Detailseite
Projekt Druckansicht

Effekte nanomolarer Schwermetallkonzentrationen auf Pflanzen - Vergleich von biochemischen und biophysikalischen Mechanismen von Mangel und subletaler Toxizität unter umweltrelevanten Bedingungen

Fachliche Zuordnung Biochemie und Biophysik der Pflanzen
Pflanzenbau, Pflanzenernährung, Agrartechnik
Pflanzenphysiologie
Förderung Förderung von 2010 bis 2015
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 169833033
 
Erstellungsjahr 2015

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

This project led to many important results, as documented by the various publications originating from it. The field study with simulation in the lab revealed that in soft water conditions strong synergy exists between toxic effects of cadmium and nickel, so that combinations of these metals become severely toxic at concentrations where the individual metals do not lead to any toxicity. In the investigation of arsenic toxicity, a key finding was that a specific inhibition of chlorophyll synthesis takes place very early in the sequence of events before any other inhibition became measurable, while oxidative stress only occurred as a rather late consequence of a malfunctioning of photosynthesis and thermal dissipation of captured energy. Arsenic accumulation in tissues changed in location and speciation during the transition from sublethally toxic to lethal treatments. In the case of cadmium and copper, a key finding was that phytochelatin synthesis is essentially zero when work is performed under ultraclean conditions leading to lower basal metal concentrations than usually achieved in earlier studies. This is important as it was long debated whether phytochelatins have physiological a physiological role independent of metal detoxification, which now seems not the case. Both cadmium and copper toxicity changed the distribution of micronutrients in the tissue, but in different ways. In case of copper it is remarkable that (in contrast to arsenic, see above) pigment loss in the plants was only observed as a late consequence of the stress, while specific inhibition of the PSII reaction centre was the first damage measured in high light. Also cadmium strongly inhibited the PSII reaction centre already at sublethal concentrations, but in addition it led to inhibition of the Calvin cycle. In low light, by metalloproteomics for the first time we could show that already at low nanomolar concentrations Cd binds to LHCII as high-affinity target. For chromium, the most important result is that the current data suggest a beneficial or even essential role in plants, where it was previously regarded as nonessential. Identification of three high affinity Cr-binding proteins by metalloproteomics furthermore suggests a role of all three proteins in carbohydrate binging and pathogen resistance. My work as a whole, not only this particular project, was subject of some media coverage when I moved to Budweis, Czech Republic. In July and August last year there were articles in several Czech national and regional newspapers and magazines, as well as on national and regional TV and radio. These articles were also related to a decision of the Czech Ministry of Education to cut funding for a programme aimed at attracting scientists from abroad, where I highlighted as a positive contrast the very reliable funding by the DFG, which is only based on scientific, not political considerations.

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

Zusatzinformationen

Textvergrößerung und Kontrastanpassung