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Press Release Heavy Metal Rocks Plant Cells too Heavy metals can trigger widely varying stress reactions in plants. A team at the Campus Vienna Biocenter was now able to provide evidence for this in a research funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF). The results, now awaiting publication, are an important basis to comprehend how plants cope with an increase in heavy metal concentrations in the soil - and how these abilities can be profitably utilised. Adverse environmental conditions can cause enormous stress in plants. As sedentary beings they are at the absolute mercy of these conditions. Nevertheless, in order to grow and flourish, they have developed a comprehensive series of stress reactions. The recent work by the team of Prof. Heribert Hirt and Dr. Claudia Jonak at the Campus Vienna Biocenter prove how subtly plants can differentiate the various kinds of stress. Plants easily distinguish heavy metal The team made an interesting discovery when the activities of the enzymes
were analysed in detail. It found out that different heavy metals activate
the same four enzymes, but at varying speeds. The activation through copper
took place very fast, but through cadmium at a comparatively much slower
rate. "The activation of individual MAPKs through copper already
took place after 5-10 minutes, while comparable effects through cadmium
occurred only 20 minutes later. This difference is not so crucial for
the ability of the plant to cope with the stress, but it points to the
fact that different types of stress reactions take place," Prof.
Hirt elaborates on the results. Even though the cause for this time difference
is still unknown, Prof. Hirt has already developed a hypothesis, which
he will put to test in future projects. Oxygen radicals create stress A better understanding of plant reactions to high concentrations of heavy metals can have a great significance for our environment in the medium-term. For instance, it may become possible to breed plants which have a better chance of survival on soil contaminated by heavy metals. However, the possibilities of the so-called phytoremediation are even more appealing - a technology in which plants are used to extract heavy metals from contaminated soil and thus slowly clean the earth. Scientific Contact Austrian Science Fund - FWF Distributor Vienna, September 20, 2004
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