Nott J A
Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Citadel Hill, Devon, U.K.
Scanning Microsc. 1991 Mar;5(1):191-204; discussion 204-5.
X-ray microanalysis (XRMA) is customized for investigations of the metabolic and detoxification strategies of heavy metals taken by marine organisms from polluted environments. Sites of uptake, intracellular accumulation, transport and excretion are visualized, analysed and quantified. Cryopreparation techniques are required to prevent the translocation or loss from specimens of soluble metal species. In marine invertebrates, metals are detoxified by systems of chemical binding and intracellular compartmentalization. XRMA investigations have concentrated on marine molluscs and crustaceans and even within these restricted groups there are marked inter-species differences in the biochemical and cytological processes which reduce metal bioavailability. Some detoxification systems also protect the carnivores which ingest the metal-laden tissues of the prey. This results in the bioreduction of metals along a food chain. These processes are investigated by XRMA which can be tuned to observe the complex interactions which operate at all levels within and between the biota and polluted environments.
X射线微分析(XRMA)专为研究受污染环境中海洋生物摄取重金属的代谢和解毒策略而定制。摄取部位、细胞内积累、运输和排泄情况均可可视化、分析和量化。需要采用冷冻制备技术以防止可溶性金属物种从标本中移位或流失。在海洋无脊椎动物中,金属通过化学结合和细胞内分隔系统进行解毒。XRMA研究主要集中在海洋软体动物和甲壳类动物上,即使在这些有限的类群中,在降低金属生物可利用性的生化和细胞学过程中也存在明显的种间差异。一些解毒系统还能保护食肉动物,使其免受摄取富含金属的猎物组织的影响。这导致了食物链中金属的生物还原。XRMA对这些过程进行研究,它可以进行调整以观察生物群与受污染环境内部及之间各个层面上发生的复杂相互作用。