In vivo and in vitro evidence for
detoxification of methylmercury
(MeHg) as insoluble mercury selenide (HgSe) underlies the central
paradigm that mercury exposure is not or little hazardous when tissue
Se is in molar excess (Se:Hg > 1). However, this hypothesis overlooks
the binding of Hg to selenoproteins, which lowers the amount of bioavailable
Se that acts as a detoxification reservoir for MeHg, thereby underestimating
the toxicity of mercury. This question was addressed by determining
the chemical forms of Hg in various tissues of giant petrels Macronectes spp. using a combination of high energy-resolution
X-ray absorption near edge structure and extended X-ray absorption
fine structure spectroscopy, and transmission electron microscopy
coupled to elemental mapping. Three main Hg species were identified,
a MeHg-cysteinate complex, a four-coordinate selenocysteinate complex
(Hg(Sec)4), and a HgSe precipitate, together with a minor
dicysteinate complex Hg(Cys)2. The amount of HgSe decreases
in the order liver > kidneys > brain = muscle, and the amount
of Hg(Sec)4 in the order muscle > kidneys > brain
> liver. On the basis
of biochemical considerations and structural modeling, we hypothesize
that Hg(Sec)4 is bound to the carboxy-terminus domain of
selenoprotein P (SelP) which contains 12 Sec residues. Structural
flexibility allows SelP to form multinuclear Hgx(Se,Sec)y complexes, which can
be biomineralized to HgSe by protein self-assembly. Because Hg(Sec)4 has a Se:Hg molar ratio of 4:1, this species severely depletes
the stock of bioavailable Se for selenoprotein synthesis and activity
to one μg Se/g dry wet in the muscle of several birds. This
concentration is still relatively high because selenium is naturally
abundant in seawater, therefore it probably does not fall below the
metabolic need for essential selenium. However, this study shows that
this may not be the case for terrestrial animals, and that muscle
may be the first tissue potentially injured by Hg toxicity.