Environmental and Experimental Botany 55 (2006) 149–162
Cadmium detoxification in roots of Pisum sativum
seedlings: relationship between toxicity levels, thiol pool
alterations and growth
Ana Isabel Gusm˜ ao Lima
∗
, Sofia Isabel Almeida Pereira,
Etelvina Maria de Almeida Paula Figueira, Gustavo Cardoso Nunes Caldeira,
Hortense Deolinda Quinteira de Matos Caldeira
Departamento de Biologia, Centro de Biologia Celular, Campus de Santiago, Universidade de Aveiro,
3810-196 Aveiro, Portugal
Accepted 18 October 2004
Abstract
The evaluation of thiol metabolism in plant adaptation to relevant levels of cadmium stress is important for understanding
the real importance of phytochelatins and related thiols in stress coping. The present work was designed to study the process of
stress adaptation in roots of Pisum sativum L. plants during an exposure to different cadmium concentrations, ranging from more
realistic exposures to those usually employed in PC studies. The balance between individual PCs and their homologous hPCs in
constitutive thiol pools and root growth was also accessed. Roots of intact plants were submitted to 1, 3, 30, 60 or 120 M Cd
and harvested after 1, 3, 6 and 9 days after exposure. Growth parameters and root tissue cadmium accumulation were analysed.
High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorescence detection was used due to its high sensitivity. Root growth
was only affected in concentrations higher than 30 M Cd, but the presence of low cadmium concentrations induced significant
alterations in constitutive thiols and triggered the synthesis of PCs and hPCs, bearing two to four olygomeric repeats. Increasing
Cd stress levels were generally associated with higher polythiol production; however, with the time-course of the experiments,
higher degrees of toxicity were associated with a reduction in thiol production. This behaviour was attributed to the Cys and
GSH depletion, which limited polythiol synthesis, as well as root growth. In tolerable concentrations, the rate of root length
recovery matched the increase in PC and hPC synthesis. In higher concentrations (60 and 120 M), the reduction in non-protein
polythiol synthesis was associated with higher Cd toxicity, leading to a severe growth reduction. The synthesis of hPCs seemed
to have a reduced importance in tolerance; however, their production was stimulated when the GSH deficit was higher. Our
results suggest that the reductions in PC levels, observed in higher degrees of stress, were not related to the activation of other
tolerance mechanisms but were instead associated with the high metabolic cost of this thiol-based tolerance mechanism.
© 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Gluthatione; Homogluthatione; Phytochelatins; Homophytochelatins; Root growth; Cadmium stress
∗
Corresponding author. Tel.: +351 234 865008; fax: +351 234 370782.
E-mail address: anagusmao@portugalmail.com (A.I.G. Lima).
0098-8472/$ – see front matter © 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.envexpbot.2004.10.008