Web Release Date: January 26,
Formation of Metallic Copper Nanoparticles at the Soil−Root Interface
LGIT-Maison des Géosciences, CNRS and Université J. Fourier, 38041 Grenoble Cedex 9, France, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 845 West Taylor Street, MC-186, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60607, Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, One Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, California 94720, and Phytorestore—Site et Concept, Hôtel Vigée Le Brun, 8 rue du Sentier, 75002 Paris, France
Received for review August 13, 2007
Revised manuscript received November 16, 2007
Accepted December 10, 2007
Abstract:
Copper is an essential element in the cellular electron-transport chain, but as a free ion it can catalyze production of damaging radicals. Thus, all life forms attempt to prevent copper toxicity. Plants diminish excess copper in two structural regions: rare hyperaccumulators bind cationic copper to organic ligands in subaerial tissues, whereas widespread metal-tolerant plants segregate copper dominantly in roots by mechanisms thought to be analogous. Here we show using synchrotron microanalyses that common wetlands plants Phragmites australis and Iris pseudoacorus can transform copper into metallic nanoparticles in and near roots with evidence of assistance by endomycorrhizal fungi when grown in contaminated soil in the natural environment. Biomolecular responses to oxidative stress, similar to reactions used to abiotically synthesize Cu0 nanostructures of controlled size and shape, likely cause the transformation. This newly identified mode of copper biomineralization by plant roots under copper stress may be common in oxygenated environments.
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