Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry

Article: pp. 2255–2262 | Full Text | PDF (133K)

ARSENIC BIOTRANSFORMATION BY THE BROWN MACROALGA FUCUS SERRATUS

Anita Geiszinger1, Walter Goessler2, Søren N. Pedersen1, and Kevin A. Francesconi1

1. Institute of Biology, Southern Denmark University, 5230 Odense M, Denmark, 2. Institute of Chemistry, Karl-Franzens University Graz, 8010 Graz, Austria

The brown alga Fucus serratus was maintained in aquaria with added arsenate (0, 20, 50, and 100 μg As/L, four individuals per treatment) for up to 19 weeks. Biotransformation of arsenic by Fucus was monitored by high-performance liquid chromatography/inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography/electrospray mass spectrometry analysis of aqueous extracts of algal frond tips removed periodically throughout the experiment. Major arsenic species monitored were arsenate, arsenite, methylarsonate, dimethylarsinate, and the four arsenosugars 1 to 4 found naturally in Fucus. Algae accumulated arsenate readily and transformed it into several arsenic compounds depending on the exposure concentration. At 100 μg As/L, the major metabolite was arsenite with smaller quantities of methylarsonate and dimethylarsinate, but only traces of arsenosugars were formed. In contrast, the 20-μg-As/L group accumulated only small quantities of arsenite and methylarsonate, while dimethylarsinate and arsenosugars were major arsenic metabolites. At 50 μg As/L exposure, algae had significant quantities of all arsenic metabolites monitored. Arsenate was toxic to the algae at 100 μg As/L but had no obvious detrimental effect at 20 μg As/L. The data are consistent with a process of arsenate detoxification by reduction and alkylation; at higher exposures, however, the alkylation processes become saturated, leading to an accumulation of arsenite and subsequent toxicity.

Keywords: Fucus, Arsenic, Arsenosugars, Toxicity, Algae

Received: October 2, 2000; Accepted: February 9, 2001

DOI: 10.1897/1551-5028(2001)020<2255:ABBTBM>2.0.CO;2