HSI) microscopy168 can be used as important supplementary techniques for the study of NP–plant interactions in addition to the above mentioned techniques which have been used in studies of NP–plant interactions. SR-FTIR microspectroscopy can acquire high-quality spectral images quickly and this helps to identify and locate functional groups on NPs with infrared absorption. The most recently developed method can straightforwardly determine the infrared absorption spectra of samples with a spatial resolution of 20 nm (namely nano-FTIR).139,164 More importantly, this technique allows one to obtain FTIR spectral imaging of plant tissue simultaneously and this is beneficial in diagnosing plant chemical responses to NP exposure.169 However, application of synchrotron radiation-based methods for such studies is largely limited by the availability of synchrotron radiation-based facilities.
HSI microscopy is an advanced visualization technique to enable the rapid identification of materials at the micro- and nanoscales.168 Mortimer et al. determined the potential of HSI for the analysis of cellular internalization of different metal-based NPs including Ag, Au, CdSe/ZnS, CuO and TiO2 NPs by the ciliated protozoan Tetrahymena thermophile. They obtained the hyperspectral images of all the NPs internalized in the protozoan at a spectral resolution of 2.5 nm, except for TiO2 NPs because they showed spectral similarities to the unexposed control cells.170 CRM allows high-speed acquisition of nondestructive chemical and structural imaging of heterogeneous samples with a microscale spatial resolution (∼1 μm).166 One of the greatest advantages of CRM is its capacity to analyze living hydrated samples which is of benefit for in situ detection. Kang et al. have used high-speed CRM to observe the real-time uptake of individual single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) by living macrophages via transient spatial Raman mapping.167 Eder et al. used CRM to visualize chains of magnetite crystals in magnetotactic bacteria at ∼100 nm lateral resolution.171 We still expect techniques such as HSI and CRM to have great potential for application in studies of NP–plant interactions, although they have not yet been used to detect NPs in plant tissues.
4.3 Stable isotope-based analytical techniques/methods
Isotope fractionation has been found to occur in many physical and chemical transformations of metal elements. NPs from different sources may therefore have special isotope ratios which can be used as intrinsic tracers to probe the source and fate of NPs.172,173 The rapid development of the multicollector ICP-MS (MC-ICP-MS) technique has confirmed the excellent accuracy and precision of non-traditional stable isotopic analysis which can provide the opportunity to track and distinguish between natural and manufactured NPs in environmental media or organisms.123 How to identify the contribution of ions and particles to the bioavailability of NPs is always a great difficulty faced by environmental and analytical scientists. A recently developed method using isotope labeling especially multi-isotope labeling combined with high-precision mass spectrometry mainly as MC-ICP-MS provides a new opportunity to resolve this problem. For example, Khan et al. studied the waterborne uptake and efflux kinetics of aqueous 68Zn, 68ZnO NPs, and 68ZnO bulk particles by an estuarine snail (Peringia ulvae), and indicated that the solubility of ZnO NPs in the exposure media was a key parameter that determined the bioavailability of the Zn constituent.174 Laycock et al. further employed double stable isotope labeled 68ZnO NPs and soluble 64ZnCl2 to test the bioavailability of ZnO NPs to earthworms by soil exposure. From the 68Zn/64Zn ratios determined in earthworms, soils, and pore waters, they provided direct evidence that rapid dissolution of the ZnO NPs was the most likely explanation for the indistinguishable environmental distribution and uptake of Zn ions and particles.175 Unfortunately, there has been no study to date using similar methods to distinguish between the uptake of particles and ions by plants.
As introduced above, NanoSIMS has excellent isotopic resolution and can provide isotopic mapping of samples. However, this advantage has not been used adequately to investigate NPs in organisms. The combination of NanoSIMS and isotope labeling techniques will unprecedentedly contribute to distinguishing the tissue distribution and translocation of NPs and ions in organisms, including plants. In addition, double stable isotope labeled NPs can be used to study root and foliar exposure of NPs to plants simultaneously, and the uptake route of NPs under different exposure modes can be investigated. We therefore consider that the power of NanoSIMS for tracking NPs in organisms should be explored as quickly as possible.
It should be noted that it is impossible to use a single technique to obtain comprehensive information on the uptake, translocation and transformation of NPs in plants, therefore the use of a combination of multiple techniques is highly recommended, and the development of novel methods and techniques is to be encouraged in this field.
5. Conclusions and perspectives
Interactions between ENPs and plants represent one of the fundamental problems we must face at a time of rapidly developing nanotechnology because ENPs released into the environment will inevitably interact with plants, not to mention the application of nano-agriculture. This issue relates not only to ecological risk but also concerns human food safety. Here, we systematically review recent advances in studies on the uptake, translocation and transformation of metal based ENPs in the soil–plant system and summarize the integrated chain of these processes. Key conclusions can be drawn from previous studies as follows. (1) There are various pathways for the uptake of ENPs by plants, and which pathway is the dominant one depends on the materials, morphology and particle size and plant species, growth stage and physiological and growing conditions although the detailed mechanisms are still far from clear. (2) Phyllosphere and rhizosphere processes including secretion of root exudates and phyllospheric or rhizospheric microorganisms play important roles in the surface chemistry, size distribution, dissolution and transformation of ENPs, which further influence the uptake of ENPs by plants. (3) In addition to the uptake and accumulation of ENPs in plant, biotransformation of ENPs such as ZnO, Cu, Cu(OH)2, Ag, Ce2O3, Y2O3 are evidenced in plants and this greatly influences the fate of ENPs in the plant–soil system. However, there remain challenges in fully addressing the uptake, translocation and transformation mechanisms of NPs in the soil–plant system, particularly arising from the following issues. (1) Thousands of ENPs have been produced in the past few decades and the number will continue to increase greatly in the future. Thus, a priority list of ENPs for research according to their physicochemical characteristics, production, applications, discharge, exposure scenarios and ultimate effects must be established. (2) Characteristics such as chemical composition, size, morphology and surface coating of NPs determine their plant bioavailability and phytotoxicity, therefore comprehensive analysis of these characteristics of ENPs is highly recommended. Furthermore, certified nanoparticle reference materials are very limited and more are needed in order to ensure comparability among studies. (3) Some basic plant physiological problems concerning the mechanisms of plant uptake, translocation and transformation of ENPs are still unresolved. For example, how ENPs penetrate the cuticle layer of roots or leaves, except by exploiting disease and physical damage. What are the size exclusion limits of ENPs to pass through cell walls, cytomembranes, PD channels, and stomatal pores of plants? Where are the locations of NPs that accumulate and are transformed inside plants? Are there organ functions or special enzymes to help ENPs translocate or transform? More direct evidence is needed to support the apoplastic and symplastic pathways of NP transport in plants. (4) The effects of environmental matrices and phyllosphere or rhizosphere processes on the transformation and bioavailability of NPs in the soil–plant system require detailed investigation. The uptake, accumulation and toxicity of the environmentally abundant transformation products of ENPs require study in addition to the original ENPs. (5) Long-term exposure of plants, especially crops and vegetables, to ENPs has been neglected and more experimental evidence is needed to evaluate whether and to what extent NPs and their ionic form can accumulate in the edible parts of plants, whether ENPs can transfer along the human food chain and even undergo biomagnification, and whether ENPs can be a threat to food safety. (6) Developments in analytical methods/technologies, for example high spatial resolution, high sensitivity and multi-informative techniques or combined methods, and stable isotope based techniques, are urgently required to support the fundamental studies on the uptake and transport pathways of NPs in plants, and to obtain qualitative and quantitative information on the accumulation, location and speciation of ENPs in plants. In addition, interactions between NPs and plants commonly occur but until now almost all studies have focused on well-designed ENPs and have neglected unintentional nanoparticles (UNPs) and natural nanoparticles (NNPs).176–179 In fact, the environmental concentrations of UNPs and NNPs are several orders of magnitude greater than those of ENPs.178 The uptake of UNPs and NNPs by plants and their influences on the uptake of contaminants, nutrients and water by plants therefore require urgent investigation. The interactions between NPs and plants is a highly cross disciplinary field requiring effective teamwork and cooperation between plant physiologists and environmental, agricultural and material scientists and analysts.
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts to declare.
Acknowledgements
This work was funded by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2016YFA0203102), the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (Grant XDB14020202), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Projects 21621064 and 21537005).
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Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c8en00645h |
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