Silicon-Based Solutions for the Mitigation of Abiotic and Biotic Stresses in Plants
A special issue of International Journal of Molecular Sciences (ISSN 1422-0067). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Plant Sciences".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (10 September 2023) | Viewed by 16918
Special Issue Editor
Interests: plant bioprocesses; plant cell wall; transcriptomics; plant secondary metabolites; plant tissue culture; plant molecular biology
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Silicon (Si) is a metalloid classified as a quasi-essential element for plants’ growth and development. It has been extensively reported that Si, once absorbed as silicic acid–Si(OH)4 via aquaporins by the roots, can deposit as opaline silica (SiO2) in the cell walls of plants, thereby conferring a mechanical protection against the penetration of pathogens. Si has been included in the list of biostimulants, given its proven protective and beneficial effects for plants. Under normal conditions, the protective effects of Si are mostly latent and become evident in the presence of exogenous stresses, as documented in several species of monocots and dicots. Some molecular studies have elucidated the major pathways affected by Si supplementation; however, a detailed understanding of the changes to genes, proteins, primary, and secondary metabolites and soil microbial communities changing under stress and the addition of Si is still missing.
Nanoformulations based on Si are also attracting interest as environmentally benign delivery systems for the mitigation of plant stress response. Nanoparticles of Si can be used to deliver active ingredients functioning as biostimulants to plants. Such nanoformulations can be applied via injection, foliar spraying (where they enter through the stomata), or root amendment and can be engineered to have specific dimensions and physicochemical properties and to be functionalized on the surface or in the core.
This Special Issue aims to attract the interest of the scientific community studying the impact of Si on the response of plants to (a)biotic stresses and the use of Si-based nanodelivery systems tailored for agronomical uses. Contributions in the form of original research papers, as well as topical reviews and/or short communications focusing on the use of -omic technologies (RNA-Seq, metabolomics proteomics, metagenomics/metatranscriptomics), microscopy (e.g., high-resolution, confocal), and nanotechnology for the manufacture and characterization of Si-containing nanoparticles are welcome.
Dr. Gea Guerriero
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- Silicon
- Abiotic stress
- Biotic stress
- Nanotechnology
- Omics
- Microscopy
- Cell walls
- Systems biology
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