Abstract

The function of selenium in an organism is mediated mostly by selenoproteins including glutathione peroxidase. Glutathione peroxidase is a potent anti-oxidative enzyme, scavenging a variety of peroxides. The green alga Scenedesmus quadricauda was used to investigate the relationship between the toxicity of selenium and the glutathione peroxidase activity. Selenium resistant strains SeIV and SeVI were synchronized and grown in high concentrations of Se (selenite or selenate). As a measure of selenium toxicity the EC 50 values were determined. During growth of the untreated wild type, glutathione peroxidase activity increased slightly and then declined gradually until the end of the cell cycle. A similar pattern was observed in untreated resistant strains and when resistant strains were grown in the presence of selenium in the oxidation state to which they were resistant. In the wild type cultivated with 50 mg Se L −1 (selenite or selenate), activity increased to a high level and slowly declined until the end of the cell cycle. Similarly, activity increased in strains SeIV and SeVI when grown in the presence of selenium in the oxidation state to which they were not resistant. We followed the effect of selenium on the ultrastructure of S. quadricauda. After exposure to selenite, the chloroplast membranes of wild type were reorganized into thick bundles of thylakoids and the stroma became granulose. When selenate was added, the chloroplast of wild type had a fingerprint-like appearance, the stroma became less dense and starch production increased. In selenium resistant strains, when treated with the selenium form to which they were resistant, the chloroplast was affected, but not to such an extent as in the wild type. The activity of glutathione peroxidase in Scenedesmus was affected by selenium in an oxidation state-dependent manner. The most apparent effects of selenium on the ultrastructure involved impairment of the chloroplast and the overproduction of starch.

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