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A hidden demethylation pathway removes mercury from rice plants and mitigates mercury flux to food chains

  • Wenli Tang
  • , Xu Bai
  • , Yang Zhou
  • , Christian Sonne*
  • , Mengjie Wu
  • , Su Shiung Lam
  • , Holger Hintelmann
  • , Carl P.J. Mitchell
  • , Alexander Johs
  • , Baohua Gu
  • , Luís Nunes
  • , Cun Liu
  • , Naixian Feng
  • , Sihai Yang
  • , Jörg Rinklebe
  • , Yan Lin
  • , Long Chen
  • , Yanxu Zhang
  • , Yanan Yang
  • , Jiaqi Wang
  • Shouying Li, Qingru Wu, Yong Sik Ok, Diandou Xu, Hong Li, Xu Xiang Zhang, Hongqiang Ren, Guibin Jiang, Zhifang Chai, Yuxi Gao*, Jiating Zhao*, Huan Zhong*
*Corresponding author for this work
  • Nanjing University
  • CAS - Institute of High Energy Physics
  • University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Aarhus University
  • University of Petroleum and Energy Studies
  • Universiti Malaysia Terengganu
  • Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences (Deemed to be University)
  • Trent University
  • University of Toronto
  • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • University of Algarve
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Jinan University
  • University of Wuppertal
  • Nankai University
  • State Key Joint Laboratory of Environmental Simulation and Pollution Control
  • Tsinghua University
  • Korea University
  • CAS - Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
  • Soochow University
  • Zhejiang University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Dietary exposure to methylmercury (MeHg) causes irreversible damage to human cognition and is mitigated by photolysis and microbial demethylation of MeHg. Rice (Oryza sativa L.) has been identified as a major dietary source of MeHg. However, it remains unknown what drives the process within plants for MeHg to make its way from soils to rice and the subsequent human dietary exposure to Hg. Here we report a hidden pathway of MeHg demethylation independent of light and microorganisms in rice plants. This natural pathway is driven by reactive oxygen species generated in vivo, rapidly transforming MeHg to inorganic Hg and then eliminating Hg from plants as gaseous Hg°. MeHg concentrations in rice grains would increase by 2.4- to 4.7-fold without this pathway, which equates to intelligence quotient losses of 0.01–0.51 points per newborn in major rice-consuming countries, corresponding to annual economic losses of US$30.7–84.2 billion globally. This discovered pathway effectively removes Hg from human food webs, playing an important role in exposure mitigation and global Hg cycling.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)72-82
Number of pages11
JournalNature Food
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2024

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