1. Effects of zinc oxide nanoelicitors on yield, secondary metabolites, zinc and iron absorption of Feverfew (Tanacetum parthenium (L.) Schultz Bip.)
- Author
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Reza Shahhoseini, Leila Samiei, Javad Asili, Nasrin Moshtaghi, and Majid Azizi
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Physiology ,Plant physiology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Plant Science ,Zinc ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Dry weight ,law ,Seedling ,Tanacetum parthenium ,Parthenolide ,Food science ,Medicinal plants ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Essential oil ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Nanoelicitors are biological and non-biological factors that can affect the synthesis of secondary metabolites in medicinal plants. Feverfew is a valuable medicinal plant containing effective and important anti-cancer compounds (essential oil and parthenolide). This study was conducted to investigate the effects of zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnONPs) on yield, metabolites content, and zinc and iron absorption of Feverfew. After seed preparation, seedling production, soil physicochemical properties analysis, ZnONPs treatments, maintenance and harvesting at full flowering stage, morphological traits and yield components were measured. The essential oil was extracted by Clevenger and parthenolide was identified by UPLC-MRM-MS. The content of Zn and Fe were measured by OES-ICP. The effects of ZnONPs were significant on all morpho-phytochemical traits. An increased biological yield (dry weight) was observed at 2000 ppm ZnONPs (32.54 g/day) compared to control (28.09 g/day). The highest (0.9% V/W) and lowest (0.56% V/W) content of essential oil were related to 1000 ppm ZnONPs and control. The content of parthenolide decreased at different levels of ZnONPs. The lowest (36.83 mg/kg DW) and highest (266.02 mg/kg DW) rates of Zn absorption were observed in control and 2000 ppm ZnONPs. Nanoparticles at all concentrations increased the biological yield, essential oil content, and Zn absorption. None of the ZnONPs concentrations improved the flower yield. Along with increasing ZnONPs and Zn uptake, parthenolide levels decreased. Also, it was determined that there was an antagonistic effect between Zn and Fe absorption.
- Published
- 2020
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