Some like it cold: Microbial transformations of mercury in polar regions

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Some like it cold : Microbial transformations of mercury in polar regions. / Barkay, Tamar; Kroer, Niels; Poulain, Alexandre J.

In: Polar Research, Vol. 30, No. SUPPL.1, 15469, 01.12.2011.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Barkay, T, Kroer, N & Poulain, AJ 2011, 'Some like it cold: Microbial transformations of mercury in polar regions', Polar Research, vol. 30, no. SUPPL.1, 15469. https://doi.org/10.3402/polar.v30i0.15469

APA

Barkay, T., Kroer, N., & Poulain, A. J. (2011). Some like it cold: Microbial transformations of mercury in polar regions. Polar Research, 30(SUPPL.1), [15469]. https://doi.org/10.3402/polar.v30i0.15469

Vancouver

Barkay T, Kroer N, Poulain AJ. Some like it cold: Microbial transformations of mercury in polar regions. Polar Research. 2011 Dec 1;30(SUPPL.1). 15469. https://doi.org/10.3402/polar.v30i0.15469

Author

Barkay, Tamar ; Kroer, Niels ; Poulain, Alexandre J. / Some like it cold : Microbial transformations of mercury in polar regions. In: Polar Research. 2011 ; Vol. 30, No. SUPPL.1.

Bibtex

@article{8ec000964a274d0a961e5dd1fbb3fd5b,
title = "Some like it cold: Microbial transformations of mercury in polar regions",
abstract = "The contamination of polar regions with mercury that is transported from lower latitudes as inorganic mercury has resulted in the accumulation of methylmercury (MeHg) in food chains, risking the health of humans and wildlife. While production of MeHg has been documented in polar marine and terrestrial environments, little is known about the responsible transformations and transport pathways and the processes that control them. We posit that as in temperate environments, microbial transformations play a key role in mercury geochemical cycling in polar regions by: (1) methylating mercury by one of four proposed pathways, some not previously described; (2) degrading MeHg by activities of mercury resistant and other bacteria; and (3) carrying out redox transformations that control the supply of the mercuric ion, the substrate of methylation reactions. Recent analyses have identified a high potential for mercury-resistant microbes that express the enzyme mercuric reductase to affect the production of gaseous elemental mercury when and where daylight is limited. The integration of microbially mediated processes in the paradigms that describe mercury geochemical cycling is therefore of high priority especially in light of concerns regarding the effect of global warming and permafrost thawing on input of MeHg to polar regions.",
keywords = "Mercury biogeochemistry, Methylation, Microbiology, Polar regions, Redox transformations",
author = "Tamar Barkay and Niels Kroer and Poulain, {Alexandre J.}",
year = "2011",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.3402/polar.v30i0.15469",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
journal = "Polar Research",
issn = "0800-0395",
publisher = "Co-Action Publishing",
number = "SUPPL.1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Some like it cold

T2 - Microbial transformations of mercury in polar regions

AU - Barkay, Tamar

AU - Kroer, Niels

AU - Poulain, Alexandre J.

PY - 2011/12/1

Y1 - 2011/12/1

N2 - The contamination of polar regions with mercury that is transported from lower latitudes as inorganic mercury has resulted in the accumulation of methylmercury (MeHg) in food chains, risking the health of humans and wildlife. While production of MeHg has been documented in polar marine and terrestrial environments, little is known about the responsible transformations and transport pathways and the processes that control them. We posit that as in temperate environments, microbial transformations play a key role in mercury geochemical cycling in polar regions by: (1) methylating mercury by one of four proposed pathways, some not previously described; (2) degrading MeHg by activities of mercury resistant and other bacteria; and (3) carrying out redox transformations that control the supply of the mercuric ion, the substrate of methylation reactions. Recent analyses have identified a high potential for mercury-resistant microbes that express the enzyme mercuric reductase to affect the production of gaseous elemental mercury when and where daylight is limited. The integration of microbially mediated processes in the paradigms that describe mercury geochemical cycling is therefore of high priority especially in light of concerns regarding the effect of global warming and permafrost thawing on input of MeHg to polar regions.

AB - The contamination of polar regions with mercury that is transported from lower latitudes as inorganic mercury has resulted in the accumulation of methylmercury (MeHg) in food chains, risking the health of humans and wildlife. While production of MeHg has been documented in polar marine and terrestrial environments, little is known about the responsible transformations and transport pathways and the processes that control them. We posit that as in temperate environments, microbial transformations play a key role in mercury geochemical cycling in polar regions by: (1) methylating mercury by one of four proposed pathways, some not previously described; (2) degrading MeHg by activities of mercury resistant and other bacteria; and (3) carrying out redox transformations that control the supply of the mercuric ion, the substrate of methylation reactions. Recent analyses have identified a high potential for mercury-resistant microbes that express the enzyme mercuric reductase to affect the production of gaseous elemental mercury when and where daylight is limited. The integration of microbially mediated processes in the paradigms that describe mercury geochemical cycling is therefore of high priority especially in light of concerns regarding the effect of global warming and permafrost thawing on input of MeHg to polar regions.

KW - Mercury biogeochemistry

KW - Methylation

KW - Microbiology

KW - Polar regions

KW - Redox transformations

U2 - 10.3402/polar.v30i0.15469

DO - 10.3402/polar.v30i0.15469

M3 - Review

AN - SCOPUS:84870677369

VL - 30

JO - Polar Research

JF - Polar Research

SN - 0800-0395

IS - SUPPL.1

M1 - 15469

ER -

ID: 214687025