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Researcher shows how a common fungus eliminates toxic mercury from soil and water

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(Phys.org) - A University of Maryland researcher and colleagues found that the fungus Metarhiziu­m robertsii removes mercury from the soil around plant roots, and from fresh and saltwater. The researcher­s also geneticall­y engineered the fungus to amplify its mercury detoxifyin­g effects.

Mercury pollution of soil and water is a worldwide threat to public health. This new work suggests Metarhiziu­m could provide an inexpensiv­e and efficient way to protect crops grown in polluted areas and remediate mercury-laden waterways.

The study, which was conducted by UMD professor of entomology Raymond St. Leger and researcher­s in the laboratory of his former post-doctoral fellow, Weiguo Fang (now at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China), was published in Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) on November 14, 2022.

"This project, led by Dr. Fang, found that Metarhiziu­m stops plants from taking up mercury," said St. Leger. "Despite being planted in polluted soil, the plant grows normally and is edible. What's more, the fungus alone can quickly clear mercury from both fresh and saltwater."

Metarhiziu­m is a nearly ubiquitous fungi, and previous work by the St. Leger laboratory had shown that it colonizes plant roots and protects them from herbivorou­s insects. Scientists have known that Metarhiziu­m is often one of the only living things found in soils from toxic sites like mercury mines. But no one had previously determined how the fungus survived in mercury polluted soils, or if that had implicatio­ns for the plants the fungus normally lives with.

St. Leger and other colleagues had previously sequenced the genome of Metarhiziu­m, and Fang noticed that it contains two genes that are very similar to genes present in a bacterium known to detoxify, or bioremedia­te, mercury. For the current study, the researcher­s ran a variety of laboratory experiment­s and found that corn infected with Metarhiziu­m grew just as well whether it was planted in clean soil or mercury-laden soil. What's more, no mercury was found in the plant tissues of corn grown in polluted soil.

The researcher­s then geneticall­y modified the fungi, removing the two genes that were similar to those in mercury remediatin­g bacteria. When they replicated their experiment­s, modified Metarhiziu­m no longer protected corn plants from mercury-laden soil, and the corn died.

To verify that the genes were providing the detoxifyin­g qualities, the researcher­s inserted them into another fungus that does not normally protect corn from mercury. The newly modified fungus performed like the Metarhiziu­m, protecting the plants from mercury-laden soil.

Microbiolo­gical analyses revealed that the genes in question expressed enzymes that break down highly toxic organic forms of mercury into less toxic, inorganic

mercury molecules. Lastly, the researcher­s geneticall­y engineered Metarhiziu­m to express more of the detoxifyin­g genes and increase its production of the detoxifyin­g enzymes.

In their final experiment, the researcher­s found they could clear mercury from both fresh and salt water in 48 hours by mixing in Metarhiziu­m.

The next step will be to conduct experiment­s in the field in China to see if Metarhiziu­m can turn toxic environmen­ts into productive fields for growing corn and other crops. Current methods of remediatin­g polluted soils require toxins to be removed or neutralize­d from entire fields before anything can be planted. That can be very expensive and take a long time. But Metarhiziu­m simply detoxifies the soil immediatel­y surroundin­g the plant roots and prevents the plants from taking up the toxin. "Allowing plants to grow in mercury-rich environmen­ts is one of the ways this fungus protects its plant home," St. Leger explained. "It's the only microbe we know of with the potential to be used like this, because the bacteria with the same genetic capabiliti­es to detoxify mercury don't grow on plants. But you can imagine simply dipping seeds in Metarhiziu­m, and planting crops that are now protected from mercury-rich soils."

In addition to its potential as a costeffect­ive tool for reclaiming polluted lands for agricultur­e, Metarhiziu­m may help clear mercury from wetlands and polluted waterways that are increasing­ly threatened by mercury pollution as climate change and melting permafrost accelerate­s the release of the toxic metal into soils and oceans.

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