Abstract Aluminum (Al) toxicity is the main factor limiting agricultural production in acidic soils around the world. In this scenario, melatonin (MET) has emerged as a promising approach to alleviate Al toxicity. Thus, we investigated morphophysiological responses of Pfaffia glomerata (Spreng.) Pedersen, a medicinal plant, to Al toxicity and MET application. Plants were grown in vitro for 40 days in MS medium (control) supplemented with Al, MET, and Al + MET. Aluminum had genotoxic effects, inducing DNA damages and endoreduplication, which resulted in growth arrest, mainly in roots. Al also decreased the photosynthetic rate and the contents of pigments, carbohydrates, amino acids, and proteins. On the other hand, all these effects were improved in plants supplemented with MET. This is supported by the up-accumulation of proteins involved in organic acids exudation (AHA2), photosynthesis (transketolase, rubisco activase, and photosystem I P700 apoprotein A2), amino acid biosynthesis (chorismate synthase 1 and aspartokinase/homoserine dehydrogenase), and cell expansion and differentiation (rough sheath 2, beta tubulin b6, and tubulin beta chain-like). Moreover, MET enhanced CAT, SOD, and GABA, reinforcing its antioxidant role and reducing DNA damage and endoreduplication, which preserved QC identity and root elongation. Al toxicity impaired growth and carbon–nitrogen metabolism, whereas MET mitigated these effects by boosting photosynthesis, antioxidant defenses, and Al sequestration, decreasing Al adherence to roots. Thus, MET serves as a protective molecule against Al toxicity in P. glomerata .
Almeida et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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