Selenium, an essential trace element for animals, poses a threat to all forms of life above a threshold concentration. The ubiquitously present cyanobacteria, a major photosynthetic biotic component of aquatic and other ecosystems, are excellent systems to study the effects of environmental toxicants. The molecular changes that led to beneficial or detrimental effects in response to different doses of selenium oxyanion Se(IV) were analyzed in the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7120. This organism showed no inhibition in growth up to 15 mg/L sodium selenite, but above this dose i.e. 20-100 mg/L of Se(IV), both growth and photosynthesis were substantially inhibited. Along with the increased accumulation of non-protein thiols, a consistent reduction in levels of ROS was observed at 10 mg/mL dose of Se(IV). High dose of Se(IV) (above 20 mg/L) enhanced endogenous reactive oxygen species (ROS)/lipid peroxidation, and decreased photosynthetic capability. Treatment with 100 mg/L Se(IV) downregulated transcription of several photosynthesis pathways-related genes such as those encoding photosystem I and II proteins, phycobilisome rod-core linker protein, phycocyanobilin, phycoerythrocyanin-associated proteins etc. Interestingly, at a dose range of 10-15 mg/L Se(IV), Anabaena showed an increase in PSII photosynthetic yield and electron transport rate (at PSII), suggesting improved photosynthesis. Se was incorporated into the Anabaena cells, and Se-enriched thylakoid membranes showed higher redox conductivity than the thylakoid membranes from untreated cells. Overall, the data supports that modulation of photosynthetic machinery is one of the crucial mechanisms responsible for the dose-dependent contrasting effect of Se(IV) observed in Anabaena.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquatox.2021.105839 | DOI Listing |
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