Selenolanthionine is the major water-soluble selenium compound in the selenium tolerant plant Cardamine violifolia |
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Authors: | Eszter Borbála Both Shuxun Shao Jiqian Xiang Zsuzsa Jókai Hongqing Yin Yafeng Liu Anna Magyar Mihály Dernovics |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Food Science, Szent István University, Villányi út 29-43, 1118 Budapest, Hungary;2. State Key Laboratory of Ore Deposit Geochemistry, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 99 Lincheng West Road, Guanshanhu District, Guiyang, Guizhou Province 550081, China;3. Enshi Autonomous Prefecture Academy of Agriculture Sciences, 517 Shizhou Road, Enshi, Hubei Province 445002, China;4. MTA-ELTE Research Group of Peptide Chemistry, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Pázmány Péter sétány 1/A, 1117 Budapest, Hungary |
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Abstract: | BackgroundSelenium hyperaccumulation in plants often involves the synthesis of non-proteinaceous methylated selenoamino acids serving for the elimination of excess selenium from plant metabolism to protect plant homeostasis.MethodsOur study aimed at the identification of the main selenium species of the selenium hyperaccumulator plant Cardamine violifolia (Brassicaceae) that grows in the wild in the seleniferous region of Enshi, China. A sample of this plant (3.7?g?Se?kg?1 d.w.) was prepared with several extraction methods and the extracted selenium species were identified and quantified with liquid chromatography mass spectrometry set-ups.ResultsThe Cardamine violifolia sample did not contain in considerable amount any of the organic selenium species that are often formed in hyperaccumulator plants; the inorganic selenium content (mostly as elemental selenium) accounted only for <20% of total Se. The most abundant selenium compound, accounting for about 40% of total Se was proved to be selenolanthionine, a selenium species that has never been unambiguously identified before from any selenium containing sample. The identification process was completed with chemical synthesis too. The molar ratio of lanthionine:selenolanthionine in the water extract was ca. 1:8.ConclusionsFinding selenolanthionine as the main organic selenium species in a plant possibly unearths a new way of selenium tolerance. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Selenium research in biochemistry and biophysics - 200?year anniversary issue, edited by Dr. Elias Arnér and Dr. Regina Brigelius-Flohe. |
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Keywords: | Cardamine ESI-MS ICP-MS Lanthionine Orthogonal chromatographic purification Speciation |
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