The Genetic Basis for Bacterial Mercury Methylation

Author:

Parks Jerry M.1,Johs Alexander2,Podar Mircea13,Bridou Romain4,Hurt Richard A.1,Smith Steven D.4,Tomanicek Stephen J.2,Qian Yun2,Brown Steven D.15,Brandt Craig C.1,Palumbo Anthony V.1,Smith Jeremy C.15,Wall Judy D.4,Elias Dwayne A.15,Liang Liyuan2

Affiliation:

1. Biosciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, USA.

2. Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, USA.

3. Department of Microbiology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.

4. Biochemistry Division, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA.

5. Department of Biochemistry and Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.

Abstract

Mercury Methylating Microbes Mercury (Hg) most commonly becomes bioavailable and enters the food web as the organic form methylmercury, where it induces acute toxicity effects that can be magnified up the food chain. But most natural and anthropogenic Hg exists as inorganic Hg 2+ and is only transformed into methylmercury by anaerobic microorganisms—typically sulfur-reducing bacteria. Using comparative genomics, Parks et al. (p. 1332 , published online 7 February; see the Perspective by Poulain and Barkay ) identified two genes that encode a corrinoid and iron-sulfur proteins in six known Hg-methylating bacteria but were absent in nonmethylating bacteria. In two distantly related model Hg-methylating bacteria, deletion of either gene—or both genes simultaneously—reduced the ability for the bacteria to produce methylmercury but did not impair cellular growth. The presence of this two-gene cluster in several other bacterial and lineages for which genome sequences are available suggests the ability to produce methylmercury may be more broadly distributed in the microbial world than previously recognized.

Funder

Office of Biological and Environmental Research

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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