Phytoremediation of ionic and methylmercury pollution
Author(s) -
Richard B. Meagher
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1122083
Subject(s) - mercury (programming language) , methylmercury , phytoremediation , environmental chemistry , pollutant , volatilisation , pollution , food chain , chemistry , bioconcentration , mercury pollution , cadmium , environmental science , bioaccumulation , heavy metals , biology , ecology , organic chemistry , computer science , programming language
Our long-term goal is to enable highly productive plant species to extract, resist, detoxify, and sequester the toxic elemental pollutants, like the heavy metal mercury. Our current working hypothesis is that transgenic plants controlling the transport, chemical speciation, electrochemical state. volatilization, and aboveground binding of mercury will: a) tolerate mercury and grow rapidly in mercury contaminated environments; b) prevent methylmercury from entering the food chain; c) remove mercury from polluted soil and . water; and d) hyperaccumulate mercury in aboveground tissues for later harvest. Progress toward these specific aims is reported: to increase the transport of mercury into roots and to aboveground vegetative organs; to increase biochemical sinks and storage for mercury in leaves; to increase leaf cell vacuolar storage of mercury; and to demonstrate that several stacked transgenes, when functioning in concert, enhance mercury resistance and hyperaccumulation to high levels
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