SANTOS, D. S.; SANTOS, Débora Souza dos.
Resumo:
Cotoniculture is a very important plantation in Brazil, holding the fifth place as the largest
producer and the third largest exporter in the world. Nationally, the planting of herbaceous
cotton is concentrated in the Midwest and Northeast, where it is mostly cultivated by irrigation,
followed by the rainfed technique and without irrigation. Climatic factors, high
evapotranspiration and low rainfall, irrigation water quality, management, soil and species
characteristics, are determinant for the existence and aggravation of saline stress at planting,
being one of the most important abiotic stresses, along with water, affect fiber growth,
productivity and quality. For this, plant genetic improvement is the most viable alternative to
reduce the consequences generated in the plant by excess salts, such as the use of chemical
products in the crop and the quantitative and economic loss of production. With design of in
silico primers that will recognize conserved domains in the gene related to tolerance and/or
resistance, enabling genetic manipulation to create cultivars more adapted to this factor. Thus,
from bioinformatics, the present work analyzed taxonomically and physico chemically three
selected proteins of interest, according to previous screening, designing the primers, validating
them and selecting the ten most stable primers, six from the proteins and four degenerates, the
which are safe, specific and in accordance with qualitative reference standards. Of extreme
relevance for the experimental area, the knowledge of the profile, action of proteins and design
of molecular markers carried out, the way to minimize the problems generated by salinity in
cultivation is palpable.