Bacterial mercury resistance from atoms to ecosystems

The biogeochemical cycle of mercury in the environment. Solid arrows represent transformation or uptake of mercury. Hollow arrows indicate flux of mercury between different compartments in the environment. The width of the hollow arrows is approximately proportional to the relative importance of the flux in nature. The speciation of Hg(II) in oxic and anoxic waters is controlled by chloride and hydroxide, and by sulfide respectively. Transformations known to be mediated by microorganisms are represented by circles depicting bacterial cells. SRB stands for sulfate-reducing bacteria, and merB and merA refer to the activity of genes encoding the enzymes organomercurial lyase and mercuric reductase, respectively. A group of dots indicate the involvement of unicellular algae. Light-mediated water column transformations are positioned below the sun. Photodegradation of CH3Hg+ results in mostly Hg0 and an unknown C1 species depicted as Cx.

Author: Barkay, T; Miller, SM; Summers, AO

Description: Bacterial resistance to inorganic and organic mercury compounds (HgR) is one of the most widely observed phenotypes in eubacteria. Loci conferring HgR in Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria typically have at minimum a mercuric reductase enzyme (MerA) that reduces reactive ionic Hg(II) to volatile, relatively inert, monoatomic Hg(0) vapor and a membrane-bound protein (MerT) for uptake of Hg(II) arranged in an operon under control of MerR, a novel metal-responsive regulator. Many HgR loci encode an additional enzyme, MerB, that degrades organomercurials by protonolysis, and one or more additional proteins apparently involved in transport. Genes conferring HgR occur on chromosomes, plasmids, and transposons and their operon arrangements can be quite diverse, frequently involving duplications of the above noted structural genes, several of which are modular themselves. How this very mobile and plastic suite of proteins protects host cells from this pervasive toxic metal, what roles it has in the biogeochemical cycling of Hg, and how it has been employed in ameliorating environmental contamination are the subjects of this review.

Subject headings: Amino Acid Sequence; Drug Resistance, Bacterial/genetics; Ecosystem; Genes, Bacterial/genetics; Gram-Negative Bacteria/enzymology/genetics; Industrial Waste; Ion Transport; Mercury/metabolism/pharmacology/toxicity; Mercury Compounds/analysis/metabolism; Models, Biological; Models, Genetic; Molecular Sequence Data; Oxidoreductases/genetics/metabolism; Sequence Alignment

Publication year: 2003

Journal or book title: FEMS microbiology reviews

Volume: 27

Issue: 2-3

Pages: 355-384

Find the full text: https://www.strategian.com/fulltext/Barkay2003.pdf

Find more like this one (cited by): https://scholar.google.com/scholar?cites=5903805297732823379&as_sdt=1000005&sciodt=0,16&hl=en

Serial number: 4191

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