Hs. Saini et al., BIOSYNTHESIS OF HALOMETHANES AND METHANETHIOL BY HIGHER-PLANTS VIA A NOVEL METHYLTRANSFERASE REACTION, Plant, cell and environment, 18(9), 1995, pp. 1027-1033
Biogenic emissions of halomethanes (CH3CI, CH3Br and CH3I) and methane
thiol (CH3SH) are of major significance to atmospheric chemistry, but
there is little information on such emissions from higher plants, We p
resent evidence that plants can produce all these gases through an ide
ntical methyltransferase reaction, A survey of 118 herbaceous species,
based on CH3I production by leaf discs supplied with KI, detected the
presence of in vivo halide methyltransferase activity in 87 species.
The activities ranged over nearly 4 orders of magnitude, Plants genera
lly considered salt tolerant had relatively low activities, and salini
zation of three such species did not increase the activity, The highes
t activities were found in the family Brassicaceae. Leaf extracts of B
rassica oleracea catalysed the S-adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent methy
lation of the halides I-, Br- and CI- to the respective halomethanes.
In addition, the extract similarly methylated HS- (bisulphide) to CH3S
H. These two types of enzyme activity (halide and bisulphide methyltra
nsferase) were also present in all of the 20 species comprising a subs
ample that represented the range of C3(H)I emissions observed in the i
nitial survey of in vivo CH3I production ability, and in a marine red
alga Endocladia muricata. Moreover, the two activities occurred in app
roximately the same ratio in all the higher plants tested, These findi
ngs highlight the potential of higher plants to contribute to the atmo
spheric budget of halomethanes and methanethiol, The halide and bisulp
hide methyltransferase activities may also provide a mechanism for the
elimination of halide and HS- ions, both of which are known to be phy
totoxic.