Literature DB >> 15640191

Mercury adaptation among bacteria from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent.

Costantino Vetriani1, Yein S Chew, Susan M Miller, Jane Yagi, Jonna Coombs, Richard A Lutz, Tamar Barkay.   

Abstract

Since deep-sea hydrothermal vent fluids are enriched with toxic metals, it was hypothesized that (i) the biota in the vicinity of a vent is adapted to life in the presence of toxic metals and (ii) metal toxicity is modulated by the steep physical-chemical gradients that occur when anoxic, hot fluids are mixed with cold oxygenated seawater. We collected bacterial biomass at different distances from a diffuse flow vent at 9 degrees N on the East Pacific Rise and tested these hypotheses by examining the effect of mercuric mercury [Hg(II)] on vent bacteria. Four of six moderate thermophiles, most of which were vent isolates belonging to the genus Alcanivorax, and six of eight mesophiles from the vent plume were resistant to >10 microM Hg(II) and reduced it to elemental mercury [Hg(0)]. However, four psychrophiles that were isolated from a nearby inactive sulfide structure were Hg(II) sensitive. A neighbor-joining tree constructed from the deduced amino acids of a PCR-amplified fragment of merA, the gene encoding the mercuric reductase (MR), showed that sequences obtained from the vent moderate thermophiles formed a unique cluster (bootstrap value, 100) in the MR phylogenetic tree, which expanded the known diversity of this locus. The temperature optimum for Hg(II) reduction by resting cells and MR activity in crude cell extracts of a vent moderate thermophile corresponded to its optimal growth temperature, 45 degrees C. However, the optimal temperature for activity of the MR encoded by transposon Tn501 was found to be 55 to 65 degrees C, suggesting that, in spite of its original isolation from a mesophile, this MR is a thermophilic enzyme that may represent a relic of early evolution in high-temperature environments. Results showing that there is enrichment of Hg(II) resistance among vent bacteria suggest that these bacteria have an ecological role in mercury detoxification in the vent environment and, together with the thermophilicity of MR, point to geothermal environments as a likely niche for the evolution of bacterial mercury resistance.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15640191      PMCID: PMC544242          DOI: 10.1128/AEM.71.1.220-226.2005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 0099-2240            Impact factor:   4.792


  26 in total

1.  Chemical speciation drives hydrothermal vent ecology.

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2.  Population structure and phylogenetic characterization of marine benthic Archaea in deep-sea sediments.

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3.  Tn5041-like transposons: molecular diversity, evolutionary relationships and distribution of distinct variants in environmental bacteria.

Authors:  G Kholodii; Zh Gorlenko; S Mindlin; J Hobman; V Nikiforov
Journal:  Microbiology       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 2.777

Review 4.  Bacterial mercury resistance from atoms to ecosystems.

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5.  Bioaccumulation of mercury in a vestimentiferan worm living in Kagoshima Bay, Japan.

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Journal:  Chemosphere       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 7.086

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7.  Mercury and organomercurial resistances determined by plasmids in Staphylococcus aureus.

Authors:  A A Weiss; S D Murphy; S Silver
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Authors:  B Fox; C T Walsh
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1982-03-10       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  Sea-air partitioning of mercury in the equatorial pacific ocean.

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  26 in total

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2.  Mercury resistance and mercuric reductase activities and expression among chemotrophic thermophilic Aquificae.

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Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2012-07-06       Impact factor: 4.792

3.  Diversity of 16S rRNA gene, ITS region and aclB gene of the Aquificales.

Authors:  I Ferrera; S Longhorn; A B Banta; Y Liu; D Preston; A-L Reysenbach
Journal:  Extremophiles       Date:  2006-09-20       Impact factor: 2.395

4.  Potential for mercury reduction by microbes in the high arctic.

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5.  Environmental conditions constrain the distribution and diversity of archaeal merA in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, U.S.A.

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6.  Microbial generation of elemental mercury from dissolved methylmercury in seawater.

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7.  Homologous Recombination in Core Genomes Facilitates Marine Bacterial Adaptation.

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Review 8.  Metal-tolerant thermophiles: metals as electron donors and acceptors, toxicity, tolerance and industrial applications.

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9.  Community analysis of a mercury hot spring supports occurrence of domain-specific forms of mercuric reductase.

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10.  Potential application in mercury bioremediation of a marine sponge-isolated Bacillus cereus strain Pj1.

Authors:  Juliana F Santos-Gandelman; Kimberly Cruz; Sharron Crane; Guilherme Muricy; Marcia Giambiagi-deMarval; Tamar Barkay; Marinella S Laport
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