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1.
The objective of this work was to evaluate mechanisms of microcystin toxicity on crustacean species. Adult male crabs of Chasmagnathus granulatus (13.97+/-0.35 g) acclimated to low salinity (2 per thousand ) were injected with saline (control) or Microcystis aeruginosa aqueous extract (39.2 microg/l) at 24 h intervals for 48 h. After the exposure period, the anterior and posterior gills were dissected, measuring Na(+),K(+)-ATPase and glutathione-S-transferase (GST) activity. Total oxyradical scavenging capacity (TOSC) and lipid peroxides (LPO) content were also determined. Na(+),K(+)-ATPase activity in anterior gills was significantly lower in crabs injected with toxin than in control crabs, while no significant difference in the enzyme activity was detected in posterior gills. Both sodium and chloride concentration in the hemolymph were not affected by toxin exposure. Significant changes in GST activity were detected in posterior gills, with higher values being observed in the toxin-injected crabs. Crabs exposed to microcystin also showed a significant increase in the TOSC value against peroxyl radicals, for both anterior and posterior gills. Lipid peroxides level did not change in both gill types after exposure to the toxin. The increased levels of TOSC suggest the occurrence of a crab response against oxidative stress induced by toxin injection, which prevents lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

2.
Posterior isolated gills of Neohelice (Chasmagnathus) granulatus were symmetrically perfused with hemolymph-like saline of varying [HCO3-] and pH. Elevating [HCO3-] in the saline from 2.5 to 12.5 mmol/l (pH 7.75 in both cases) induced a significant increase in the transepithelial potential difference (Vte), a measure of ion transport. The elevation in [HCO3-] also induced a switch from acid secretion (-43.7 +/- 22.5 microequiv.kg(-1).h(-1)) in controls to base secretion (84.7 +/- 14.4 microequiv.kg(-1).h(-1)). The HCO3(-)-induced Vte increase was inhibited by basolateral acetazolamide (200 micromol/l), amiloride (1 mmol/l), and ouabain (5 mmol/l) but not by bafilomycin (100 nmol/l). The Vte response to HCO3(-) did not take place in Cl(-)-free conditions; however, it was unaffected by apical SITS (2 mmol/l) or DIDS (1 mmol/l). A decrease in pH from 7.75 to 7.45 pH units in the perfusate also induced a significant increase in Vte, which was matched by a net increase in acid secretion of 67.8 +/- 18.4 microequiv kg(-1) h(-1). This stimulation was sensitive to basolateral acetazolamide, bafilomycin, DIDS, and Na+-free conditions, but it still took place in Cl(-)-free saline. Therefore, the cellular response to low pH is different from the HCO3(-)-stimulated response. We also report V-H+-ATPase- and Na+-K+-ATPase-like immunoreactivity in gill sections for the first time in this crab. Our results suggest that carbonic anhydrase (CA), basolateral Na+/H+ exchangers and Na+-K+-ATPase and apical anion exchangers participate in the HCO3(-)-stimulated response, while CA, apical V-H+-ATPase and basolateral HCO3(-)-dependent cotransporters mediate the response to low pH.  相似文献   

3.
The euryhaline green crab, Carcinus maenas, is a relatively strong osmotic and ionic regulator, being able to maintain its hemolymph osmolality as much as 300 mOsm higher than that in the medium when the crab is acclimated to low salinity. It makes the transition from osmoconformity to osmoregulation at a critical salinity of 26 ppt, and new acclimated concentrations of hemolymph osmotic and ionic constituents are reached within 12 h after transfer to low salinity. One of the central features of this transition is an 8-fold induction of the enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA) in the gills. This induction occurs primarily in the cytoplasmic pool of CA in the posterior, ion-transporting gills, although the membrane-associated fraction of CA also shows some induction in response to low salinity. Inhibition of branchial CA activity with acetazolamide (Az) has no effect in crabs acclimated to 32 ppt but causes a depression in hemolymph osmotic and ionic concentrations in crabs acclimated to 10 ppt. The salinity-sensitive nature of the cytoplasmic CA pool and the sensitivity of hemolymph osmotic/ionic regulation to Az confirm the enzyme's role in ion transport and regulation in this species. CA induction is a result of gene activation, as evidenced by an increase in CA mRNA at 24 h after transfer to low salinity and an increase in protein-specific CA activity immediately following at 48 h post-transfer. CA gene expression appears to be under inhibitory control by an as-yet unidentified repressor substance found in the major endocrine complex of the crab, the eyestalk.  相似文献   

4.
The euryhalinity of mitten crab, Eriocheir sinensis, is based on osmoregulation, and thus on the activity of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase. We studied location and activity of this enzyme in gills of juvenile crabs exposed to 5 per thousand, 25 per thousand, and 40 per thousand salinity. The posterior gills showed always a high number of immunopositive cells (IPC), staining with fluorescent antibody against Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, covering at 5 per thousand the entire lamellae. At 25 per thousand, they showed fewer IPC which occurred only at the bases of the lamellae. Enzyme activity was consistently higher in posterior than in anterior gills. Low salinity stimulated the activity only in posterior gills. Both histochemical and enzymatic results are consistent with previous ultrastructural observations showing that the epithelial cells of the posterior, but not the anterior gills exhibit typical traits of ionocytes. While an increase in Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity at a reduced salinity is consistent with a strong hyper-osmoregulatory capacity in juvenile crabs, a low activity at an enhanced salinity suggests a physiological response, directed towards a reduction of Na(+) uptake. The activity increase of ion-transporting enzymes is directly related to spatial changes in their distribution along the osmoregulatory tissue, i.e. an enhanced number of IPC scattered along the entire lamellae. In juveniles, this allows for successful development and growth at reduced salinities.  相似文献   

5.
We investigated the involvement of carbonic anhydrase (CA) in mediating V-H(+)-ATPase translocation into the basolateral membrane in gills of alkalotic Squalus acanthias. Immunolabeling revealed that CA is localized in the same cells as V-H(+)-ATPase. Blood plasma from dogfish injected with acetazolamide [30 mg/kg at time (t) = 0 and 6 h] and infused with NaHCO(3) for 12 h (1,000 microeq.kg(-1).h(-1)) had significantly higher plasma HCO(3)(-) concentration than fish that were infused with NaHCO(3) alone (28.72 +/- 0.41 vs. 6.57 +/- 2.47 mmol/l, n = 3), whereas blood pH was similar in both treatments (8.03 +/- 0.11 vs. 8.04 +/- 0.11 pH units at t = 12 h). CA inhibition impaired V-H(+)-ATPase translocation into the basolateral membrane, as estimated from immunolabeled gill sections and Western blotting on gill cell membranes (0.24 +/- 0.08 vs. 1.00 +/- 0.28 arbitrary units, n = 3; P < 0.05). We investigated V-H(+)-ATPase translocation during a postfeeding alkalosis ("alkaline tide"). Gill samples were taken 24-26 h after dogfish were fed to satiety in a natural-like feeding regime. Immunolabeled gill sections revealed that V-H(+)-ATPase translocated to the basolateral membrane in the postfed fish. Confirming this result, V-H(+)-ATPase abundance was twofold higher in gill cell membranes of the postfed fish than in fasted fish (n = 4-5; P < 0.05). These results indicate that 1) intracellular H(+) or HCO(3)(-) produced by CA (and not blood pH or HCO(3)(-)) is likely the stimulus that triggers the V-H(+)-ATPase translocation into the basolateral membrane in alkalotic fish and 2) V-H(+)-ATPase translocation is important for enhanced HCO(3)(-) secretion during a naturally occurring postfeeding alkalosis.  相似文献   

6.
The relationship between branchial carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity, CA gene expression and salinity, and potential mechanisms of regulation, was investigated in the euryhaline green crab, Carcinus maenas, acclimated to 33 ppt and transferred to 10 ppt, and the stenohaline rock crab, Cancer irroratus, acclimated to 32 ppt and transferred to 18 ppt. CA activity in green crabs acclimated to high and low salinity was a function of CA mRNA expression, with low salinity exposure resulting in an increase in both CA expression and activity. Eyestalk ablation (ESA) in green crabs acclimated to high salinity resulted in an increase in CA expression in the posterior, ion-transporting gills, in the absence of the low salinity stimulus. There were no changes in CA activity or expression in the anterior, respiratory gills. ESA also potentiated low salinity-stimulated CA induction, again, only in posterior gills. There were no changes in CA activity in any gills of Cancer irroratus, in response to either ESA or low salinity. These results suggest that CA expression in euryhaline, osmoregulating species, is under inhibitory regulation by a putative repressor found in the eyestalk, and that this mechanism is absent in stenohaline, osmoconforming species. CA expression is maintained at low, baseline levels in crabs acclimated to high salinity by the presence and action of this compound. The effects of the repressor appear to be reduced upon exposure to low salinity, allowing CA induction to occur.  相似文献   

7.
During acclimation to dilute seawater, the specific activity of Na+,K+-ATPase increases substantially in the posterior gills of the blue crab Callinectes sapidus. To determine whether this increase occurs through regulation of pre-existing enzyme or synthesis of new enzyme, mRNA and protein levels were measured over short (<24 h) and long (18 days) time courses. Na+,K+-ATPase expression, both mRNA and protein, did not change during the initial 24-h exposure to dilute seawater (10 ppt salinity). Thus, osmoregulation in C. sapidus during acute exposure to low salinity likely involves either modulation of existing enzyme or mechanisms other than an increase in the amount of Na+,K+-ATPase enzyme. However, crabs exposed to dilute seawater over 18 days showed a 300% increase in Na+,K+-ATPase specific activity as well as a 200% increase in Na+,K+-ATPase protein levels. Thus, it appears that the increase in Na+,K+-ATPase activity during chronic exposure results from the synthesis of new enzyme. The relative amounts of mRNA for the alpha-subunit increased substantially (by 150%) during the acclimation process, but once the crabs had fully acclimated to low salinity, the mRNA levels had decreased and were not different from levels in crabs fully acclimated to high salinity. Thus, there is transient induction of the Na+,K+-ATPase mRNA levels during acclimation to dilute seawater.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of water salinity and ions on metallothionein-like proteins (MTLP) concentration was evaluated in the blue crab Callinectes sapidus. MTLP concentration was measured in tissues (hepatopancreas and gills) of crabs acclimated to salinity 30 ppt and abruptly subjected to a hypo-osmotic shock (salinity 2 ppt). It was also measured in isolated gills (anterior and posterior) of crabs acclimated to salinity 30 ppt. Gills were perfused with and incubated in an isosmotic saline solution (ISS) or perfused with ISS and incubated in a hypo-osmotic saline solution (HSS). The effect of each single water ion on gill MTLP concentration was also analyzed in isolated and perfused gills through experiments of ion substitution in the incubation medium. In vivo, MTLP concentration was higher in hepatopancreas than in gills, being not affected by the hypo-osmotic shock. However, MTLP concentration in posterior and anterior gills significantly increased after 2 and 24 h of hypo-osmotic shock, respectively. In vitro, it was also increased when anterior and posterior gills were perfused with ISS and incubated in HSS. In isolated and perfused posterior gills, MTLP concentration was inversely correlated with the calcium concentration in the ISS used to incubate gills. Together, these findings indicate that an increased gill MTLP concentration in low salinity is an adaptive response of the blue crab C. sapidus to the hypo-osmotic stress. This response is mediated, at least in part, by the calcium concentration in the gill bath medium. The data also suggest that the trigger for this increase is purely branchial and not systemic.  相似文献   

9.
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in the gills of the euryhaline blue crab, Callinectes sapidus, was measured in response to acute low-salinity transfer and treatment with eyestalk ablation (ESA) in an attempt to elucidate potential regulatory mechanisms of salinity-mediated CA induction. ESA alone resulted in an approximate doubling of CA activity in the posterior, ion-transporting gills of crabs acclimated to 35 ppt. Transfer of intact crabs to 28 ppt, a salinity at which the blue crab is still an osmotic and ionic conformer, had no effect on CA activity, but treatment with ESA prior to transfer resulted in a 5-fold increase. Hemolymph osmolality was unaffected by ESA. There was a 7-fold induction of CA activity in posterior gills of intact crabs transferred from 35 to 15 ppt, and this was potentiated by about 100% by ESA. Hemolymph osmolality was slightly elevated in the ESA-treated crabs. CA activity in anterior gills did not increase in response to any treatment. Hemolymph concentrations of methyl farnesoate (MF) were measured for all experimental animals. MF concentrations were undetectable in all intact crabs, regardless of salinity. Treatment with ESA resulted in elevated levels of hemolymph MF, but these levels were still relatively low and unrelated to salinity. These results suggest that CA induction is under the control of a regulatory substance located in the eyestalk. This substance appears to be a CA repressor, keeping CA expression at low levels in the gills of crabs acclimated to high salinity. Exposure to low salinity, or treatment with ESA, removes the effects of this putative repressor and allows CA induction to occur.  相似文献   

10.
In this study, the correlation between Cl(-) influx in freshwater tilapia and various transporters or enzymes, the Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger, Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, V-type H(+)-ATPase, and carbonic anhydrase were examined. The inhibitors 2x10(-4) M ouabain (a Na(+),K(+)-ATPase inhibitor), 10(-5) M NEM (a V-type H(+)-ATPase inhibitor), 10(-2) M ACTZ (acetazolamide, a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor), and 6x10(-4) M DIDS (a Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger inhibitor) caused 40%, 60%-80%, 40%-60%, and 40%-60% reduction in Cl(-) influx of freshwater tilapia, respectively. The inhibitor 2x10(-4) M ouabain also caused 50%-65% inhibition in gill Na(+),K(+)-ATPase activity. Western blot results showed that protein levels of gill Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, V-type H(+)-ATPase, and carbonic anhydrase in tilapia acclimated in low-Cl(-) freshwater were significantly higher than those acclimated to high-Cl(-) freshwater. Based on these data, we conclude that Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, V-H(+)-ATPase, the Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger, and carbonic anhydrase may be involved in the active Cl(-) uptake mechanism in gills of freshwater-adapted tilapia.  相似文献   

11.
In the present investigation we studied the carbonic anhydrase (CA) in various tissues of Chinese crabEriocheir sinensis which were acclimated to different salinities (0, 10, 20, 30‰). We found only negligible CA activity in haemolymph, heart, hypodermis, antennal gland, leg muscle and digestive gland, irrespective of the acclimation medium. However, high amounts of CA activity were found in the gills. In the case of the posterior gills, a strong dependence on the acclimatization of the animals was demonstrated; the highest activities were found in those adapted to tap water. To investigate the cellular distribution of the CA in the posterior gills, the additional enzyme activities were measured in all fractions of a differential centrifugation of the gill homogenate: Na+/K+-ATP'ase (a marker for the plasmamembrane); lactate dehydrogenase (LDH; as marker for the cytosol); and succinate dehydrogenase (SDH; as marker for mitochondria). Independent of the acclimation salinity (0 or 36‰ salinity), we found about 70% of CA associated with the highest level of the Na+/K+-ATP'ase in the second 100 000 g pellet (membrane fraction), while only 15% were found in the cytosolic fractions (associated with highest levels of LDH). We conclude that the carbonic anhydrase of posterior gills of the Chinese crab is mainly membrane-bound. Furthermore, the activity of CA shows a strong dependence on the salinity of the water in which the crabs were kept.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The posterior gills of Uca uruguayensis are mostly lined with a thick tissue which presents the characteristics of a typical salt-transporting epithelium. Electron microscope analysis of gill tissue from crabs acclimated to both low (2.5 per thousand) and high (44 per thousand) salinity showed significant development of the basolateral membrane interdigitations with numerous mitochondria and conspicuous apical membrane infoldings. In high-salinity acclimated crabs, the basolateral interdigitations extended to the apical membrane. Under these conditions, apical infoldings were expanded laterally (forming wide subcuticular spaces), while the apical infoldings of low-salinity adapted animals appeared as regular leaflets. Septate desmosomes were also much more developed in low-salinity exposed animals than in those kept under high-salinity conditions. These morphological observations were analyzed for correlation with the currently-accepted ion hyporegulation model for crustaceans, which is mainly based on transcellular sodium flow. In this study, we propose an ion hyporegulation model involving apical paracellular sodium flux.  相似文献   

14.
Abrupt transfer of rainbow trout from freshwater to 65% seawater caused transient disturbances in extracellular fluid ionic composition, but homeostasis was reestablished 48 h posttransfer. Intestinal fluid chemistry revealed early onset of drinking and slightly delayed intestinal water absorption that coincided with initiation of NaCl absorption and HCO(3)(-) secretion. Suggestive of involvement in osmoregulation, relative mRNA levels for vacuolar H(+)-ATPase (V-ATPase), Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, Na(+)/H(+) exchanger 3 (NHE3), Na(+)-HCO(3)(-) cotransporter 1, and two carbonic anhydrase (CA) isoforms [a general cytosolic isoform trout cytoplasmic CA (tCAc) and an extracellular isoform trout membrane-bound CA type IV (tCAIV)], were increased transiently in the intestine following exposure to 65% seawater. Both tCAc and tCAIV proteins were localized to apical regions of the intestinal epithelium and exhibited elevated enzymatic activity after acclimation to 65% seawater. The V-ATPase was localized to both basolateral and apical regions and exhibited a 10-fold increase in enzymatic activity in fish acclimated to 65% seawater, suggesting a role in marine osmoregulation. The intestinal epithelium of rainbow trout acclimated to 65% seawater appears to be capable of both basolateral and apical H(+) extrusion, likely depending on osmoregulatory status and intestinal fluid chemistry.  相似文献   

15.
The time course of induction of activity of carbonic anhydrase (CA) and Na/K ATPase, two enzymes that are central to osmotic and ionic regulation in the eyryhaline green crab, Carcinus maenas, was measured in response to a transfer from 32 to 10 ppt salinity. CA activity was low in all gills in crabs acclimated to high salinity. Activity was induced in the posterior three gills (G6-G9) starting at 96 hr following transfer to low salinity, with activity peaking at seven post-transfer. Na/K ATPase activity in posterior gills was already high in crabs acclimated to 32 ppt salinity, and it did not increase as a result of transfer to 10 ppt. Acclimation of crabs to hypersaline (40 ppt) conditions resulted in uniformly low levels of Na/K ATPase activity, and transfer from 40 ppt to 10 ppt stimulated a four-fold induction of activity in the posterior gills that was evident by seven days of low salinity exposure. Low salinity stimulates the activity of both enzymes, but a different degree of salinity change appears to be necessary to cause the induction of each enzyme. The Na/K ATPase activity is already high at a salinity (32 ppt) at which the crab is still an osmotic and ionic conformer. CA activity, however, even when expressed in low levels, is still present in excess of what is needed to supply counterions at a rate adequate to match the rate of active ion transport. It is possible that two strategies exist for the regulation of these two enzymes that coincide with the crab's intertidal and estuarine lifestyle: short-term modulation of activity of highly expressed enzyme (Na/K ATPase) and long-term modulation of enzyme concentration by changes in gene expression (CA). For all ranges of low salinity exposure, crabs undergo hemodilution, cell swelling, and subsequent cell volume readjustment as evidenced by the increase in concentration of TNPS in the hemolymph. This response takes place before the induction of enzyme activity, and it could serve as the initial signal in the induction pathway.  相似文献   

16.
In euryhaline crabs, ion-transporting cells are clustered into osmoregulatory patches on the lamellae of the posterior gills. To examine changes in the branchial osmoregulatory patch in the blue crab Callinectes sapidus in response to change in salinity and to correlate these changes with other osmoregulatory responses, crabs were acclimated to a range of salinities between 10 and 35 ppt. When crabs that had been acclimated to 35 ppt were subsequently transferred to 10 ppt, both the size of the osmoregulatory patch on individual gill lamellae and the specific activity of Na+, K+-ATPase in whole-gill homogenates increased only after the first 24 h of exposure to dilute seawater. Enzyme activity and size of patch area increased gradually and reached their maxima (increasing by 200% and 60%, respectively) 6 days following transfer to 10 ppt seawater and then remained at these levels. Patch size at acclimation varied inversely with the salinity for seawater dilutions below 26 ppt (the isosmotic point of the crab), although it did not vary in salinities at or above 26 ppt. Thus, the size of the patch clearly is modulated with acclimation salinity, but it increases only in those salinities in which the crab hyperosmoregulates. An increase in the total RNA/DNA ratio in gill homogenates, the lack of mitotic figures in the lamellae, and the lack of incorporation of bromodeoxyuridine into nuclei of lamellar epithelial cells during acclimation to dilute seawater were interpreted as evidence that no cell proliferation had occurred and that increases in the size of the osmoregulatory patch occurred through differentiation of existing gas exchange cells or of undifferentiated epithelial cells into ion-transporting cells.  相似文献   

17.
Our investigations indicate the existence of binding sites for [3H]SCH23390 on crude membrane preparations in the anterior and posterior gills of the Chinese crab, Eriocheir sinensis acclimated to freshwater (FW) or seawater (SW). Maximum specific binding in the posterior gills is always higher than in the anterior gills, independent of saline acclimation. Kd values are similar in the two regions, suggesting the same affinity of both types of gills for the ligand, either from FW or from SW crabs.  相似文献   

18.
The occurrence, localization and response to environmental salinity of carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity were studied in all of the gills of the euryhaline crab Chasmagnathus granulata from Mar Chiquita coastal lagoon (Buenos Aires Province, Argentina). CA activity in all gills appeared to be dependent on salinity. The pattern of distribution of CA activity among gills was different upon transition of C. granulata from osmoionoconformity (more uniform distribution) to hyperregulation (highest activity in posterior gills 6-8). Upon abrupt salinity change a differential response of CA activity occurred among gills which could suggest a differential role of CA in ion transport process in different gills of this crab. Furthermore, CA activity in anterior and posterior gills was found in cytosolic and microsomal fractions, although highest activity appeared to be membrane-associated. Both pools of CA were also strongly influenced by salinity and very sensitive to sulfonamide acetazolamide. The results suggest a differential participation of branchial CA in ionoregulatory mechanisms of C. granulata.  相似文献   

19.
Activities of carbonic anhydrase (CA) and its distribution in the branchial cavity tissues were studied in European lobsters (Homarus gammarus) from ambient seawater (SW; salinity=38 ppt, 1126 mosmol/l) and acclimated to dilute seawater (DSW; salinity=20 ppt, 548 mosmol/l). Acetazolamide inhibited dose dependently the activity of CA in homogenates of epipodites, where the inhibition constant (IC50=0.12 μM) did not differ significantly from that of membrane vesicles and cytosolic fraction. In DSW-acclimated lobsters, almost 70% of total CA in tissues of the branchial cavity was found in epipodites (E) and the rest was equally distributed between branchiostegites (B) and gills (G). Upon acclimation to dilute seawater, CA activity in membrane fractions of E and B was increased 6-fold and in homogenates, respectively 5- and 13-fold compared to SW-acclimated lobsters. Exposure to DSW enhanced cytosolic CA in E (8-fold) and B (7-fold) over SW-acclimated animals. Slight activation of CA in homogenates and in partially purified membranes of G was not confirmed as a statistically significant difference between SW and DSW groups. In DSW, cytosol specific activity of CA was increased compare to the SW cytosol. These results indicate the importance of E and B in CA induction when lobsters are acclimated to DSW. In subcellular fractions from DSW-acclimated lobsters, the main proportion of 75.8% (E), 61.0% (B) of total CA activity in each of these tissues remained in cytosol portion. Partially purified membranes contained 6.8% (E) and 16.2% (B) and the remainder of 15% (E) and 27% (B) was found in mitochondrial and nuclear fractions. In gills, 49.2% and 9.0 % of total gill CA activity was found respectively in cytosol and partially purified vesicles and the rest in mitochondrial and nuclear fractions.  相似文献   

20.
A novel relationship between branchial carbonic anhydrase II (CAII) and anion exchanger 1 (AE1) was investigated in the euryhaline spotted green pufferfish (Tetraodon nigroviridis). The immunoblots revealed that AE1 was only detected in the membrane fraction of gills while CAII can be probed both in the membrane and cytosol fractions of gills. CAII protein abundance in the membrane fraction is salinity dependent. Immunological detection of the membrane fraction CAII protein in gills showed 3.9-fold higher in the hyposmotic (freshwater) group than the hyperosmotic (seawater;35 per thousand) group. In contrast, there was no change in the protein level of cytosolic CAII between seawater and freshwater groups. The whole-mount immunocytochemical staining demonstrated that both AE1 and CAII were colocalized to the Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase-immunoreactive cells in gill epithelium of the pufferfish. The interaction between CAII and AE1 was further identified by co-immunoprecipitation because AE1 was detected in the immunoprecipitates of CAII and vice versa. Our results showed that in pufferfish gills CAII was not only expressed in the cytosol to produce the substrate for AE1 transport during Cl(-) influx but also associated with the plasma membrane via AE1. Obviously, it is essential for the physiological function of AE1 to interact with CAII in the membrane of gill Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase-immunoreactive cells. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate the interaction of branchial CAII and AE1 in fish. The novel correlation proposed a new model of Cl(-)/HCO(3) (-) transport in gills of the teleosts.  相似文献   

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