Dissertação
Caracterização fisiológica e molecular de plantas de arroz mutantes para o transportador de zinco OsZIP7
Fecha
2019-03-13Autor
Gindri, Rafael Gonçalves
Institución
Resumen
Rice is one of the most important crops in the world, being daily food for about half of the
world population. However, rice grain is poor in micronutrients such as Fe and Zn, the two
most commonly deficient minerals in the human diet. In plants, both Fe and Zn must be
absorbed from the soil, distributed and stored in the plant, so that their concentrations are
maintained at sufficient but not toxic levels. The understanding of the mechanisms and proteins
involved in the maintenance of Fe and Zn homeostasis in plants has the potential to benefit
agriculture, improving the use of micronutrients by plants, as well as to indicate approaches
that aim at biofortification of the grains, increasing their nutritional quality. Thus, this work
aims to characterize the oszip7 mutant and the role of the OsZIP7 transporter in Zn transport in
rice plants. The study was developed in the Laboratory of Plant Physiology of Agrobiological
Interest of the Federal University of Santa Maria. Rice plants of the oszip7 mutant strain and
the respective wild type (Nipponbare cv.) Were grown in a greenhouse under a hydroponic
system and submitted to a nutrient solution: control solution, Zn excess, Zn deficiency and
deficiency Fe. After 24 days of cultivation, shoot growth, root system growth and structure,
root and shoot dry matter, chlorophyll fluorescence, chlorophyll a / b caratenods concentration,
SOD and POD enzyme activity were evaluated. concentrations of H2O2, expression of the
OsZIP7 gene by RT-qPCR and quantification of elements such as Fe and Zn by ICP-OES.
Plants of the oszip7 mutant when cultivated in Zn deficiency showed an increase in leaf area
growth, root length, root diameters and surface area, when analyzed for elemental concentration
in the tissues of shoot plants of the mutant showed a reduction in the concentrations of Zn, when
compared to the wild type. Expression of the OsZIP7 gene in wild-type plants was enhanced
when subjected to Zn deficiency. When the plants were subjected to excess Zn, the expression
of the OsZIP7 gene was suppressed in comparison with the wild type.