The expanding development of graphene-based materials (GBMs) requires immediate and balanced environmental assessment balancing two key areas: investigating the risk of graphene oxide toxicity to ecosystems and evaluating GBMs’ potential to act as solutions for challenges like heavy metal stress mitigation. This study analyzed the effects of reduced graphene oxide (rGO) on copper (Cu) and nickel (Ni) toxicity in Lemna minor. Our findings reveal that rGO’s protective effects are metal-specific. L. minor demonstrated significant sensitivity to nickel, but rGO offered no mitigation; growth parameters, pigment content, and nickel accumulation showed no significant improvements with rGO co-exposure compared to Ni-plants. This suggests that rGO does not enhance L. minor’s ability to tolerate or absorb nickel, especially after 14 days (T14). In contrast, rGO showed a partially protective effect against copper toxicity. At T14, the presence of rGO significantly improved plant performance under copper stress, resulting in a 17% increase in biomass, a 19% increase in relative growth rate, and enhanced pigment content, including a 40% increase in chlorophyll when compared to Cu-plants. The protective effect of rGO was directly tied to a 37% reduction in copper accumulation, providing strong evidence that rGO reduces copper’s bioavailability, thereby limiting plant uptake. The divergent effects on Cu and Ni uptake suggest differing affinities of these metals for rGO. Future research, including large-scale experiments with various GBMs and Lemna clones, is crucial to fully assessing their phytoremediation potential.

Reduced Graphene Oxide Modulates Physiological Responses of Lemna minor Under Environmental Heavy Metal Stress / D'Eugenio, Marco; Casentini, Barbara; Iannelli, M. Adelaide. - In: ENVIRONMENTS. - ISSN 2076-3298. - 12:11(2025). [10.3390/environments12110407]

Reduced Graphene Oxide Modulates Physiological Responses of Lemna minor Under Environmental Heavy Metal Stress

D'Eugenio, Marco
Primo
;
2025

Abstract

The expanding development of graphene-based materials (GBMs) requires immediate and balanced environmental assessment balancing two key areas: investigating the risk of graphene oxide toxicity to ecosystems and evaluating GBMs’ potential to act as solutions for challenges like heavy metal stress mitigation. This study analyzed the effects of reduced graphene oxide (rGO) on copper (Cu) and nickel (Ni) toxicity in Lemna minor. Our findings reveal that rGO’s protective effects are metal-specific. L. minor demonstrated significant sensitivity to nickel, but rGO offered no mitigation; growth parameters, pigment content, and nickel accumulation showed no significant improvements with rGO co-exposure compared to Ni-plants. This suggests that rGO does not enhance L. minor’s ability to tolerate or absorb nickel, especially after 14 days (T14). In contrast, rGO showed a partially protective effect against copper toxicity. At T14, the presence of rGO significantly improved plant performance under copper stress, resulting in a 17% increase in biomass, a 19% increase in relative growth rate, and enhanced pigment content, including a 40% increase in chlorophyll when compared to Cu-plants. The protective effect of rGO was directly tied to a 37% reduction in copper accumulation, providing strong evidence that rGO reduces copper’s bioavailability, thereby limiting plant uptake. The divergent effects on Cu and Ni uptake suggest differing affinities of these metals for rGO. Future research, including large-scale experiments with various GBMs and Lemna clones, is crucial to fully assessing their phytoremediation potential.
2025
duckweed; nickel; copper; phytotoxicity; bioaccumulation; graphene-based materials (GBMs)
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Reduced Graphene Oxide Modulates Physiological Responses of Lemna minor Under Environmental Heavy Metal Stress / D'Eugenio, Marco; Casentini, Barbara; Iannelli, M. Adelaide. - In: ENVIRONMENTS. - ISSN 2076-3298. - 12:11(2025). [10.3390/environments12110407]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1756063
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