A molecular study of Italian ryegrass grown on Martian regolith simulant

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158774Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Italian ryegrass grew on Martian regolith simulants MMS-1

  • Plants on MMS-1 showed chlorotic leaves and developed root aerenchyma

  • Genes involved in stress response/primary metabolism changed in expression on MMS-1

  • Proteins involved in translation and DNA methylation changed in abundance on MMS-1

  • Plants significantly modified the pH of MMS-1 over a time of 2 weeks

Abstract

In the last decade, the exploration of deep space has become the objective of the national space programs of many countries. The International Space Exploration Coordination Group has set a roadmap whose long-range strategy envisions the expansion of human presence in the solar system to progress with exploration and knowledge and to accelerate innovation. Crewed missions to Mars could be envisaged by 2040. In this scenario, finding ways to use the local resources for the provision of food, construction materials, propellants, pharmaceuticals is needed. Plants are important resources for deep space manned missions because they produce phytochemicals of pharmaceutical relevance, are sources of food and provide oxygen which is crucial in bioregenerative life support systems. Growth analysis and plant biomass yield have been previously evaluated on Martian regolith simulants; however, molecular approaches employing gene expression analysis and proteomics are still missing. The present work aims at filling this gap by providing molecular data on a representative member of the Poaceae, Lolium multiflorum Lam., grown on potting soil and a Martian regolith simulant (MMS-1). The molecular data were complemented with optical microscopy of root/leaf tissues and physico-chemical analyses. The results show that the plants grew for 2 weeks on regolith simulants. The leaves were bent downwards and chlorotic, the roots developed a lacunar aerenchyma and small brownish deposits containing Fe were observed. Gene expression analysis and proteomics revealed changes in transcripts related to the phenylpropanoid pathway, stress response, primary metabolism and proteins involved in translation and DNA methylation. Additionally, the growth of plants slightly but significantly modified the pH of the regolith simulants. The results here presented constitute a useful resource to get a comprehensive understanding of the major factors impacting the growth of plants on MMS-1.

Keywords

Martian regolith simulants
In situ resource utilization
Lolium multiflorum
Microscopy
qPCR
Proteomics

Data availability

The data generated are included in the submission or made available through a repository

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