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1.
Plant Biotechnol J ; 5(2): 254-62, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17309680

ABSTRACT

Eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marsh.) trees were engineered to express merA (mercuric ion reductase) and merB (organomercury lyase) transgenes in order to be used for the phytoremediation of mercury-contaminated soils. Earlier studies with Arabidopsis thaliana and Nicotiana tabacum showed that this gene combination resulted in more efficient detoxification of organomercurial compounds than did merB alone, but neither species is optimal for long-term field applications. Leaf discs from in vitro-grown merA, nptII (neomycin phosphotransferase) transgenic cottonwood plantlets were inoculated with Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain C58 carrying the merB and hygromycin resistance (hptII) genes. Polymerase chain reaction of shoots regenerated from the leaf discs under selection indicated an overall transformation frequency of 20%. Western blotting of leaves showed that MerA and MerB proteins were produced. In vitro-grown merA/merB plants were highly resistant to phenylmercuric acetate, and detoxified organic mercury compounds two to three times more rapidly than did controls, as shown by mercury volatilization assay. This indicates that these cottonwood trees are reasonable candidates for the remediation of organomercury-contaminated sites.


Subject(s)
Lyases/genetics , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Phenylmercuric Acetate/metabolism , Populus/genetics , Biodegradation, Environmental , Blotting, Western , Cinnamates/pharmacology , Drug Resistance , Hygromycin B/analogs & derivatives , Hygromycin B/pharmacology , Organomercury Compounds/metabolism , Phenylmercuric Acetate/pharmacology , Plant Leaves/genetics , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Plant Shoots/genetics , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Plants, Genetically Modified , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Populus/enzymology , Populus/growth & development , Rhizobium/genetics , Transformation, Genetic , Transgenes
2.
Plant Biotechnol J ; 3(6): 571-82, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17147628

ABSTRACT

Strong, tissue-specific and genetically regulated expression systems are essential tools in plant biotechnology. An expression system tool called a 'repressor-operator gene complex' (ROC) has diverse applications in plant biotechnology fields including phytoremediation, disease resistance, plant nutrition, food safety, and hybrid seed production. To test this concept, we assembled a root-specific ROC using a strategy that could be used to construct almost any gene expression pattern. When a modified E. coli lac repressor with a nuclear localization signal was expressed from a rubisco small subunit expression vector, S1pt::lacIn, LacIn protein was localized to the nuclei of leaf and stem cells, but not to root cells. A LacIn repressible Arabidopsis actin expression vector A2pot was assembled containing upstream bacterial lacO operator sequences, and it was tested for organ and tissue specificity using beta-glucuronidase (GUS) and mercuric ion reductase (merA) gene reporters. Strong GUS enzyme expression was restricted to root tissues of A2pot::GUS/S1pt::lacIn ROC plants, while GUS activity was high in all vegetative tissues of plants lacking the repressor. Repression of shoot GUS expression exceeded 99.9% with no evidence of root repression, among a large percentage of doubly transformed plants. Similarly, MerA was strongly expressed in the roots, but not the shoots of A2pot::merA/S1pt::lacIn plants, while MerA levels remained high in both shoots and roots of plants lacking repressor. Plants with MerA expression restricted to roots were approximately as tolerant to ionic mercury as plants constitutively expressing MerA in roots and shoots. The superiority of this ROC over the previously described root-specific tobacco RB7 promoter is demonstrated.

3.
Plant Physiol ; 131(2): 463-71, 2003 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12586871

ABSTRACT

Methylmercury is an environmental pollutant that biomagnifies in the aquatic food chain with severe consequences for humans and other animals. In an effort to remove this toxin in situ, we have been engineering plants that express the bacterial mercury resistance enzymes organomercurial lyase MerB and mercuric ion reductase MerA. In vivo kinetics experiments suggest that the diffusion of hydrophobic organic mercury to MerB limits the rate of the coupled reaction with MerA (Bizily et al., 2000). To optimize reaction kinetics for organic mercury compounds, the merB gene was engineered to target MerB for accumulation in the endoplasmic reticulum and for secretion to the cell wall. Plants expressing the targeted MerB proteins and cytoplasmic MerA are highly resistant to organic mercury and degrade organic mercury at 10 to 70 times higher specific activity than plants with the cytoplasmically distributed wild-type MerB enzyme. MerB protein in endoplasmic reticulum-targeted plants appears to accumulate in large vesicular structures that can be visualized in immunolabeled plant cells. These results suggest that the toxic effects of organic mercury are focused in microenvironments of the secretory pathway, that these hydrophobic compartments provide more favorable reaction conditions for MerB activity, and that moderate increases in targeted MerB expression will lead to significant gains in detoxification. In summary, to maximize phytoremediation efficiency of hydrophobic pollutants in plants, it may be beneficial to target enzymes to specific subcellular environments.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/genetics , Lyases/metabolism , Mercury/metabolism , Methylmercury Compounds/metabolism , Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Arabidopsis/enzymology , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Cell Wall/enzymology , Endoplasmic Reticulum/enzymology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Lyases/genetics , Phenotype , Phenylmercury Compounds/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified
4.
Environ Toxicol Chem ; 22(12): 2940-7, 2003 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14713034

ABSTRACT

Mercury contamination of soil and water is a serious problem at many sites in the United States and throughout the world. Plant species expressing the bacterial mercuric reductase gene, merA, convert ionic mercury, Hg(II), from growth substrates to the less toxic metallic mercury, Hg(0). This activity confers mercury resistance to plants and removes mercury from the plant and substrates through volatilization. Our goal is to develop plants that intercept and remove Hg(II) from polluted aquatic systems before it can undergo bacterially mediated methylation to the neurotoxic methylmercury. Therefore, the merA gene under the control of a monocot promoter was introduced into Oryza sativa L. (rice) by particle gun bombardment. This is the first monocot and first wetland-adapted species to express the gene. The merA-expressing rice germinated and grew on semisolid growth medium spiked with sufficient Hg(II) to kill the nonengineered (wild-type) controls. To confirm that the resistance mechanism was the conversion of Hg(II) to Hg(0), seedlings of merA-expressing O. sativa were grown in Hg(II)-spiked liquid medium or water-saturated soil media and were shown to volatilize significantly more Hg(0) than wild-type counterparts. Further genetic manipulation could yield plants with increased efficiency to extract soil Hg(II) and volatilize it as Hg(0) or with the novel ability to directly convert methylmercury to Hg(0).


Subject(s)
Genetic Engineering , Mercury/metabolism , Oryza/genetics , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Soil Pollutants/metabolism , Water Pollutants/metabolism , Bacteria/genetics , Biodegradation, Environmental , Drug Resistance , Methylation , Methylmercury Compounds , Oryza/enzymology , Oxidoreductases/pharmacology , Seedlings/enzymology , Volatilization
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