Silicon (Si) is a beneficial element that contributes to increasing the
resistance of plants to diseases, pests and lodging, and rice productivity. The
objectives of the present study were to explore the relationship between Si concentration
and the expression of Si transport genes in different tissues of SPR1
and PTT1 rice varieties. The rice was grown aerobically in sand culture in pots
arranged in completely randomized design with 3 independent replications.
Variation in Si concentration among growth stages and plant tissues in both
rice varieties were detected. The Si concentration in SPR1 was higher than
PTT1 in some plant parts up to flowering, but significantly higher in all tissues
by maturity, including in the husk which accounts for almost all of the Si in the
grain. The consistently higher expression of the genes Lsi1 and Lsi2, detectable
only in the roots, was in agreement with higher Si concentration in SPR1 than
PTT1 in all tissues at maturity. SPR1 had higher expression of Lsi6 than PTT1
at booting stage, but the difference between varieties was less distinct at flowering
stage. Either a varietal difference in the passive Si transport by transpiration
or changes in the level of expression of the gene in the period from flowering to
maturity or both are suggested by discrepancies between expression of the Lsi6
gene at flowering and the Si concentrations at maturity of the two rice varieties.