Literature DB >> 17049417

Bioavailability of trace metals to aquatic microorganisms: importance of chemical, biological and physical processes on biouptake.

I Worms1, D F Simon, C S Hassler, K J Wilkinson.   

Abstract

An important challenge in environmental biogeochemistry is the determination of the bioavailability of toxic and essential trace compounds in natural media. For trace metals, it is now clear that chemical speciation must be taken into account when predicting bioavailability. Over the past 20 years, equilibrium models (free ion activity model (FIAM), biotic ligand model (BLM)) have been increasingly developed to describe metal bioavailability in environmental systems, despite the fact that environmental systems are always dynamic and rarely at equilibrium. In these simple (relatively successful) models, any reduction in the available, reactive species of the metal due to competition, complexation or other reactions will reduce metal bioaccumulation and thus biological effects. Recently, it has become clear that biological, physical and chemical reactions occurring in the immediate proximity of the biological surface also play an important role in controlling trace metal bioavailability through shifts in the limiting biouptake fluxes. Indeed, for microorganisms, examples of biological (transport across membrane), chemical (dissociation kinetics of metal complexes) and physical (diffusion) limitation can be demonstrated. Furthermore, the organism can employ a number of biological internalization strategies to get around limitations that are imposed on it by the physicochemistry of the medium. The use of a single transport site by several metals or the use of several transport sites by a single metal further complicates the prediction of uptake or effects using the simple chemical models. Finally, once inside the microorganism the cell is able to employ a large number of strategies including complexation, compartmentalization, efflux or the production of extracellular ligands to minimize or optimize the reactivity of the metal. The prediction of trace metal bioavailability will thus require multidisciplinary advances in our understanding of the reactions occurring at and near the biological interface. By taking into account medium constraints and biological adaptability, future bioavailability modeling will certainly become more robust.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17049417     DOI: 10.1016/j.biochi.2006.09.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochimie        ISSN: 0300-9084            Impact factor:   4.079


  26 in total

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Review 5.  Biogeochemical behaviour and bioremediation of uranium in waters of abandoned mines.

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6.  Bioaccumulation and molecular effects of sediment-bound metals in zebrafish embryos.

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7.  Saccharides enhance iron bioavailability to Southern Ocean phytoplankton.

Authors:  Christel S Hassler; Véronique Schoemann; Carol Mancuso Nichols; Edward C V Butler; Philip W Boyd
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8.  Modelling copper bioaccumulation in Gammarus pulex and alterations of digestive metabolism.

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9.  Microbial availability of mercury: effective detection and organic ligand effect using a whole-cell bioluminescent bioreporter.

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10.  Association of dissolved organic matter characteristics and trace metals in mountainous streams with sabo dams.

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