Title

Phytoremediation Of Mercury And Organomercurials In Chloroplast Transgenic Plants: Enhanced Root Uptake, Translocation To Shoots, And Volatilization

Abstract

Transgenic tobacco plants engineered with bacterial merA and merB genes via the chloroplast genome were investigated to study the uptake, translocation of different forms of mercury (Hg) from roots to shoots, and their volatilization. Untransformed plants, regardless of the form of Hg supplied, reached a saturation point at 200 μM of phenylmercuric acetate (PMA) or HgCl 2, accumulating Hg concentrations up to 500 μg g-1 with significant reduction in growth. In contrast, chloroplast transgenic lines continued to grow well with Hg concentrations in root tissues up to 2000 μg g-1. Chloroplast transgenic lines accumulated both the organic and inorganic Hg forms to levels surpassing the concentrations found in the soil. The organic-Hg form was absorbed and translocated more efficiently than the inorganic-Hg form in transgenic lines, whereas no such difference was observed in untransformed plants. Chloroplast-transgenic lines showed about 100-fold increase in the efficiency of Hg accumulation in shoots compared to untransformed plants. This is the first report of such high levels of Hg accumulation in green leaves or tissues. Transgenic plants attained a maximum rate of elemental-Hg volatilization in two days when supplied with PMA and in three days when supplied with inorganic-Hg, attaining complete volatilization within a week. The combined expression of merAB via the chloroplast genome enhanced conversion of Hg2+ into Hg,0 conferred tolerance by rapid volatilization and increased uptake of different forms of mercury, surpassing the concentrations found in the soil. These investigations provide novel insights for improvement of plant tolerance and detoxification of mercury. © 2007 American Chemical Society.

Publication Date

12-15-2007

Publication Title

Environmental Science and Technology

Volume

41

Issue

24

Number of Pages

8439-8446

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1021/es070908q

Socpus ID

37249054333 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/37249054333

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