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Phytochelations and Metal Tolerance in Plants

Phytochelations and Metal Tolerance in Plants

The induction and heavy metal binding properties of phytochelatins in heavy metal tolerant (Silene vulgaris) and sensitive (tomato) cell cultures, in water cultures of these plants and in Silene vulgaris grown on a medieval copper mining dump were investigated. Application of heavy metals to cell suspension cultures and whole plants of Silene vulgaris and tomato induces the formation of heavy metal-phytochelatin -complexes with Cu and Cd and the binding of Zn and Pb to lower molecular weight substances. (Brooks, 2009) The binding of heavy metal ions to phytochelatins seems to play only a transient role in the heavy metal detoxification, because the Cd- and Cu-complexes disappear in the roots of water cultures of Silene vulgaris between 7 and 14 days after heavy metal exposition. Free heavy metal ions were not detectable in the extracts of all investigated plants and cell cultures. Silene vulgaris plants grown under natural conditions on a mining dump synthesize low molecular weight heavy metal binding compounds only and show no complexation of heavy metal ions to phytochelatins. The induction of phytochelatins is a general answer of higher plants to heavy metal exposition, but only some of the heavy metal ions are able to form stable complexes with phytochelatins. The investigation of tolerant plants from the copper mining dump shows that phytochelatins are not responsible for the development of the heavy metal tolerant phenotypes. (Smith, 2007)

Phytochelatins are enzymatically synthesized peptides involved in metal detoxification and have been measured in plants grown at very high Cd concentrations, but few studies have examined the response of plants at lower environmentally relevant Cd concentrations. Using an ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA)-buffered nutrient medium, the paper varied Cd exposure and measured phytochelatin and glutathione concentrations in romaine lettuce (Lactuca sativa L. var. longifolia Lam. var. Parris Island) grown in a flow-through hydroponic (FTH) system. Very low free ionic Cd (10-9.6 M) increased average phytochelatin concentrations above those of controls, and increasing Cd resulted in increased phytochelatin production, though increases were tissue dependent. Glutathione concentrations also increased with increasing Cd. In other standard hydroponic experiments, the media were manipulated to vary total Cd concentration while the ionic Cd was fixed. It was found that the total amount of Cd (primarily EDTA bound) in the medium altered thiol production in roots, whereas thiols in leaves remained constant. The Cd uptake into roots and translocation to old leaves was also influenced by the total concentration in the medium. Cadmium in all tissues was lower and in some tissues thiol concentrations were higher than in FTH-grown plants grown in identical medium, suggesting that nutrient delivery technique is also an important variable. Though phytochelatin and glutathione production can be sensitive to changes in bioavailable Cd, thiol concentrations will not necessarily reflect the Cd content of the plant tissues. (Neumann, 2005)

The toxic heavy metal Cd is derived from the weathering of sulfide minerals and is naturally present in trace amounts in the ...
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