Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/11082
Title: Mercury intracellular partitioning and chelation in a salt marsh plant, Halimione portulacoides (L.) Aellen: strategies underlying tolerance in environmental exposure
Author: Válega, M
Lima, A I G
Figueira, E M A P
Pereira, E
Pardal, M A
Duarte, A C
Keywords: Amaranthaceae
Environmental Exposure
Geologic Sediments
Intracellular Space
Mercury
Phytochelatins
Plant Leaves
Plant Roots
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Wetlands
Salt marshes
Halimione portulacoides
Issue Date: Jan-2009
Publisher: Elsevier
Abstract: In the presence of metal stress, plants can resort to a series of tolerance mechanisms. Therefore field studies should be undertaken in order to evaluate the real role of these mechanisms in stress coping. The aim of this paper was to clarify the biochemical processes behind mercury tolerance in Halimione portulacoides (L.) Aellen (Caryophyllales: Chenopodiaceae) collected in a mercury contaminated salt marsh. Different fractions of mercury were separated: buffer-soluble (mainly cytosolic) and insoluble mercury (mainly associated with membranes and cell walls). The amounts in each fraction of metal were compared and related to metal distribution within plant organs. Protein-mercury complexes were isolated and analysed for their thiol content in order to assess wether the tolerance of this salt marsh plant was associated with the induction of metal chelation by phytochelatins. Overall, the mercury tolerance strategies of the plant are likely to involve root cell wall immobilization as a major mechanism of metal resistance, rather than metal chelation in the cytosolic fraction. Nevertheless, phytochelatins were demonstrated to chelate mercury under environmental exposure.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/11082
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2008.09.076
ISSN: 0045-6535
Appears in Collections:Ria de Aveiro - Artigos

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