Rhizobia have a significant agronomic and environmental role and are eminent contributors to soil fertility. However, this group of microorganisms are affected by various environmental stresses, such as Cd contamination. High Cd concentrations change bacterial metabolism. During this metabolic shift, bacteria alter their volatilome (the set of volatile metabolites synthesized by an organism). In the presence of Cd, peak areas of saturated aldehydes and alcohols were previously reported to increase, and the consequences of this increase to cells are poorly known. In this study, Rhizobium sp. strain E20-8 cells were exposed to Cd and aldehydes or their conjugated alcohols. Exposure to Cd (100 μM) inhibited cell growth and induced several biomarkers of oxidative stress. The present study also evidenced the higher toxicity of most aldehydes relatively to the corresponding alcohol in the presence of Cd, suggesting that reduction of aldehydes into alcohols may be an effective mechanism to restrain aldehydes toxicity in Rhizobium cells under Cd toxicity. Nonetheless, the protective effect was dependent on the pair aldehyde-respective alcohol considered and it differed between Cd stressed and non-stressed cells. Differences in the ability to convert aldehydes to alcohols may emerge as a new feature helping explain the oxidative tolerance variability among bacteria.
Keywords: Alcohols; Aldehydes; Cadmium; Rhizobium; Toxicity.
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