The photonic-and redox-triggered cyclic uptake and release of organic substrates in functionalized mesoporous SiO 2 nanoparticles (NPs) is demonstrated. The mesoporous SiO 2 NPs are functionalized with nitrospiropyran photoisomerizable units. Rhodamine B is encapsulated in the channels of the SiO 2 NPs and trapped by the hydrophobic nitrospiropyran capping units. Photoisomerization of the capping units to the protonated nitromerocyanine groups opens the channels and releases the encapsulated dye.Similarly, modification of the SiO 2 channels by chloronaphthoquinone units traps eosin Y in the channels, by means of donor-acceptor interactions. The reduction of the quinone units to the chloronaphth hydroquinone donor groups opens the channels and releases the encapsulated substrate.The novelty of the study rests on the demonstration of the reversible and cyclic photostimulated or redox-activated uptake and release of substrates from the mesoporous SiO 2 NPs.
The effect of soil solarization and Trichoderma harzianum on induced resistance to grey mould (Botrytis cinerea) and powdery mildew (Podosphaera xanthii) was studied. Plants were grown in soils pretreated by solarization, T. harzianum T39 amendment or both, and then their leaves were inoculated with the pathogens. There was a significant reduction in grey mould in cucumber, strawberry, bean and tomato, and of powdery mildew in cucumber, with a stronger reduction when treatments were combined. Bacillus, pseudomonad and actinobacterial communities in the strawberry rhizosphere were affected by the treatments, as revealed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis fingerprinting. In tomato, treatments affected the expression of salicylic acid (SA)‐, ethylene (ET)‐ and jasmonic acid (JA)‐responsive genes. With both soil treatments, genes related to SA and ET – PR1a, GluB, CHI9 and Erf1 – were downregulated whereas the JA marker PI2 was upregulated. Following soil treatments and B. cinerea infection, SA‐, ET‐, and JA‐related genes were globally upregulated, except for the LOX genes which were downregulated. Upregulation of the PR genes PR1a, GluB and CHI9 in plants grown in solarized soil revealed a priming effect of this treatment on these genes' expression. The present study demonstrates the capacity of solarization and T. harzianum to systemically induce resistance to foliar diseases in various plants. This may be due to either a direct effect on the plant or an indirect one, via stimulation of beneficial microorganisms in the rhizosphere.
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