Monday, 12 September 2011

Plant nanotoxicology: how nanoparticles can affect plant's (and human) healt

Published this month on Trends in Plant Science, here is the abstract of the paper:

"The anthropogenic release of nanoparticles (NPs) to the environment poses a potential hazard to human health and life. The interplay between NPs and biological processes is receiving increasing attention. Plants expose huge interfaces to the air and soil environment. Thus, NPs are adsorbed to the plant surfaces, taken up through nano- or micrometer-scale openings of plants and are translocated within the plant body. Persistent NPs associated with plants enter the human food chain. In this Opinion, we document the occurrence and character of NPs in the environment and evaluate the need for future research on toxicological effects. Plant nanotoxicology is introduced as a discipline that explores the effects and toxicity mechanisms of NPs in plants, including transport, surface interactions and material-specific responses."



Plant nanotoxicology
Dietz, Karl-Josef; Herth, Simone
Trends in plant science doi:10.1016/j.tplants.2011.08.003 

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