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Effects of Nanosilica Priming on Rapeseed (<i>Brassica napus</i>) Tolerance to Cadmium and Arsenic Stress by Regulating Cellular Metabolism and Antioxidant Defense

Zaid Ulhassan, Sharafat Ali, Zohaib Kaleem, Hafsah Shahbaz, Di He, Ali Raza Khan, Abdus Salam, Yasir Hamid, Mohamed S. Sheteiwy, Weijun Zhou, Qian Huang

2025Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry34 citationsDOI

Abstract

The mechanisms by which seed-primed silicon dioxide nanoparticles (nSi) alleviated arsenic (As) and cadmium (Cd) toxicity in Brassica napus L. remain unclear. A pot study examined the physico-biochemical, cellular, and molecular responses of B. napus exposed to Cd (10 mg/kg soil) and As (50 mg/kg soil) doses with or without nSi priming. The results showed that nSi priming improved photosynthesis, seedling biomass, and metabolite accumulation, and restored the cell structure. Upon Cd and As stress, nSi diminished oxidative stress by downplaying H 2 O 2 (24–32%) and O 2 •– (29–36%), MDA, and activating antioxidant defenses. Also, nSi relieved Cd and As accumulation (27–36%) by enhancing root-vacuolar sequestration (upregulating BnHMA3, BnPCs, and BnABCC1 ), cell wall chelation, and downregulating root transporters ( BnNRAMP5, BnIRTI, BnHMA2, BnHMA4, BnPHT1.1, and BnPHT1.4) . Our findings revealed that nSi priming effectively enhanced canola tolerance to Cd and As toxicity by strengthening multiple oxidative defense mechanisms and limiting their accumulation.

Topics & Concepts

RapeseedBrassicaCadmiumPriming (agriculture)Defence mechanismsArsenicAntioxidantMetabolismFight-or-flight responseChemistryBiologyFood scienceBotanyBiochemistryGeneOrganic chemistryGerminationAluminum toxicity and tolerance in plants and animalsPlant Micronutrient Interactions and EffectsSilicon Effects in Agriculture
Effects of Nanosilica Priming on Rapeseed (<i>Brassica napus</i>) Tolerance to Cadmium and Arsenic Stress by Regulating Cellular Metabolism and Antioxidant Defense | Litcius