Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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First published online September 24, 2004; 10.1104/pp.104.044073

Plant Physiology 136:3198-3208 (2004)
© 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists

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PLANT NUTRITION

Arsenic Hyperaccumulation in Gametophytes of Pteris vittata. A New Model System for Analysis of Arsenic Hyperaccumulation1

Luke Gumaelius, Brett Lahner, David E. Salt* and Jo Ann Banks

Department of Botany and Plant Pathology (L.G., J.B.) and Center for Plant Environmental Stress Physiology (B.L., D.E.S.), Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907

The sporophyte of the fern Pteris vittata is known to hyperaccumulate arsenic (As) in its fronds to >1% of its dry weight. Hyperaccumulation of As by plants has been identified as a valuable trait for the development of a practical phytoremediation processes for removal of this potentially toxic trace element from the environment. However, because the sporophyte of P. vittata is a slow growing perennial plant, with a large genome and no developed genetics tools, it is not ideal for investigations into the basic mechanisms underlying As hyperaccumulation in plants. However, like other homosporous ferns, P. vittata produces and releases abundant haploid spores from the parent sporophyte plant which upon germination develop as free-living, autotrophic haploid gametophyte consisting of a small (<1 mm) single-layered sheet of cells. Its small size, rapid growth rate, ease of culture, and haploid genome make the gametophyte a potentially ideal system for the application of both forward and reverse genetics for the study of As hyperaccumulation. Here we report that gametophytes of P. vittata hyperaccumulate As in a similar manner to that previously observed in the sporophyte. Gametophytes are able to grow normally in medium containing 20 mM arsenate and accumulate >2.5% of their dry weight as As. This contrasts with gametophytes of the related nonaccumulating fern Ceratopteris richardii, which die at even low (0.1 mM) As concentrations. Interestingly, gametophytes of the related As accumulator Pityrogramma calomelanos appear to tolerate and accumulate As to intermediate levels compared to P. vittata and C. richardii. Analysis of gametophyte populations from 40 different P. vittata sporophyte plants collected at different sites in Florida also revealed the existence of natural variability in As tolerance but not accumulation. Such observations should open the door to the application of new and powerful genetic tools for the dissection of the molecular mechanisms involved in As hyperaccumulation in P. vittata using gametophytes as an easily manipulated model system.


1 This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DE–FG02–03ER63622 to J.B. and D.E.S.).

Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.044073.

* Corresponding author; e-mail dsalt{at}purdue.edu; fax 765–494–0391.

Received April 2, 2004; returned for revision May 13, 2004; accepted May 17, 2004.




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D. R. Ellis, L. Gumaelius, E. Indriolo, I. J. Pickering, J. A. Banks, and D. E. Salt
A Novel Arsenate Reductase from the Arsenic Hyperaccumulating Fern Pteris vittata
Plant Physiology, August 1, 2006; 141(4): 1544 - 1554.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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