Title: Cd Toxicity in Plants
1Cd Toxicity in Plants
BIO 676
- Involvement of Oxidative Response Mechanisms
by Burcu Kaplan
2OUTLINE
- Oxidative Stress Responses
- Heavy Metal Stress
- Cadmium Uptake Cd Toxicity
- Cd Oxidative Stress
- Selected Papers
3Oxidative Stress
- Various stress conditions lead to formation
- Superoxide radicals (O2-)
- Singlet oxygen (1O2)
- Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)
- Hydroxyl radical (OH.)
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5Enzymatic Antioxidant System
- Superoxide dismutases (SOD) are located in
various cell compartments and catalyze the
disproportionation of two O2- radicals to H2O2
and O2.
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7Enzymatic Antioxidant System
- H2O2 is eliminated by various antioxidant enzymes
- Catalases (CAT), located in peroxisomes/glyoxysome
s and mitochondria thereby scavenging mostly
photorespiratory/ respiratory H2O2. - Peroxidases (POD) participate in lignin
biosynthesis, IAA degradation, and convert H2O2
to water by utilizing it in the oxidation of
various inorganic and organic substrates - Ascorbate peroxidase (APX) is primarily located
in chloroplasts and cytosol and as the key enzyme
of the ascorbate cycle, it eliminates peroxides
by converting ascorbic acid to dehydroascorbate. - One of the characteristic differences in the
reaction mechanisms of these enzymes is that CAT
without co-substrates can disproportionate H2O2,
while POD and APX require co-substrates to
detoxify H2O2.
8Pathways for reactive oxygen intermediate (ROI)
scavenging in plants. (a) The waterwater
cycle. (b) The ascorbateglutathione cycle. (c)
The glutathione peroxidase (GPX) cycle. (d)
Catalase (CAT). SOD acts as the first line of
defense converting O2- into H2O2. APX, GPX and
CAT then detoxify H2O2. In contrast to CAT (d),
APX and GPX require an ascorbate (AsA) and/or a
glutathione (GSH) regenerating cycle (ac). This
cycle uses electrons directly from the
photosynthetic apparatus (a) or NAD(P)H (b,c) as
reducing power.
9Biosynthetic Pathway of Mugineic Acid Family
Phytosiderophores
Mugineic Acid Family
10Heavy Metal Stress
- Various heavy metals produce different oxidative
responses in different plants. - The amount activity of SOD, CAT,POD,APX varies
under metal stress conditions.
11Cd Uptake
- Cd is believed to penetrate the root through the
cortical tissue. - As soon as Cd enters the roots, it can reach the
xylem through an apoplastic and/or a symplastic
pathway complexed by several ligands, such as
organic acids and/or phytochelatins. - Normally Cd ions are mainly retained in the
roots, and only small amounts are transported to
the shoots. - Cd accumulation in developing wheat fruits can
occur via phloem-mediated transport (Hart et al.,
1998).
12Cd Responses
- In a very general way, Cd in plants causes leaf
roll and chlorosis, and reduces growth, both in
roots and in stems.
13Effects of Cd
- Iteracts with the water balance.
- Damages the photosynthetic apparatus, in
particular the light harvesting complex II
(Krupa, 1988), and the photosystems II and I . - Lowers total chlorophyll content inhibits the
oxidative mitochondrial phosphorylation in
Brassica napus plants. - Indirectly inhibits the stomatal opening probably
due to the strong interference of Cd with
movements of K, Ca2 and abscisic acid in the
guard cells. - Cd significantly reduces the normal H/K exchange
and the activity of plasma membrane ATPases. - Inhibits the activity of several enzymes eg.
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, glutamate
dehydrogenase, malic enzyme, isocitrate
dehydrogenase, Rubisco and carbonic anhydrase - Cd may replace Zn ions in the zinc fingers, and
that consequently Cd may interfere with the
transcription mechanism.
14Plant Defense Mechanisms
-
- Immobilization
- Exclusion
- Synthesis of phytochelatins
- Compartmentalization
- Synthesis of metallothioneins
- Synthesis of stress proteins
- Production of stress ethylene.
15Dosage Duration Dependency
- Low Cd levels (i.e. about lt 1 µM in the soil
solution or in the culture medium), Long exposure
time (years or, in some cell cultures, at least
several months), it can be reasonably
hypothesized that plant management of chronic
Cd stress is a whole made up of general cellular
homeostatic processes, which may be common also
to the management of other metals and other
stress factors. - High Cd levels(i.e. gt 1 µM ), Short exposure time
(hours, days or weeks), plants can manage this
acute Cd stress by a rapidly induced full
fan-shaped response, in order to detoxify Cd
ions and efficiently repair Cd damage.
16Fan-shaped response to Cd stress in higher
plants. The proposed multi-component model could
allow the plantmodulating to various extents the
expression of each ray of the fanto cope
effectively with Cd stress, by means of
mechanisms of avoidance, detoxification and
repair.
17Dosage Duration Dependency
Tolerance is supported by detoxification
mechanisms, which in turn rely on homeostatic
processes. The shift between homeostatic and
fan-shaped responses can be rapid and involve
quick changes in gene expression. Differently,
the slow shift from fan-shaped response to
real tolerance is caused and affected by the
long-term selection pressure, which may increase
the frequency (and promote the expression) of one
or a few tolerance gene(s).
18Cd Oxidative Response
- Cadmium induces profound changes in the
physiology of plants. - Despite its very low relative concentration in
chloroplasts, it seriously blocks the activity of
photosynthetic processes at different routes,
including chlorophyll degragation.
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21Cd Oxidative Stress
- Cd produces oxidative stress but, in contrast
with other heavy metals such as Cu, it does not
seem to act directly on the production of oxygen
reactive species (via Fenton andor Haber Weiss
reactions). - On the other hand, Cd ions can inhibit (and
sometimes stimulate) the activity of several
antioxidative enzymes. - There are varying responses to Cd-induced
oxidative stress in different plants this is
probably related both to levels of Cd supplied
and to concentration of thiolic groups already
present or induced by Cd treatment. Thiols
possess strong antioxidative properties, and they
are consequently able to counteract oxidative
stress (Pichorner et al., 1993).
22Cd Oxidative Stress
- In sunflower leaves, Cd enhanced lipid
peroxidation, increased lipoxygenase activity and
decreased the activity of the SOD, CAT, APX,
glutathione reductase and dehydroascorbate
reductase (Gallego et al., 1996). - In mungbean Cd produced lipid peroxidation,
decrease of catalase activity and increase of
guaiacol peroxidase and ascorbate peroxidase
activity (Shaw, 1995). - In bean roots and leaves, 5 mM Cd enhanced
activities of guaiacol and ascorbate peroxidases,
and raised lipid peroxidation (Chaoui et al.,
1997). - Cd treatment notably increased lipid peroxidation
in pea plants (Lozano-Rodriguez et al., 1997),
whereas no peroxidation was noticed in Cd-exposed
plants and hairy roots of carrot (Sanita di
Toppi et al., 1998).
23Comparative studies of H2O2 detoxifying enzymes
in green andgreening barley seedlings under
cadmium stress
Attila Hegedus, Sara Erdei,, Gabor Horvath
24EXPERIMENTAL
- Hordeum ulgare L. cv. Triangle
- Hydroponics of a half strength Hoagland solution
- Either etiolated or grown in growth chamber 12
h. light 12 h. dark, 23 C - After 7 days transferred to different
concentrations of CdCl2 grown in above growth
chamber conditions.
25EXPERIMENTAL
- Cd content
- Chlorophyll content MDA (malondialdehyde)
content (lipid peroxidation) - Enzyme activities
- POD
- CAT
- APX
26Results
- Cd mainly accumulates in roots
- Chlorophyll content decreases
- MDA content is higher in Cd treated plants
- PODhigher in roots in all plants but upon Cd
enhanced activity only in leaves - CAT, no significant change
- APX, activity increases with increased Cd
concentration and time
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30MDA
- MDA shows the existence of the non-redox heavy
metal induced oxidative stress. - At high Cd concentration increased level of MDA
could be detected in both leaves and roots
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32POD
- POD destroys hydrogen peroxide, but there is no
activity increase in roots - POD increases in soybean roots upon Al.
- ( Cakmak et al. 1991)
- POD activity is not effected in carrot roots upon
Cd (Sanita di Toppi et al. 1998) - Leaf POD activity increases with increasing Cd
amount time in both green greening plants - Probably acts in cytosol as a scavenger.
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34CAT Cd
- Increase in activity is reported for soybean.
- Decrease in activity is reported for mungbean,
bean, sunflower. - Clijsters et al. 1999 states that most heavy
metals do not effect the peroximal CAT activity,
supporting results in this study. - CAT activity is primarily regulated by the amount
of H2O2 produced by photorespiration due to its
peroxisomal location.
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36APX
- At all Cd concentrations, the APX activity starts
to dramatically decrease, exclusively in roots of
green plants after the third day of treatment. - In green leaves the decrease in APX activity is
seen only at the highest, 1 mM Cd concentration.
- In etiolated leaves, after light exposure, the
APX activity decreases in control leaves and
after the second day of Cd treatment the elevated
APX activity again decreases especially at higher
Cd concentrations. - Different response in green greening plants
- APX plays a central role in H2O2 detoxification
at the chloroplast level
37Four barley genotypes respond differently to
cadmium lipidperoxidation and activities of
antioxidant capacity
Feibo Wua,, Guoping Zhang a, Peter Dominy
38EXPERIMENTAL
- Cd-efficient genotypes
- Zhenong 1, ZAU 3 and Mimai 114
- Cd-inefficient genotype
- Wumaoliuling
- The composition of the hydroponic nutrient
solution (mg/L) - (NH4)2SO4 48.2, MgSO4 65.9, K2SO4 15.9, KNO3
18.5, Ca( NO3)2 59.9, KH2PO4 24.8, Fecitrate 5,
MnCl24H2O 0.9, ZnSO4 7H2O 0.11, CuSO4 5H2O 0.04,
HBO3 2.9, H2MoO4 0.01. - pH 6.59/0.1
39EXPERIMENTAL
- On the sixth day after transplanting, cadmium (as
CdCl2) was added to each pot to form three
concentrations - 0 (control), 0.1, and 1 µM.
- From the 40th day after transplanting and
thereafter, half of the 1 µM Cd treatments was
changed with 5 µM Cd.
40RESULTS
Wumaoliuling was the most affected among the four
genotypes
4173 76 86 65
42RESULTS
- The Cd-sensitive genotype Wumaoliuling shows much
higher levels of MDA and a higher stimulation in
SOD and POD activities in 1 mM Cd treatment,
while in 5 mM Cd it had the lowest SOD and POD
activities when compared with the other three
resistant genotypes. - Cd-stress elevates the levels of SOD, POD and
CAT the effect varies with the intensity and
duration of Cd exposure, and with genotype. - The higher activity of SOD and POD at 5 mM Cd in
the three resistant genotypes could explain their
higher resistance to Cd concentration. - The decreased SOD and POD activities observed
when Wumaoliuling was exposed to 5 mM Cd against
1 mM Cd was very probably due to the harmful
effect of overproduction of H2O2 or its poisonous
AOS derivatives, as observed by the higher MDA
concentration. Also it can be attributed to
Cd-induced inhibition of protein synthesis. - CAT is the least effected among others.
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47REFERENCES
- I. Cakmak, W.J. Horst, Effect of aluminium on
lipid peroxidation, superoxide dismutase,
catalase and peroxidase activities in root tips
of soybean (Glycine max),Physiol. Plant. 83
(1991) 463468. - L. Sanita di Toppi, M. Lambardi, L. Pazzagli, G.
Cappugi, M. Durante, R. Gabbrielli, Response to
cadmium in carrot in vitro plants and cell
suspension cultures,Plant Sci. 137 (1998)
119129. - L. Sanita di Toppi, R. Gabbrielli, Response to
cadmium in higher plants, Environ. Exp. Bot. 41
(1999) 105130. - H. Clijsters, A. Cuypers, J. Vangronsveld,
Physiological responses to heavy metals in higher
plants defence against oxidative stress, Z.
Naturforsch. 54c (1999) 730734. - Gallego, S.M., Benavides, M.P., Tomaro, M.L.,
1996. Effect of heavy metal ion excess on
sunflower leaves evidence for involvement of
oxidative stress. Plant Sci. 121, 151159. - Hart, J.J., Welch, R.M., Norvell, W.A., Sullivan,
L.A.,Kochian, L.V., 1998. Characterization of
cadmium binding, uptake, and translocation in
intact seedlings of bread and durum wheat
cultivars. Plant Physiol. 116, 14131420.
48THANK YOU QUESTIONS?