Abstract

Phytochelatins ((gamma GluCys)nGly) are synthesized from glutathione by plants exposed to metals like Cd2+, Cu2+ and Zn2+. An intracellular complex formed by phytochelatins with Cd2+ and sulfide is thought to detoxify the metal possibly by sequestration in the vacuole. It was found that maize seedlings exposed to Cd2+ produced phytochelatins and two additional families of cysteine-containing peptides, (gamma GluCys)n and (gamma GluCys)nGlu. All thiol peptides with n = 2 and 3 were purified and their structure characterized by tandem mass spectrometry. For maize plants exposed to Cd2+ for 7 days, phytochelatins were synthesized preferentially in the first 24 h whereas the amounts of (gamma GluCys)n and (gamma GluCys)nGlu were the highest thereafter. This was probably due to an initial large pool of glutathione available in control plants compared with a dearth of gamma GluCys and no detectable gamma GluCysGlu. The (gamma GluCys)nGlu peptides were induced exclusively by Cd2+ as they were below the detection limit in control seedlings that contained low amounts of phytochelatins and (gamma GluCys)n. Since the Cys moiety of the peptides is essential for binding Cd2+, a role for accumulated (gamma GluCys)n and (gamma GluCys)nGlu in detoxifying Cd2+ in plants must be considered.

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