Abstract

Phytochelatins (PCs) were first discovered as Cd-binding "Cadystins A and B" in a fission yeast and then in many plants as the major components of Cd-binding complexes. PCs have the general structure of (gamma-glutamyl-cysteinyl)n-glycine (n=2-11) and the variants with the repeated gamma-glutamyl-cysteinyl units are formed in some plants and yeast. They are capable of binding to various metals including Cd, Cu, Zn or As via the sulfhydryl and carboxyl residues, but their biosyntheses are controlled preferentially by the metal Cd or metalloid As. PCs are synthesized from glutathione (gamma-glutamyl-cysteinyl-glycine) in steps mediated by PC synthase. Genes (CAD1, PCS1) of the enzyme have been isolated from plants, fission yeast and some animals. Inhibition studies of PC biosynthesis via glutathione have demonstrated their fundamental roles in the metal detoxification in yeast and fungi, green algae and some aquatic plants, and also in the suspension-cultured cells and intact tissues in higher plants. Over-expression of PC synthase genes increases the Cd-tolerance in yeast and bacteria efficiently but not always in higher plant tissues especially in metal-accumulating species. "Hyperaccumulators" of Cd, Zn, Ni or As in terrestrial plants have a common feature where massive metal transport to shoots prevails, besides the ability of their roots to form PCs. This suggests that PC-based metal detoxification might be an ancient type of defense mechanism established in micro-algae or micro-fungi, and the additional PC-independent mechanism via vascular transport system became established later in higher plants. Readjustment of the PC-dependent and independent mechanisms at the metal-binding sites in the symplast and apoplast of shoots can be effective for further improvement of the metal detoxification activities and the tolerance characteristics of higher plants under various conditions.

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