Publication | Closed Access
Efflux Mechanisms of Resistance to Cadmium, Arsenic and Antimony in Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes
29
Citations
90
References
1997
Year
Unknown Venue
Molecular BiologyMany Heavy MetalRedox BiologyDrug ResistanceBioenergeticsMetalloid ContaminationEfflux MechanismsBiological Inorganic ChemistryBiochemistryAntimony ResistanceTrace MetalMembrane BiologyNatural SciencesBioactive MetalMetalloproteinMetal ToxicityMicrobiologyCellular BiochemistryHost ResistanceMedicine
ABSTRACT Kan-Jen Tsai, Ching-Mei Hsu and Barry P. Rosen (1997) Efflux mechanisms of resistance to cadmium, arsenic and antimony in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Zoological Studies 36(1): 1-16. Resistance to toxic metals is ubiquitously found in prokaryotes, both gram positive and gram negative, and in all types of eukaryotes, including fungi, plants, protozoans, and animals. In both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, toxic metals are ex truded from cells through efflux transport systems to confer this resistance. Although the chemical sub strates recognized by eachtransport system vary considerably, many heavy metal and metalloid translocating ATPases have been identified by evolutionarily unrelated pumps that have evolved the same function. Among these efflux mechanisms of resistance to heavy metals and metalloids, bacterial cadmium resistance is mediated by a primary transporter while the thiol-linked efflux systems have developed for cadmium re sistance in eukaryotes. In contrast, bacterial resistance to arsenicals and antimonials is mediated by a primary ATP-coupled pump in association with a catalytic subunit, whereas an ATP-coupled As-thiol pump has evolved to confer the resistance in eukaryotic systems. The biochemical aspects of the efflux mechanisms related to cadmium, arsenic, and antimony resistance in prokaryotes and eukaryotes are discussed in detail in the present review.
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