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      Mediterranean Mercury Assessment 2022: An Updated Budget, Health Consequences, and Research Perspectives

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          Mercury as a Global Pollutant: Sources, Pathways, and Effects

          Mercury (Hg) is a global pollutant that affects human and ecosystem health. We synthesize understanding of sources, atmosphere-land-ocean Hg dynamics and health effects, and consider the implications of Hg-control policies. Primary anthropogenic Hg emissions greatly exceed natural geogenic sources, resulting in increases in Hg reservoirs and subsequent secondary Hg emissions that facilitate its global distribution. The ultimate fate of emitted Hg is primarily recalcitrant soil pools and deep ocean waters and sediments. Transfers of Hg emissions to largely unavailable reservoirs occur over the time scale of centuries, and are primarily mediated through atmospheric exchanges of wet/dry deposition and evasion from vegetation, soil organic matter and ocean surfaces. A key link between inorganic Hg inputs and exposure of humans and wildlife is the net production of methylmercury, which occurs mainly in reducing zones in freshwater, terrestrial, and coastal environments, and the subsurface ocean. Elevated human exposure to methylmercury primarily results from consumption of estuarine and marine fish. Developing fetuses are most at risk from this neurotoxin but health effects of highly exposed populations and wildlife are also a concern. Integration of Hg science with national and international policy efforts is needed to target efforts and evaluate efficacy.
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            Ecological effects, transport, and fate of mercury: a general review

            Chemosphere, 40(12), 1335-1351
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              Bacterial mercury resistance from atoms to ecosystems.

              Bacterial resistance to inorganic and organic mercury compounds (HgR) is one of the most widely observed phenotypes in eubacteria. Loci conferring HgR in Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria typically have at minimum a mercuric reductase enzyme (MerA) that reduces reactive ionic Hg(II) to volatile, relatively inert, monoatomic Hg(0) vapor and a membrane-bound protein (MerT) for uptake of Hg(II) arranged in an operon under control of MerR, a novel metal-responsive regulator. Many HgR loci encode an additional enzyme, MerB, that degrades organomercurials by protonolysis, and one or more additional proteins apparently involved in transport. Genes conferring HgR occur on chromosomes, plasmids, and transposons and their operon arrangements can be quite diverse, frequently involving duplications of the above noted structural genes, several of which are modular themselves. How this very mobile and plastic suite of proteins protects host cells from this pervasive toxic metal, what roles it has in the biogeochemical cycling of Hg, and how it has been employed in ameliorating environmental contamination are the subjects of this review.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
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                Journal
                Environmental Science & Technology
                Environ. Sci. Technol.
                American Chemical Society (ACS)
                0013-936X
                1520-5851
                April 05 2022
                March 04 2022
                April 05 2022
                : 56
                : 7
                : 3840-3862
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Université Grenoble Alpes, ISTerre, CS 40700, 38058 Grenoble Cedex 9, France
                [2 ]Ifremer, Centre Atlantique de Nantes, BP 44311, 44980 Nantes, France
                [3 ]Aix Marseille Université, CNRS/INSU, Université de Toulon, IRD, Mediterranean Institute of Oceanography (MIO) UM 110, 13288 Marseille, France
                [4 ]Géosciences Environnement Toulouse, CNRS/Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées (OMP)/Université de Toulouse, 31400 Toulouse, France
                [5 ]Istituto sull’inquinamento atmosferico, CNR-IIA, 87036 Rende, Italy
                [6 ]Institut de Ciències del Mar, 08003 Barcelona, Spain
                [7 ]Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisca Sperimentale (OGS), 34010 Trieste, Italy
                [8 ]Institut Józef Stefan, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenija
                Article
                10.1021/acs.est.1c03044
                35244390
                aa8c0219-d07f-4e6e-8d17-656e27a36f2c
                © 2022

                https://doi.org/10.15223/policy-029

                https://doi.org/10.15223/policy-037

                https://doi.org/10.15223/policy-045

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