Abstract
Phytochelatin (PC) is involved in the detoxification of harmful, non-essential heavy metals and the homeostasis of essential heavy metals in plants. Its synthesis can be induced by either cadmium (Cd) or copper (Cu), and can form stable complexes with either element. This might suggest that PC has an important role in determining plant tolerance to both. However, this is not clearly apparent, as evidenced by a PC-deficient and Cd-sensitiveArabidopsis mutant (cad1-3) that shows no significant increase in its sensitivity to copper. Therefore, we investigated whether the mechanism for Cu tolerance differed from that for Cd by analyzing copper sensitivity in Cd-tolerant transgenics and Cd-sensitive mutants ofArabidopsis. Cadmium-tolerant transgenic plants that over-expressedA. thaliana phytochelatin synthase 1 (AtPCS1) were not tolerant of copper stress, thereby supporting the hypothesis that PC is not primarily involved in this tolerance mechanism. We also investigated Cu tolerance incad2-1, a Cd-sensitive and glutathione (GSH)-deficientArabidopsis mutant. Paradoxically,cad2-1 was more resistant to copper stress than were wild-type plants. This was likely due to the high level of cysteine present in that mutant. However, when the growth medium was supplemented with cysteine, the wild types also exhibited copper tolerance. Moreover,Saccharomyces cerevisiae that expressedAtPCS1 showed tolerance to Cd but hypersensitivity to Cu. All these results indicate that PC is not a major factor in determining copper tolerance in plants.
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Lee, S., Kang, B.S. Phytochelatin is not a primary factor in determining copper tolerance. J. Plant Biol. 48, 32–38 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03030562
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03030562