Bacterial mercury resistance from atoms to ecosystems
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey · Rutgers Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Bacterial resistance to inorganic and organic mercury compounds (HgR) is one of the most widely observed phenotypes in eubacteria. Loci conferring HgR in Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria typically have at minimum a mercuric reductase enzyme (MerA) that reduces reactive ionic Hg(II) to volatile, relatively inert, monoatomic Hg(0) vapor and a membrane-bound protein (MerT) for uptake of Hg(II) arranged in an operon under control of MerR, a novel metal-responsive regulator. Many HgR loci encode an additional enzyme, MerB, that degrades organomercurials by protonolysis, and one or more additional proteins apparently involved in transport. Genes conferring HgR occur on chromosomes, plasmids, and transposons…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 297
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Operon
- Biology
- Bacteria
- Transposable element
- Plasmid
- Microbiology
- Mercury (programming language)
- Efflux
- Life in Land