表达微生物酶的动物甲基汞的去甲基化和挥发

IF 15.7 1区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Kate Tepper, Josh King, Pradeep Manuneedhi Cholan, Chandran Pfitzner, Marco Morsch, Simon C. Apte, Maciej Maselko
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引用次数: 0

摘要

汞是一种剧毒的微量金属,在目前的生物修复方法无法达到的食物网中很容易被生物放大。动物可能会被改造成在它们的食物网中排毒,以清理受影响的生态系统。我们证明了无脊椎动物(Drosophila melanogaster)和脊椎动物(Danio rerio)动物模型可以从大肠杆菌中表达有机汞裂解酶(MerB)和汞还原酶(MerA),将甲基汞去甲基化,并将其作为挥发性元素汞从其生物量中去除。与野生型相比,转基因动物积累的汞不到其一半,而且其组织中较高比例的汞以生物可利用性较低的无机汞的形式存在。此外,与对照组相比,转基因动物可以耐受更高的甲基汞暴露。这些发现证明了利用工程动物进行生物修复的潜力,并可能通过破坏甲基汞的生物放大作用来减轻受影响生态系统中甲基汞的负担,或用于处理受污染的有机废物流。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Methylmercury demethylation and volatilization by animals expressing microbial enzymes

Methylmercury demethylation and volatilization by animals expressing microbial enzymes

Mercury is a highly toxic trace metal that readily biomagnifies in food webs where it is inaccessible to current bioremediation methods. Animals could potentially be engineered to detoxify mercury within their food webs to clean up impacted ecosystems. We demonstrate that invertebrate (Drosophila melanogaster) and vertebrate (Danio rerio) animal models can express organomercurial lyase (MerB) and mercuric reductase (MerA) from Escherichia coli to demethylate methylmercury and remove it from their biomass as volatile elemental mercury. The engineered animals accumulated less than half as much mercury relative to their wild-type counterparts, and a higher proportion of mercury in their tissue was in the form of less bioavailable inorganic mercury. Furthermore, the engineered animals could tolerate higher exposures to methylmercury compared to controls. These findings demonstrate the potential of using engineered animals for bioremediation and may be applied to reduce the burden of methylmercury in impacted ecosystems by disrupting its biomagnification or to treat contaminated organic waste streams.

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来源期刊
Nature Communications
Nature Communications Biological Science Disciplines-
CiteScore
24.90
自引率
2.40%
发文量
6928
审稿时长
3.7 months
期刊介绍: Nature Communications, an open-access journal, publishes high-quality research spanning all areas of the natural sciences. Papers featured in the journal showcase significant advances relevant to specialists in each respective field. With a 2-year impact factor of 16.6 (2022) and a median time of 8 days from submission to the first editorial decision, Nature Communications is committed to rapid dissemination of research findings. As a multidisciplinary journal, it welcomes contributions from biological, health, physical, chemical, Earth, social, mathematical, applied, and engineering sciences, aiming to highlight important breakthroughs within each domain.
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