B. Pawlik et T. Skowronski, TRANSPORT AND TOXICITY OF CADMIUM - ITS REGULATION IN THE CYANOBACTERIUM SYNECHOCYSTIS-AQUATILIS, Environmental and experimental botany, 34(2), 1994, pp. 225-233
Cadmium entrance into cells of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis aquati
lis was energy-dependent requiring light. Cells exposed to cadmium in
the dark took up considerably less Cd2+ than in the light. The metal t
aken up under different light conditions caused changes in cellular ad
enylate metabolism; the ATP/ADP ratio increased significantly in cells
exposed to cadmium. The ATP/ADP ratio increased with duration of Cd e
xposure in light much more than in dark. Cd2+ transport was affected b
y the uncouplers CCCP, DNP and DCMU at concentrations that inhibited p
hosphorylation and decreased membrane electropotential; DCCD, an inhib
itor of the FoFl-reverse ATP-ase, had no effect. Cadmium transport inc
reased with temperature in the range 10-30-degrees-C. Cadmium toxicity
was modified by temperature as well. The Cd inhibition of CO2 fixatio
n in S. aquatilis was by 50% at 30-degrees-C, and only by 5% at 10-deg
rees-C. The cadmium transport process displayed saturation Michaelis-M
enten kinetics; the apparent K(m) and V(max) were estimated at 286 muM
and 1.43 mumol min-1 x g dry wt, respectively. Calcium, magnesium and
zinc cations were inhibitory to Cd2+ transport at equimolar concentra
tion (8.9 muM); manganese and potassium were not.