Title of article
Microbial Resistance to Metals in the Environment Review Article
Author/Authors
Mark R. Bruins، نويسنده , , Sanjay Kapil، نويسنده , , Frederick W. Oehme، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
10
From page
198
To page
207
Abstract
Many microorganisms demonstrate resistance to metals in water, soil and industrial waste. Genes located on chromosomes, plasmids, or transposons encode specific resistance to a variety of metal ions. Some metals, such as cobalt, copper, nickel, serve as micronutrients and are used for redox processes, to stabilize molecules through electrostatic interactions, as components of various enzymes, and for regulation of osmotic pressure. Most metals are nonessential, have no nutrient value, and are potentially toxic to microorganisms. These toxic metals interact with essential cellular components through covalent and ionic bonding. At high levels, both essential and nonessential metals can damage cell membranes, alter enzyme specificity, disrupt cellular functions, and damage the structure of DNA. Microorganisms have adapted to the presence of both nutrient and nonessential metals by developing a variety of resistance mechanisms. 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. The understanding of how microorganisms resist metals can provide insight into strategies for their detoxification or removal from the environment.
Keywords
essential metals. , Heavy metals , resistance mechanisms , nonessentialmetals
Journal title
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
Record number
710241
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