2 resultados para Hg2

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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With global heavy metal contamination increasing, plants that can process heavy metals might provide efficient and ecologically sound approaches to sequestration and removal. Mercuric ion reductase, MerA, converts toxic Hg2+ to the less toxic, relatively inert metallic mercury (Hg0) The bacterial merA sequence is rich in CpG dinucleotides and has a highly skewed codon usage, both of which are particularly unfavorable to efficient expression in plants. We constructed a mutagenized merA sequence, merApe9, modifying the flanking region and 9% of the coding region and placing this sequence under control of plant regulatory elements. Transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana seeds expressing merApe9 germinated, and these seedlings grew, flowered, and set seed on medium containing HgCl2 concentrations of 25-100 microM (5-20 ppm), levels toxic to several controls. Transgenic merApe9 seedlings evolved considerable amounts of Hg0 relative to control plants. The rate of mercury evolution and the level of resistance were proportional to the steady-state mRNA level, confirming that resistance was due to expression of the MerApe9 enzyme. Plants and bacteria expressing merApe9 were also resistant to toxic levels of Au3+. These and other data suggest that there are potentially viable molecular genetic approaches to the phytoremediation of metal ion pollution.

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The nature of an L-arginine-derived relaxing factor released from vascular smooth muscle cells cultured on microcarrier beads and stimulated for 20 h with interleukin 1 beta was investigated. Unlike the unstable relaxation elicited by authentic nitric oxide (NO) in a cascade superfusion bioassay system, the effluate from vascular smooth muscle cells induced a stable relaxation that was susceptible to inhibition by oxyhemoglobin. Three putative endogenous NO carriers mimicked this stable relaxing effect: S-nitroso-L-cysteine, low molecular weight dinitrosyl-iron complexes (DNICs), and the adduct of NG-hydroxy-L-arginine (HOArg) with NO. Inactivation of S-nitroso-L-cysteine by Hg2+ ions or trapping of DNICs with agarose-bound bovine serum albumin abolished their relaxing effects, whereas that of the vascular smooth muscle cell effluate remained unaffected. In addition, neither S-nitrosothiols nor DNICs were detectable in the effluate from these cells, as judged by UV and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. The HOArg-NO adduct was instantaneously generated upon reaction of HOArg with authentic NO under bioassay conditions. Its pharmacological profile was indistinguishable from that of the vascular smooth muscle cell effluate, as judged by comparative bioassay with different vascular and nonvascular smooth muscle preparations. Moreover, up to 100 nM HOArg was detected in the effluate from interleukin 1 beta-stimulated vascular smooth muscle cells, suggesting that sufficient amounts of HOArg are released from these cells to spontaneously generate the HOArg-NO adduct. This intercellular NO carrier probably accounts for the stable L-arginine-derived relaxing factor released from cytokine-stimulated vascular smooth muscle cells and also from other NO-producing cells, such as macrophages and neutrophils.