Abstract

Short-term (< 1 h) silver uptake by the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was measured in the laboratory in defined inorganic media in the presence or absence of ligands (chloride and thiosulfate). In contradiction to the free-ion model of metal uptake, silver accumulation by the alga proved to be sensitive to the choice of ligand used to buffer the free silver concentration. For a low fixed free Ag+ concentration of 10 nM, silver uptake in the presence of thiosulfate (0.11 microM) was 2x greater than in the presence of chloride (4 mM). When sulfate was removed from the exposure medium (i.e., 81 microM-->0 microM), silver uptake in the presence of thiosulfate was even more markedly enhanced (more than 4x greater than in the presence of chloride). Varying the sulfate concentration in the exposure medium only affected silver uptake if thiosulfate was present. We conclude that silver-thiosulfate complexes are transported across the plasma membrane via sulfate/thiosulfate transport systems and that sulfate acts as a competitive inhibitor of this uptake mechanism.

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