Abstract

Thiol-peptides synthesized as intermediates in phytochelatin (PC) biosynthesis confer cellular tolerance to toxic elements like arsenic, mercury, and cadmium, but little is known about their long-distance transport between plant organs. A modified bacterial gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (ECS) gene, S1ptECS, was expressed in the shoots of the ECS-deficient, heavy-metal-sensitive cad2-1 mutant of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). S1ptECS directed strong ECS protein expression in the shoots, but no ECS was detected in the roots of transgenic plant lines. The S1ptECS gene restored full mercury tolerance and partial cadmium tolerance to the mutant and enhanced arsenate tolerance significantly beyond wild-type levels. After arsenic treatment, the root concentrations of gamma-glutamylcysteine (EC), PC2, and PC3 peptides in a S1ptECS-complemented cad2-1 line increased 6- to 100-fold over the mutant levels and were equivalent to wild-type concentrations. The shoot and root levels of glutathione were 2- to 5-fold above those in wild-type plants, with or without treatment with toxicants. Thus, EC and perhaps glutathione are efficiently transported from shoots to roots. The possibility that EC or other PC pathway intermediates may act as carriers for the long-distance phloem transport and subsequent redistribution of thiol-reactive toxins and nutrients in plants is discussed.

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