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WormBase Tree Display for WBProcess: WBbiopr:00000096

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Name Class

WBbiopr:00000096Public_nameResponse to metal
SummarySome chemical metals are micronutrients at low concentrations and are essential for key biological processes. At higher concentrations, these essential metals, e.g., calcium (Ca), copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn), etc., can have toxic effects. Likewise, nonessential metals, even in low doses can also be toxic. Toxicity can be attributed to the metal element binding to structural proteins, enzymes, and nucleic acids, inhibiting or altering the function of the bound object. Both essential and nonessential metals are found naturally in the environment as well as in concentrated sources stemming from human activity through mining and industrial wastes; vehicle emissions; lead-acid batteries; fertilizers, paints and treated woods. Metals, in particular heavy metals such as cadmium (Cd), arsenic (As), antimony (Sb), lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), and chromium (Cr), have been shown to be able to impede or alter basic cellular functions causing severe neurological damage. C. elegans, the most abundant soil invertebrate, provides a model organism for the study of metal toxicity. As a free-living soil nematode, C. elegans is exposed to many toxins naturally present in the soil. Heavy metals such as Cd result in larval lethality and arrested development. Among its repertoire of defenses, C. elegans has a highly tuned nervous system that allow the animals to recognize and avoid toxins, for example the ADL, ASE and ASH neurons direct behaviors in response to Cu or Cd. In cases of exposure to toxic concentrations of metals, a generalized cellular stress response is activated that includes an increase in expression of a number of genes, including heat shock stress proteins such as daf-21/Hsp90, that direct cellular repair and defense. Studies of metal toxicity in C. elegans has also revealed a strong correlation between toxicity and temperature-dependent metabolic activity.
Other_nameMetal toxicity
Related_topicSpecialisation_ofWBbiopr:00000050
Involved_entityGene (50)
Interaction (22)
Anatomy_termWBbt:0005661Paper_evidenceWBPaper00003464
WBbt:0005663Paper_evidenceWBPaper00003464
WBbt:0005665Paper_evidenceWBPaper00003464
WBbt:0005751Paper_evidenceWBPaper00036020
WBbt:0005792Paper_evidenceWBPaper00001688
Life_stageWBls:0000023Paper_evidenceWBPaper00001688
WBls:0000041Paper_evidenceWBPaper00001688
Molecule (65)
Associated_withPhenotype (16)
GO_termGO:0097501
PictureWBPicture0000012976
WBPicture0000012977
WBPicture0000012979
WBPicture0000012980
WBPicture0000012983
WBPicture0000012986
WBPicture0000012988
WBPicture0000012990
Marker_constructWBCnstr00019264
WBCnstr00012496
WBCnstr00015911
Reference (347)