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Journal ArticleDOI

Cadmium transport, resistance, and toxicity in bacteria, algae, and fungi

J. T. Trevors, +2 more
- 01 Jun 1986 - 
- Vol. 32, Iss: 6, pp 447-464
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TLDR
Although considerable information is available on Cd toxicity to, and uptake in fungi, further work is clearly needed in several areas and mechanisms remain largely unknown at this point in time.
Abstract
Cadmium is an important environmental pollutant and a potent toxicant to bacteria, algae, and fungi. Mechanisms of Cd toxicity and resistance are variable, depending on the organism. It is very clear that the form of the metal and the environment it is studied in, play an important role in how Cd exerts its effect and how the organism(s) responds. A wide range of Cd concentrations have been used to designate resistance in organisms. To date, no concentration has been specified that is applicable to all species studied under standardized conditions. Cadmium exerts its toxic effect(s) over a wide range of concentrations. In most cases, algae and cyanobacteria are the most sensitive organisms, whereas bacteria and fungi appear to be more resistant. In some bacteria, plasmid-encoded resistance can lead to reduced Cd2+ uptake. However, some Gram-negative bacteria without plasmids are just as resistant to Cd as are bacteria containing plasmids encoding for Cd resistance. According to Silver and Misra (1984), there is no evidence for enzymatic or chemical transformations associated with Cd resistance. Insufficient information is available on the genetics of Cd uptake and resistance in cyanobacteria and algae. Mechanisms remain largely unknown at this point in time. Cadmium is toxic to these organisms, causing severe inhibition of such physiological processes as growth, photosynthesis, and nitrogen fixation at concentrations less than 2 ppm, and often in the ppb range (Tables 2 and 3). Cadmium also causes pronounced morphological aberrations in these organisms, which are probably related to deleterious effects on cell division. This may be direct or indirect, as a result of Cd effects on protein synthesis and cellular organelles such as mitochondria and chloroplasts. Cadmium is accumulated internally in algae (Table 4) as a result of a two-phase uptake process. The first phase involves a rapid physicochemical adsorption of Cd onto cell wall binding sites, which are probably proteins and (or) polysaccharides. This is followed by a lag period and then a slow, steady intracellular uptake. This latter phase is energy dependent and may involve transport systems used to accumulate other divalent cations, such as Mn2+ and Ca2+. Some data indicate that Cd resistance, and possibly uptake, in algae and cyanobacteria is controlled by a plasmid-encoded gene(s). Although considerable information is available on Cd toxicity to, and uptake in fungi, further work is clearly needed in several areas. There is little information about Cd uptake by filamentous fungi, and even in yeasts, information on the specificity, kinetics, and mechanisms of Cd uptake is limited.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial resistance to metals in the environment.

TL;DR: Six metal resistance mechanisms exist: exclusion by permeability barrier, intra- and extra-cellular sequestration, active transport efflux pumps, enzymatic detoxification, and reduction in the sensitivity of cellular targets to metal ions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interactions of fungip with toxic metals

TL;DR: The use of fungal biomass for the detoxification of metal/radionuclide-containing industrial effluents is of biotechnological potential (Gadd, 1990, 1992a) as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biosorption: critical review of scientific rationale, environmental importance and significance for pollution treatment

TL;DR: Biosorption is a physico-chemical process and includes such mechanisms as absorption, adsorption, ion exchange, surface complexation and precipitation as discussed by the authors, which has been heralded as a promising biotechnology for pollutant removal from solution, and/or pollutant recovery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of Algae for Removing Heavy Metal Ions From Wastewater: Progress and Prospects

TL;DR: Commercial application of algal technology for metal removal from wastewaters, emphasis should be given to selection of strains with high metal sorption capacity, adequate understanding of sorption mechanisms, and development of low-cost methods for cell immobilization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heavy metal accumulation by bacteria and other microorganisms

TL;DR: Many aspects of metal-microbe interactions remain unexploited in biotechnology and further development and application is necessary, particularly to the problem of radionuclide release into the environment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biological cycles for toxic elements in the environment

TL;DR: The detoxification mechanisms of mercury are used as examples to demonstrate that there are biological cycles for the synthesis and degradation of toxic compounds and that the present knowledge of the biologial cycles of toxic elements enables us to predict the behavior of other toxic elements in the environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasmid-determined resistance to antimicrobial drugs and toxic metal ions in bacteria.

TL;DR: Les principaux objectifs de cette revue sont: les mecanismes biochimiques de the resistance plasmidique aux dragues and aux ions metalliques toxiques, les etudes comparatives sur les determinants de resistance, andes evolutionnaires des genes de resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of the toxicity thresholds of water pollutants to bacteria, algae, and protozoa in the cell multiplication inhibition test

G. Bringmann, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1980 - 
TL;DR: It is found that a determination of the toxicity threshold of potential water pollutants for these three model organisms from the microbiological spectrum would provide a broader basis for assessing the damaging action of water pollutants to model organisms active in the biological self-purification of water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Uptake of heavy metals by Plectonema boryanum (cyanophyceae) into cellular components, especially polyphosphate bodies: An X-ray energy dispersive study

TL;DR: In situ X-ray energty dispersive analysis has been used to study heavy metal uptake in Plectonema boryanum as mentioned in this paper, and it was determined that the heavy metals Cd, Co, Cu, Hg, Ni, Pb and Zn are all taken up and sequestered in the cell sectors with polyphosphate bodies.