Biomethylation of arsenic and its excretion by the alga Chlorella vulgaris

Experimental results in this paper lead to the following conclusions. (1) Cell homogenates of Chlorella vulgaris adsorbed the inorganic arsenic compound Na2HAsO4 but no methylation of the arsenic occurred in vitro. (2) A small part of the arsenic bioaccumulated by C. vulgaris was methylated in vivo. The quantity of arsenic methylated in the cell increased with an increase of arsenic concentration in the medium. (3) When the arsenic-accumulating cells were transferred into arsenic-free media, the arsenic was excreted and the relative quantity of the methylated arsenic in the excrement was larger than that in the cell. (4) In the growth phase of C. vulgaris, a small fraction of the arsenic accumulated in the cell was first transformed to monomethyl and dimethyl-arsenic compounds during the early exponential phase, and after a short time a fraction was transformed to trimethylarsenic species.