Phytoreduction and volatilization of mercury by ascorbate in Arabidopsis thaliana, European beech and Norway spruce
Mercury vapor (Hg 0) emission from plants contributes to the atmospheric Hg cycle. Young barley ( Hordeum vulgare L.) plants grown on a hydroponic cultivation medium containing Hg(II) have previously been shown to increase their Hg 0 emission significantly by reduction of Hg(II) with endogenous asco...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied geochemistry 2008-03, Vol.23 (3), p.494-502 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Mercury vapor (Hg
0) emission from plants contributes to the atmospheric Hg cycle. Young barley (
Hordeum vulgare L.) plants grown on a hydroponic cultivation medium containing Hg(II) have previously been shown to increase their Hg
0 emission significantly by reduction of Hg(II) with endogenous ascorbic acid. Regarding the potential contribution to the Hg cycle from the vast forest-covered areas, it was important to investigate this mechanism in trees. The increase in Hg
0 emission from young European beech plants cultivated on a HgCl
2 medium exceeded that from controls by ca. tenfold and was proportional to the Hg(II) concentration. From these experiments, a flux of 12.8
μg Hg
0/h/m
2 was estimated at an exposure of the roots to 20
μM Hg(II). Mercury vapor release from homogenates of Norway spruce needles exceeded that from European beech leaves by a factor of 2.3–4, i.e. in proportion to the reported AA concentrations; the reduction was maximal at alkaline pH which is typical for AA. The 8.4-fold difference in Hg
0 release between homogenates from wild-type
Arabidopsis thaliana and from its AA-deficient mutant
vtc 1-1 also paralleled the reported difference in AA levels of both species. It is concluded that the phytoreduction and vaporization of Hg by AA is an important mechanism as much for Hg detoxification in trees as for Hg emission to the atmosphere. The efficiency of this process seems to result from the optimal coordination of transfer and biochemical transformation of mercuric ions and Hg vapor. There is no evidence for a relevant difference in the mechanisms of biogenic Hg(II) reduction between grass plants and trees. |
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ISSN: | 0883-2927 1872-9134 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apgeochem.2007.12.023 |