4.8 Article

The potential of mercury methylation and demethylation by 15 species of marine microalgae

期刊

WATER RESEARCH
卷 215, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118266

关键词

Marine microalgae; Mercury; Methylation; demethylation; Stable isotope technique; Thiol

资金

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFC1407602]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21577134, 41530965]
  3. Major Scientific and Technological Innovation Project (MSTIP) of Shandong [2019JZZY020705]

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This study found that most marine microalgae cannot directly methylate inorganic mercury, but six species can significantly induce the demethylation of methylmercury. The rates of microalgae-mediated demethylation were similar to that of photodemethylation, indicating that microalgae may play an important role in the degradation of methylmercury in marine environments.
Mercury (Hg) and its compounds are a kind of worldwide concerned persistent toxic pollutants. As the major primary producer in the ocean, microalgae are expected to play an important role in the cycling and accumulation of Hg in marine ecosystems by either uptake Hg species from seawater or involving in the transformations of Hg species. However, there is still lack of clear knowledge on whether microalgae can induce the methylation and demethylation of Hg in aquatic environments. In this study, Hg isotope dilution and isotope addition techniques were utilized to determine the methylation and demethylation potential of Hg at concentrations comparable to that in natural environments by 15 common marine microalgae (8 species of Diatoms, 4 species of Dinoflagellates, 2 species of Chlorophyta and 1 species of Chrysophyte). Methylation of inorganic Hg was found to be negligible in the culture of all tested marine microalgae, while 6 species could significantly induce the demethylation of methylmercury (MeHg). The rates of microalgae mediated MeHg demethylation were at the same order of magnitude as that of photodemethylation, indicating that marine microalgae may play an important role in the degradation of MeHg in marine environments. Further studies suggest that the demethylation of MeHg by the microalgae may be mainly caused by their extracellular secretions (via photo-induce demethylation) and associated bacteria, rather than the direct demethylation of MeHg by microalgae cells. In addition, it was found that thiol groups may be the major component in microalgal extracellular secretions that lead to the photo-demethylation of MeHg.

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