Abstract

Graphene oxide (GO) is considered to be an emerging environmental pollutant with its inevitable release into the environment. Thus, its potential environmental risks and biosafety are receiving increased attention. In this study, Paeonia ostii was exposed to GO under drought stress. The results demonstrated that GO prevented soil water from evaporating due to its hydrophilic oxygen-containing functional groups and did not change the soil pH. Moreover, GO treatment resulted in lower increases in reactive oxygen species, relative electrical conductivity and free proline content, and greater increases in the antioxidant enzyme activities of P. ostii under drought stress compared with those in the control. And under drought stress, higher photosynthesis, more intact mesophyll cells and organelles and open stomata were found in P. ostii under GO treatment. Furthermore, GO treatment induced greater changes in the expression patterns of genes required for lignin biosynthesis, photosynthesis-antenna proteins, carbon fixation in photosynthetic organisms, and glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism. Additionally, GO did not accumulate in P. ostii due to the soil environment and the electrostatic repulsion between GO and the roots. GO did not have toxic effects on P. ostii and was an effective soil water retention agent; therefore, it could be economically beneficial for the production of plants under drought stress.

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