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Physiological Responses of Transgenic merA-TOBACCO (Nicotiana tabacum) to Foliar and Root Mercury Exposure
Authors:Andrew C P Heaton  Clayton L Rugh  Nian-Jie Wang  Richard B Meagher
Institution:1. Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, U.S.A.
2. Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, 48824, U.S.A.
3. Genaissance Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Five Science Park, New Haven, CT, 06511, U.S.A.
Abstract:Plants expressing a modified bacterial mercury reductase, merA, are highly resistant to Hg(II) toxicity as a result of the enzymatically catalyzed electrochemical reduction of Hg(II) to the much less toxic and volatile Hg(0). merA expression may allow plants to manifest a suite of responses to mercury exposure, making them more capable than wild-type plants of interacting with and removing mercury from contaminated soil or water. We have engineered merA-expressing Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco) as a model plant for examining these responses. Mercury resistance was demonstrated by germinating and growing merA tobacco seeds on semi-solid medium spiked with a HgCl2 concentration acutely toxic to wild-type plants. On similar growth medium, merA plant roots penetrated a highly concentrated, localized Hg(II) zone of HgS (cinnibar) more readily than wild-type roots. In hydroponic medium spiked with HgCl2, merA plants maintained higher evapotranspiration activity than wild-type plants. The ability of merA Hg(II)-reductive activity to counter typical plant-catalyzed Hg(0) oxidation to Hg(II) was demonstrated by a lower net foliar absorption of atmospheric Hg(0) than wild-type plants. Mercury translocation through merA plants was examined through reciprocally grafted merA and wild-type tobacco grown on HgCl2-spiked hydroponic medium. Elevated mercury concentrations in wild-type shoots grafted to merA roots suggest the vertical movement of mercury within merA tissues or plants may be facilitated by dynamic balance between native Hg(0) oxidation and MerA-catalyzed Hg(II) reduction. These experiments demonstrate that merA-engineered tobacco plants display an array of tissue-level and whole-plant attributes which should allow for more efficient mercury extraction and processing compared to the wild-type.
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