African Journal of Biotechnology
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African
Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 1 (1), pp. 1-9, November 2002 ISSN 1684-5315 © 2002 Academic Journals
Accepted 14 October 2002 |
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| Abstract | |||||
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Perennial wildfires in Africa
and other continents contribute an estimated 8 x 105 kg of
mercury to the global atmosphere with a residence time of approximately
one year. This phenomenon changes the flux of biologically available
mercury in natural microbial communities where enzymatic actions,
including mercuric reductase and organomercurial lyase activities,
underpin the biogeochemical cycling of mercury with repercussions for
human exposure to toxic forms of the element. To elucidate the impact of
episodic mercury bioavailability on the response of microbial communities,
the expression of microbial proteins and nucleic acids in environmental
strains of Pseudomonas species were evaluated under various
concentrations of mercury ranging from 0 to 500 µM. Routine cultivation
of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PU21 containing the 142.5 kb plasmid
Rip64 in medium containing 100 µg of Hg++/ml (500 µM)
exhibited a prolonged lag phase survived by hyper-resistant cells able to
grow in medium containing 200 µg of Hg++/ml. Nucleic acid
analyses showed a distinct mutation in the merA gene encoding for
mercuric reductase activity in cells able to grow at elevated mercury
concentrations. A similar mutation was detected in the merR locus
which serves as the regulator of the mer operon. Mutations were not
detected in merC which encodes for a hydrophobic
membrane-associated protein implicated in active mercury transport.
Protein profiles of cells grown with elevated mercury concentrations were
associated with a stable increase in the production of specific
polypeptides. In addition, the survival and genetic response of
naturally-occurring mercury resistant bacteria inoculated into
contaminated environmental samples were monitored in microcosm experiments
over a 30 day period. The results suggest that sudden exposure to high
concentrations of mercury either decimates the bacterial population or
selects for hyper-resistant strains with high level of constitutive
expression of active proteins, including mercuric reductase. Methyl
mercury was observed to cause a higher level of induction for mercuric
reductase than the specific substrate, inorganic mercury. The selection of
hyper-resistant strains is potentially useful for biotechnological
strategies to control the bioavailability of mercury, and thereby
potentially reducing the re-uptake of mercury into vegetation in regions
frequently subjected to wildfires.
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