Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9884708 | Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics | 2005 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Euglena gracilis lacks a plant-like vacuole and, when grown in Cd2+-containing medium, 60% of the accumulated Cd2+ is located inside the chloroplast. Hence, the biochemical mechanisms involved in Cd2+ accumulation in chloroplast were examined. Percoll-purified chloroplasts showed a temperature-sensitive uptake of the free 109Cd2+ ion. Kinetics of the uptake initial rate was resolved in two components, one hyperbolic and saturable (Vmax 11 nmol 109Cd2+ minâ1 mg protein â1, Km 13 μM) and the other, linear and non-saturable. 109Cd2+ uptake was not affected by metabolic inhibitors or illumination. Zn2+ competitively inhibited 109Cd2+ uptake (Ki 8.2 μM); internal Cd2+ slightly inhibited 109Cd2+ uptake. Cadmium was partially and rapidly released from chloroplasts. These data suggested the involvement of a cation diffusion facilitator-like protein. Chloroplasts isolated from cells grown with 50 μM CdCl2 (ZCd50 chloroplasts) showed a 1.6 times increase in the uptake Vmax, whereas the Km and the non-saturable component did not change. In addition, Cd2+ retention in chloroplasts correlated with the amount of internal sulfur compounds. ZCd50 chloroplasts, which contained 4.4 times more thiol-compounds and sulfide than control chloroplasts, retained six times more Cd2+. The Cd2+ storage-inactivation mechanism was specific for Cd2+, since Zn2+ and Fe3+ were not preferentially accumulated into chloroplasts.
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Authors
David G. Mendoza-Cózatl, Rafael Moreno-Sánchez,