Lead accumulation in photosynthetic Euglena gracilis depends on polyphosphates and calcium
2021
Hernández-Garnica, M. | García-García, J.D. | Moreno-Sánchez, R. | Sánchez-Thomas, R.
Worldwide increasing levels of lead in water systems require the search for efficient ecologically friendly strategies to remove it. Hence, lead accumulation by the free-living algae-like Euglena gracilis and its effects on cellular growth, respiration, photosynthesis, chlorophyll, calcium, and levels of thiol- and phosphate-molecules were analyzed. Photosynthetic cells were able to accumulate 4627 mg lead/kgDW after 5 days of culture with 200 μM Pb²⁺. Nevertheless, exposure to 50, 100 and 200 μM Pb²⁺ for up to 8 days did not modify growth, viability, chlorophyll content and oxygen consumption/production. Enhanced biosynthesis of thiol molecules and polyphosphates, i.e. the two canonical metal ion chelation mechanisms in E. gracilis, was not induced under such conditions. However, in cells cultured in the absence of phosphate, lead accumulation and polyphosphate content markedly decreased, while culturing in the absence of sulfate did not modify the accumulation of this metal. In turn, the total amount of intracellular calcium slightly increased as the amount of intracellular lead increased, whereas under Ca²⁺ deficiency lead accumulation doubled. Therefore, the results indicated that E. gracilis is highly resistant to lead through mechanisms mediated by polyphosphates and Ca²⁺ and can in fact be classified as a lead hyperaccumulator microorganism.
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