Abstract

The hydrothermal environment is characterised, among other things, by a high metal concentration, related to the convective sea-water circulation inside the oceanic crust and its interaction with basaltic rocks. The biological communities associated with the hydrothermal system can survive in this toxic environment owing to their ability to regulate their intracellular metal levels by excretion or accumulation of metal ions in non-toxic forms. Various detoxification processes have been previously studied within an hydrothermal organism: immobilisation and precipitation of the metal in lysosomal systems, or binding to specific and soluble ligands such as metallothioneins. The later are heat stable and characterised by a high content of cysteine. The quantification of Fe, Zn, Cu, Mn, Cd, Ag, Ba and Sr in the tissues of the vent mussel Bathymodiolus sp. indicates a high accumulation of these metals in two target organs, the gill and the digestive gland. This accumulation is in relation with high concentrations of metallothioneins, but the subcellular distribution of metals indicates a higher contribution of the insoluble compartment for detoxification processes. These results are compared with the literature data about metal bioaccumlation in Bathymodiolus thermophilus collected at the Galapagos Rift.

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