|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
First published online May 15, 2009
Journal of Experimental Biology 212, 1647-1661 (2009)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2009
doi: 10.1242/jeb.029181
Review Article |
Carbonic anhydrase and acid–base regulation in fish
Department of Biology and Centre for Advanced Research in Environmental Genomics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: kgilmour{at}uottawa.ca)
Accepted 23 March 2009
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Key words: carbonic anhydrase, acid–base regulation, fish, gill, kidney, gut, V-type H+-ATPase, Na+/H+ exchanger, Cl–/HCO3– exchanger, Na+/HCO3– cotransporter, CA isoforms
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
H++HCO3–.
In fish, however, acid–base regulation is also coupled to ionic
regulation because acid–base compensation relies primarily on the direct
transfer of H+ and HCO3– across the
gill in exchange for Na+ and Cl–, respectively.
Regulation of NaCl movement across the gill, in turn, is the keystone to
maintaining ionic and osmotic balance in fish. A vital participant in all
three processes is carbonic anhydrase (CA), the zinc metalloenzyme that
catalyses the reversible hydration/dehydration reactions of CO2 and
that therefore is critical to CO2 excretion, ionic regulation and
acid–base balance. The role played by CA in acid–base balance in
fish often takes a backseat to its more visible roles in CO2
excretion (for reviews, see Randall and
Val, 1995| CA isoforms in fish |
|---|
|
|
|---|
-CA gene family have been
identified in mammals; this number may represent the full complement of
mammalian
-CAs as genomic database searches have failed to yield
additional CA sequences (Hilvo et al.,
2008
-CAs differ in molecular sequence,
kinetic properties, susceptibility to inhibitors, tissue distribution and
subcellular localization (Fig.
1) (for reviews, see Sly and
Hu, 1995
|
|
Phylogenetic analyses suggest that the main cytosolic CA isoforms in fish
and mammals differ. The point of divergence occurs after the appearance of CA
V and CA VII, which appear in both fish and mammals (Figs
2 and
3). The I, II, III, XIII gene
cluster emerged in mammals (or in the tetrapod line – our present
knowledge of non-mammalian CA isoforms is insufficient to pinpoint the
divergence more accurately than fish versus mammals). CA II is the
workhorse of this cluster, being a high activity isoform of near ubiquitous
distribution (Chegwidden and Carter,
2000
) that contributes to systemic acid–base regulation both
as the main red blood cell (RBC) isoform underlying CO2 excretion
(reviewed by Geers and Gros,
2000
; Henry and Swenson,
2000
; Swenson,
2000
) and as a key player in HCO3–
reabsorption in the mammalian kidney, where it accounts for 95% of renal total
CA activity (reviewed by Swenson,
2000
; Schwartz,
2002
; Purkerson and Schwartz,
2007
). By contrast, and keeping in mind that the data on which to
base phylogenetic analyses are very limited, fish seem to have retained the
ancestral state of a single, high activity CA isoform until the appearance of
the teleosts, where a whole genome duplication of the teleost common ancestor
gave rise to two closely related cytosolic isoforms differing in tissue
distribution and kinetic properties (Figs
2 and
3). Our understanding of the
functional significance of the two teleost isoforms rests entirely on work
carried out in two species, zebrafish (Lin
et al., 2008
) and rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
(Rahim et al., 1988
;
Esbaugh et al., 2004
;
Esbaugh et al., 2005
),
emphasizing a need for caution in making broad generalizations. Nevertheless,
the available data indicate that mRNA for one isoform, variously termed CA
II-like b or CAb, is expressed predominantly in the blood of zebrafish
(Lin et al., 2008
) and trout
(Esbaugh et al., 2004
;
Esbaugh et al., 2005
), whereas
that of the second isoform, CA II-like a or CAc, is more widely distributed,
with high expression in the gills, lower expression in the kidney and little
or no RBC expression (Esbaugh et al.,
2005
; Lin et al.,
2008
). Correspondingly, immunohistochemical localization of CA in
trout gills revealed the existence of two distinct isozymes, one in RBCs and
the other in gill tissue (Rahim et al.,
1988
), with the RBC form exhibiting a higher catalytic efficiency
(kcat/Km) and greater sensitivity to
the endogenous CA inhibitor present in trout plasma
(Esbaugh et al., 2005
).
Assuming that this pattern holds across other teleost species, with the only
evidence at the moment being that CAs cloned from blood have generally grouped
with the `b' isoforms (e.g. carp, Cyprinus carpio, in
Fig. 3) while those cloned from
gill tissue have generally grouped with the `a'/`c' isoforms (e.g. Osorezan
dace, Tribolodon hakonensis, in
Fig. 3), then teleost fish
differ from mammals in making use of cytosolic CAs that have been tailored to
favour CO2 excretion (the higher activity RBC isoform)
versus acid–base regulation (the slower isoform found in gill
and kidney tissue). Notably, neither of these isoforms is closely related to
mammalian CA II and regardless of whether the `a/b' or `c/b' nomenclature
ultimately holds sway, fish cytosolic CA should not be termed CA II (see also
Tufts et al., 2003
;
Esbaugh et al., 2005
;
Esbaugh and Tufts, 2006a
;
Lin et al., 2008
). Evidence
supporting the hypothesis that non-teleost fish express a single cytosolic
isoform (beyond CA VII) is sparse. CA has been cloned from the blood of
several non-teleost fish, including gar (Lepisosteus osseus), a
holostean fish (Lund et al.,
2002
), dogfish, an elasmobranch
(Gilmour et al., 2007a
), and
lamprey (Petromyzon marinus), an agnathan
(Esbaugh and Tufts, 2006b
),
but only in lamprey was a systematic attempt made to determine whether
additional cytosolic CA isoforms were present in other tissues
(Esbaugh and Tufts, 2006b
).
The results of this analysis indicated that lamprey express only a single
high-activity cytosolic CA isoform that groups most closely with CA VII and is
found in a variety of tissues including blood and gill
(Esbaugh and Tufts, 2006b
). By
the divergence of elasmobranchs, on the other hand, a CA isoform cloned from
blood can be clearly distinguished from CA VII
(Fig. 3)
(Gilmour et al., 2007a
).
Clearly, additional sequence information together with functional
characterization of fish cytosolic CAs is required to clarify these
evolutionary relationships.
|
| Acid–base regulation in fish: an overview |
|---|
|
|
|---|
2 Torr (
0.27 kPa) in fish
versus
40 Torr (5.32 kPa) in humans], limiting the capacity of
fish to raise pH by `blowing off' CO2 through hyperventilation (see
reviews by Heisler, 1986
Despite our basic understanding of how fish respond to acid–base
challenges, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the transfer of
acid–base equivalents at the gill and kidney remain uncertain. There is
widespread agreement that HCO3– and proton
excretion at the gill occur in exchange for, respectively,
Cl– and Na+ uptake
(Claiborne et al., 2002
;
Marshall, 2002
;
Hirose et al., 2003
;
Perry et al., 2003b
;
Evans et al., 2005
), and since
most fish, marine or freshwater, regulate internal NaCl levels at the gill (by
excreting NaCl in a marine environment or actively taking up NaCl in fresh
water), acid–base and ionic regulation in fish are tightly coupled.
Marine elasmobranchs are an exception in this regard because the rectal gland
is used to excrete NaCl (Shuttleworth,
1988
) but acid–base disturbances are regulated at the gill
(see below). CA plays a key role in both processes by providing the
acid–base equivalents that function as counter-ions for NaCl movement
and that are excreted to maintain or restore acid–base balance. Recent
work on CA has provided insight into its importance in acid–base
regulation at both the gill and kidney.
| CA in branchial acid–base regulation |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Teleost fish
Based on assessments of CA activity in gill homogenates, the gill has long
been known as a CA-rich tissue (Maren,
1967
). First using Hansson's technique, a histochemical approach
employing a cobalt phosphate/cobalt sulphate vital stain (e.g.
Dimberg et al., 1981
;
Conley and Mallatt, 1988
;
Flügel et al., 1991
), and
more recently immunohistochemical approaches with homologous antibodies (e.g.
Rahim et al., 1988
;
Sender et al., 1999
;
Hirata et al., 2003
;
Georgalis et al., 2006b
),
in situ hybridization (Hirata et
al., 2003
; Georgalis et al.,
2006b
; Lin et al.,
2008
) and cell subtype isolation in conjunction with real-time
RT-PCR (Nawata et al., 2007
),
CA has been localized to most cell types in the teleost fish gill including
mitochondrion-rich (MR) cells, pavement cells, mucus cells and even
neuroepithelial cells (Z. Qin, J. Lewis and S. F. Perry, unpublished
observations). However, characterization of the CA isoform complement as well
as the cellular and subcellular distribution of branchial CA remains a work in
progress, not least because recent work has emphasized both the diversity of
ionocytes present in the branchial epithelium and interspecific variation in
this diversity (for reviews, see Hirose et
al., 2003
; Evans et al.,
2005
; Hwang and Lee,
2007
) [as well as the review by Hwang in this issue
(Hwang, 2009
)]. A further
complication among euryhaline teleosts is intraspecific variation in ionocyte
diversity with environmental salinity
(Hirose et al., 2003
;
Hwang and Lee, 2007
), although
ionocyte heterogeneity in marine teleosts has received far less attention than
is the case for freshwater species (see
Hwang, 2009
). Because studies
of branchial CA expression in euryhaline/seawater teleost fish have tended to
focus more on whether salinity changes affect CA expression or abundance (e.g.
Dimberg et al., 1981
;
Kültz et al., 1992
;
Sender et al., 1999
;
Scott et al., 2005
;
Scott et al., 2008
) than on
the cellular distribution of cytosolic CA, our knowledge of CA isoform
distribution in the gills of marine and euryhaline teleosts is very limited.
Hence, the following discussion will focus on freshwater species, which have
been more thoroughly investigated to date.
Among freshwater teleosts, the gills of rainbow trout
(Georgalis et al., 2006b
),
zebrafish (Lin et al., 2008
)
and Osorezan dace (Hirata et al.,
2003
) have been found to express the teleost general cytosolic CA
isoform (i.e. the `a'/`c' isoform; see above), but only in zebrafish has the
absence of other intracellular isoforms, CA V and CA VII, been confirmed
(Lin et al., 2008
). In rainbow
trout (Fig. 4A), cytosolic CA
is present in both pavement and MR cells
(Rahim et al., 1988
;
Georgalis et al., 2006b
;
Nawata et al., 2007
) with a
primarily apical localization (Rahim et
al., 1988
). Two populations of MR cells exist in rainbow trout and
can be distinguished on the basis of whether peanut lectin agglutinin (PNA)
binding sites are present on the apical membranes
(Goss et al., 2001
;
Galvez et al., 2002
). Both
cell types are enriched in Na+,K+-ATPase (NKA), but only
the PNA+ MR cells also exhibit the extensive three-dimensional
tubular network of basolateral membranes that typifies the classical
freshwater `chloride cell' (Perry,
1997
). PNA+ MR cells are postulated to be responsible
for base excretion (coupled to Cl– uptake), whereas acid
excretion (coupled to Na+ uptake) is proposed to occur via
PNA– MR cells (reviewed by
Perry and Gilmour, 2006
).
Cytosolic CA is presumed to be present in both MR cell subtypes
(Fig. 4), but this assumption
remains to be confirmed experimentally. In zebrafish
(Fig. 4B), at least three
ionocyte subtypes probably occur (Hwang
and Lee, 2007
), with cytosolic CA expression having been localized
to only one of the three, the proton pump-rich (HR) cell
(Esaki et al., 2007
;
Lin et al., 2008
). Zebrafish
HR cells express V-type H+-ATPase highly in the apical membrane
(Lin et al., 2006
) and are
responsible for Na+ uptake and H+ extrusion
(Lin et al., 2006
;
Horng et al., 2007
;
Esaki et al., 2007
), thereby
playing a role in ion uptake and acid–base balance similar to that
proposed for the rainbow trout PNA– MR cells
(Fig. 4). A second ionocyte in
the zebrafish branchial epithelium, the NaR cell, is mitochondrion rich with
high NKA expression localized to tubular enfoldings of the basolateral
membrane (Lin et al., 2006
).
The NaR cell corresponds to the classical freshwater chloride cell and is
analogous in many respects to the trout PNA+ MR cell, but lacks
detectable cytosolic CA expression and, unlike the HR cell, does not bind the
lectin concanavalin A (Esaki et al.,
2007
; Lin et al.,
2008
). Relative to NaR cells, zebrafish HR cells are poorer in
mitochondria and NKA but enriched in proton pump
(Lin et al., 2006
;
Esaki et al., 2007
). The same
statement holds true for trout PNA– MR cells relative to
PNA+ MR cells (Galvez et al.,
2002
). Despite the similarities, however, several key differences
in transporter protein make-up distinguish trout from zebrafish ionocyte
complements [discussed by Hwang in this issue
(Hwang, 2009
)], not least of
which is the apparent difference in cytosolic CA expression. Branchial
ionocyte heterogeneity has also been explored in tilapia (Oreochromis
mossambicus) (Hwang and Lee,
2007
; Hiroi et al.,
2008
; Hwang,
2009
), but not as yet with respect to CA expression.
|
Most biochemical and physiological evidence suggests that branchial CA in
teleost fish is restricted to the intracellular environment. Differential
centrifugation of gill homogenates to isolate subcellular fractions has
indicated that the vast majority of CA activity is associated with the
cytoplasmic fraction (Henry et al.,
1988
; Henry et al.,
1993
; Henry et al.,
1997
; Gervais and Tufts,
1998
; Sender et al.,
1999
; Gilmour et al.,
2001
; Gilmour et al.,
2002
; Tufts et al.,
2002
). The low level of CA activity detected in membrane fractions
has usually (e.g. Gervais and Tufts,
1998
; Gilmour et al.,
2001
; Gilmour et al.,
2002
), but not always (e.g.
Tufts et al., 2002
), failed
to pass tests considered diagnostic of membrane-associated CA, such as
resistance to SDS (Waheed et al.,
1996
) or release of CA IV from its membrane anchorage by treatment
with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC)
(Zhu and Sly, 1990
).
Physiological experiments making use of a stopflow approach have also
supported the idea that branchial CA in teleost fish is exclusively
intracellular. In the stopflow approach, a change in pH upon halting the flow
of a solution is taken to be indicative of CO2 reactions that are
out of equilibrium because of insufficient access to CA activity
(Gilmour, 1998b
). Blood
leaving the gills of rainbow trout exhibits a disequilibrium pH that can be
eliminated by the addition of exogenous CA to the plasma, indicating that
plasma CO2 reactions do not have access to CA activity during
passage through the gills (Gilmour et al.,
1994
) (reviewed by Gilmour,
1998a
) (see also Randall,
1982
). Similarly, use of the stopflow approach suggested that
CO2 reactions in water passing across the gills of rainbow trout do
not have access to CA activity (Heming,
1986
; Perry et al.,
1999
) [the conflicting results of a separate stopflow study on
rainbow trout (Wright et al.,
1986
) have been attributed to methodological considerations
(Henry and Heming, 1998
)].
Given this context, it is interesting that Lin and colleagues
(Lin et al., 2008
) recently
localized mRNA expression for the CA IV-like isoform, CA 15a, to the HR cells
of the zebrafish gill. This finding is not, however, necessarily inconsistent
with the data of other studies. In particular, it is unclear whether the
biochemical and physiological approaches used in previous studies would be
sufficiently sensitive to detect CA activity that is associated with a
specific and relatively uncommon cell type within the branchial epithelium, as
is postulated for zebrafish HR cell CA 15a. The recent work of Lin and
colleagues (Lin et al., 2008
)
on zebrafish branchial CA emphasizes a pressing need to re-evaluate the
rainbow trout model in greater detail with respect to the cellular
distribution of CA isoforms.
Does branchial CA contribute to acid–base regulation in teleost fish?
Surprisingly few studies have attempted to address this question directly.
More have instead focused on the question of whether branchial CA contributes
to ionic regulation, finding support for such a role by using acetazolamide or
other permeant CA inhibitors to demonstrate a significant reduction in
Na+ [goldfish, Carassius auratus
(Maetz, 1956
;
Maetz and Garcia-Romeu,
1964
); rainbow trout
(Kerstetter et al., 1970
;
Payan et al., 1975
);
zebrafish (Boisen et al., 2003
;
Esaki et al., 2007
)] or
Cl– uptake [goldfish
(Maetz and Garcia-Romeu,
1964
); tilapia (Chang and
Hwang, 2004
); zebrafish (Boisen
et al., 2003
)] when CA is inhibited (for reviews, see
Perry and Laurent, 1990
;
Evans et al., 2005
;
Tresguerres et al., 2006a
).
Somewhat unexpectedly, elimination of cytosolic CA or CA 15a activity from HR
cells using the antisense oligonucleotide morpholino approach (to selectively
knockdown translation of the CA isoform of interest) increased rather than
decreased Na+ influx in zebrafish larvae
(Lin et al., 2008
). These
apparently anomalous results probably reflect compensatory mechanisms
initiated in the developing embryo in the absence of cytosolic CA or CA 15a
activity; for example, morphants exhibited increased expression of the
Na+/H+ exchanger NHE3
(Lin et al., 2008
). Additional
support for the role of branchial CA in ion uptake has come from the
observation that CA mRNA expression [cytosolic CA
(Craig et al., 2007
); CA 15a
(Lin et al., 2008
)] as well as
cytosolic CA protein levels (Perry and
Laurent, 1990
; Chang and
Hwang, 2004
) increased in soft, low Na+ or low
Cl– water, conditions under which ion uptake mechanisms must
be enhanced if ion balance is to be maintained.
Given that cytosolic CA contributes to ion uptake by catalysing
CO2 hydration to provide H+ and
HCO3– as counter-ions for Na+ and
Cl– uptake, respectively, it is reasonable to assume that CA
will also contribute to acid–base regulation, although the experimental
data to support this assumption are somewhat meager. Using an in vivo
approach in rainbow trout, Georgalis and colleagues
(Georgalis et al., 2006b
)
demonstrated a significant reduction in branchial net acid excretion following
treatment with the permeant CA inhibitor acetazolamide, a finding that clearly
implicates branchial CA in acid–base regulation. Moreover, in keeping
with the role of enhanced branchial net acid excretion during compensation for
a systemic acidosis (see above), the effect of acetazolamide treatment on
branchial net acid excretion was stronger in trout exposed to environmental
hypercapnia (Georgalis et al.,
2006b
). CA has also been implicated in net acid excretion by
zebrafish embryos and larvae. Using a non-invasive H+-selective
microelectrode to probe H+ activity at the surface of zebrafish
embryos/larvae, Lin and colleagues (Lin et
al., 2008
) were able to measure pH gradients indicative of proton
extrusion by the embryo or larva. Proton extrusion was significantly reduced
in morphants in which cytosolic CA translation was knocked down, as expected
based on the proposed role of cytosolic CA in providing H+ for
export from the cell (Fig. 4B).
Proton extrusion was significantly enhanced at 24 h in morphants in which CA
15a translation was knocked down, but impaired by 96 h. Increased proton
extrusion is in agreement with the model in which apically localized CA 15a
catalyses the conversion of extruded H+ to CO2, thereby
reducing external H+ activity
(Fig. 4B); the subsequent
reversal of this effect by 96 h was attributed to compensatory changes in the
expression of other H+ and/or Na+ transport mechanisms
(Lin et al., 2008
). Assessment
of CA mRNA expression and/or protein during acid–base challenges has
provided some additional support for the role of branchial CA in
acid–base regulation in teleost fish. For example, branchial cytosolic
CA mRNA expression was increased in rainbow trout exposed to hypercapnia
(Georgalis et al., 2006b
) and
Osorezan dace exposed to acidic water
(Hirata et al., 2003
), while
branchial CA 15a mRNA expression was increased in zebrafish exposed to acidic
pH (Lin et al., 2008
).
Georgalis and colleagues (Georgalis et
al., 2006b
) also detected an increase in branchial cytosolic CA
protein levels, but, interestingly, not branchial CA activity, in hypercapnic
rainbow trout. Interpretation of the data for rainbow trout is complicated by
the likelihood that CA is involved in both acid excretion by
PNA– MR cells and base excretion by PNA+ MR cells
(Fig. 4); both cell subtypes
will be present in gill homogenates but are expected to respond to
acid–base challenges in opposite fashions. Taken as a whole, the data
indicate that acid–base fluxes are affected by loss of branchial CA
activity and that regulation of branchial CA expression is sensitive to
acid–base challenges, findings that strongly endorse the role of
branchial CA in acid–base regulation in freshwater teleost fish.
Electroneutral exchanges of Na+/H+ and
Cl–/HCO3– for the purposes of
acid–base regulation are also postulated to occur at the marine teleost
fish gill, despite the fact that such exchanges are likely to augment the NaCl
burden faced by these hypo-osmotic regulators
(Claiborne et al., 2002
;
Evans et al., 2005
). A role
for CA in providing H+ and HCO3– ions
for such exchanges is expected, although no significant impact of
acetazolamide treatment on net acid excretion was detected in mudskipper
(Periophthalmodon schlosseri)
(Wilson et al., 2000a
). The
cellular location(s) of the exchange mechanisms and associated CA as well as
the contribution of CA to acid–base regulation require
investigation.
Elasmobranch fish
The gills of elasmobranch fish appear to express at least two CA isoforms.
Differential centrifugation of gill homogenates revealed that the CA activity
associated with membrane fractions in elasmobranch gills was substantially
higher than that in teleost gills (Henry
et al., 1997
; Gilmour et al.,
2001
; Gilmour et al.,
2002
), was resistant to inhibition by SDS
(Gilmour et al., 2002
), and
could be released from its membrane anchorage by treatment with PI-PLC
(Gilmour et al., 2001
;
Gilmour et al., 2002
),
suggesting the presence of a type IV-like CA isoform. Subsequently, CA IV was
cloned from dogfish gill tissue and localized largely to pillar cells by
in situ hybridization (Gilmour et
al., 2007a
). Immunohistochemistry using an antibody raised against
trout CA IV established a plasma membrane localization for dogfish CA IV
(Gilmour et al., 2007a
).
Anchored to the plasma membrane of pillar cells, CA IV would be available to
catalyse plasma CO2 reactions
(Wilson et al., 2000b
),
specifically to dehydrate plasma HCO3–, in keeping
with physiological data supporting a role for branchial extracellular CA in
contributing to CO2 excretion in dogfish
(Gilmour et al., 2001
;
Gilmour and Perry, 2004
). In
the same fashion, branchial CA IV could factor in acid–base regulation,
particularly in the clearance of a HCO3– load
(Fig. 5). Preliminary evidence
suggests that this is, indeed, the case. Clearance of an infused
NaHCO3 load was slowed significantly by treatment of dogfish with
polyoxyethylene-aminobenzolamide (F3500)
(Swenson et al., 1995
;
Swenson et al., 1996
), a CA
inhibitor that is restricted by virtue of its molecular size to the
extracellular compartment and therefore selectively inhibits extracellular CA
activity (Conroy et al.,
1996
). Branchial extracellular CA appears to be restricted to the
vascular compartment, as stopflow experiments indicated that CO2
reactions in water passing across the gills of dogfish do not have access to
CA activity (Perry et al.,
1999
).
|
The majority of branchial CA activity in elasmobranchs, however, is
cytoplasmic (Henry et al.,
1997
; Gilmour et al.,
2002
). Studies using heterologous antibodies suggest that
cytoplasmic CA is found in most cell types of the branchial epithelium
(Wilson et al., 2000b
;
Tresguerres et al., 2007b
),
including the distinct populations of NKA-rich and V-type
H+-ATPase-rich cells that have been described in the branchial
epithelia of several elasmobranch species over the last few years
(Piermarini and Evans, 2001
;
Tresguerres et al., 2005
).
Current models of acid–base regulation for elasmobranch fish
(Fig. 5)
(Piermarini and Evans, 2001
)
(for reviews, see Claiborne et al.,
2002
; Evans et al.,
2004
; Evans et al.,
2005
) postulate that these cell subtypes are responsible for acid
excretion and base excretion, respectively (note that salt secretion in marine
elasmobranchs relies on the rectal gland). Acid excretion is accomplished
through an apical NHE (Edwards et al.,
2002
; Choe et al.,
2005
) driven by the inwardly directed Na+ gradient,
with Na+ removal from the cell via the basolateral NKA.
Base excretion reflects the coordinated actions of an apical anion exchanger,
possibly a pendrin-like Cl–/HCO3–
exchanger (Piermarini et al.,
2002
; Evans et al.,
2004
), and V-type H+-ATPase that normally resides in
cytoplasmic vesicles but is trafficked to the basolateral membrane during
blood alkalosis (Tresguerres et al.,
2005
; Tresguerres et al.,
2006c
). As in models of acid–base regulation for the teleost
fish gill, cytosolic CA is proposed to contribute to acid or base excretion by
catalysing the hydration of CO2 to H+ and
HCO3–. Measurements of acid–base or ion
fluxes following CA inhibition under control conditions or during an
acid–base challenge have been used to test this hypothesis. In
acetazolamide-treated Scyliorhinus canicula, Na+ influx
was significantly reduced, supporting a role for branchial CA in acid
excretion coupled to Na+ uptake
(Payan and Maetz, 1973
).
Using changes in plasma HCO3– concentrations
during or following infusion of a NaHCO3 load as an index of
HCO3– excretion, inhibition of branchial CA was
found to attenuate recovery from a metabolic alkalosis
(Hodler et al., 1955
;
Swenson and Maren, 1987
;
Tresguerres et al., 2007b
).
Moreover, the HCO3– load was cleared more slowly
during inhibition of both intracellular and extracellular branchial CA than
when extracellular CA alone was selectively inhibited, an observation that
intimates distinct yet additive functions for cytosolic and extracellular CA
in base excretion (Swenson et al.,
1995
; Swenson et al.,
1996
). Extracellular CA could, for example, facilitate entry of
HCO3– into gill epithelial cells by catalysing its
conversion to the more diffusible CO2. Recently, an additional role
was proposed for CA in acid–base regulation in elasmobranchs.
Base-infused dogfish treated with acetazolamide failed to exhibit basolateral
membrane localization of H+-ATPase, implicating CA in the mechanism
that mediates H+-ATPase translocation during a systemic alkalosis
(Tresguerres et al.,
2007b
).
Agnathan fish
The lampreys include a number of anadromous species in which both marine
and freshwater life stages occur. The ionoregulatory and osmoregulatory
problems faced by these species are similar to those encountered by marine or
freshwater teleost fish, and branchial mechanisms analogous to those of
teleost fish are thought to be involved in maintaining ionic and osmotic
balance, even though the cellular composition of the branchial epithelium in
lamprey differs from that of teleosts
(Karnaky, 1998
;
Bartels and Potter, 2004
;
Evans et al., 2005
). Branchial
CA in lamprey is thought to be exclusively cytoplasmic; there is no evidence
to date for membrane-associated or extracellular branchial CA
(Henry et al., 1993
;
Tufts and Perry, 1998
).
Unlike the situation in teleost fish, where distinct blood and gill cytosolic
CA isoforms appear to exist (see above), only one cytosolic CA has been
detected in lamprey (Esbaugh and Tufts,
2006b
). Recent work indicates that the lamprey cytosolic CA is a
high activity isoform that is unusually resistant to inhibition by
acetazolamide (Esbaugh and Tufts,
2006b
). Using heterologous antibodies, CA has been localized in
the gills of two lamprey species (Geotria australis and P.
marinus) to a population of H+-ATPase-enriched MR cells
(Choe et al., 2004
;
Reis-Santos et al., 2008
)
where it is presumed to catalyse the hydration of CO2 to supply the
proton pump with H+ in a model of acid–base regulation
similar to that of teleost or elasmobranch fish
(Choe et al., 2004
).
Experimental data in support of this model, including the involvement of CA,
are needed, however.
The gills of hagfish, which are stenohaline marine osmoconformers, contain
MR cells that have been proposed to function in acid–base regulation as
there is little requirement for ionic or osmotic regulation
(Mallatt et al., 1987
).
Acid–base regulation in hagfish, as in other fish, appears to involve
branchial Na+/H+ and
Cl–/HCO3– exchanges
(Evans, 1984
), and several of
the transporters that have been implicated in driving these exchanges in
teleost and elasmobranch fish, including NHE, V-type H+-ATPase and
NKA, have been detected in the hagfish gill using heterologous antibodies
(Tresguerres et al., 2006b
),
real-time PCR (Edwards et al.,
2001
) or histochemical approaches
(Mallatt et al., 1987
).
Interestingly and unlike the models that have been developed for teleosts,
elasmobranchs and lamprey, all three transporters appear to be expressed in a
single cell type that is presumed to be the MR cell
(Tresguerres et al., 2006b
).
The generation of appropriate responses to acidosis versus alkalosis
would, under these circumstances, probably involve trafficking of transporters
between cytoplasmic vesicles and the apical or basolateral membrane
(Tresguerres et al., 2006b
),
a possibility that is supported by changes in the membrane abundance of these
transporters in acid- or base-infused hagfish
(Parks et al., 2007
;
Tresguerres et al., 2007a
).
In the emerging hagfish model, cytosolic CA would play its usual role of
catalysing CO2 hydration to provide the acid–base equivalents
for exchange. Biochemical analysis of hagfish gill homogenates revealed that
most CA activity was cytoplasmic (Esbaugh
et al., 2009a
), and CA has been localized to hagfish branchial MR
cells by histochemistry (Mallatt et al.,
1987
), although no isoform information is yet available for
hagfish cytosolic CA. Recently, two extracellular CA isoforms were cloned from
hagfish tissues and localized to gill tissue by real-time PCR
(Esbaugh et al., 2009a
). The
mRNA expression of a CA XV-like isoform was widespread and included the gill.
By contrast, mRNA for a CA IV-like isoform was expressed only in the gill,
where its expression was 6-fold higher than that of the CA XV-like isoform
(Esbaugh et al., 2009a
).
Although the cellular location and physiological function of these isoforms
remain to be determined, it is tempting to speculate that one or both may
contribute to CO2 excretion and acid–base regulation in
fashions similar to that of pillar cell CA IV in the elasmbranch gill (see
above). In this regard, it is notable that CA was localized to hagfish gill
pillar cells using Hansson's (histochemical) technique
(Mallatt et al., 1987
).
| CA in renal acid–base regulation |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The predominant CA isoform in trout kidney is the general cytosolic variant
(tCAc) (Esbaugh et al., 2005
).
Although previous studies have reported the presence of `CA II' in fish kidney
[e.g. Osorezan dace (Hirata et al.,
2003
); winter flounder (Pleuronectes americanus)
(Pelis et al., 2003
)], this
renal CA is probably more appropriately termed cytosolic CA (`c' or `a'
nomenclature; see above). In trout and flounder, cytosolic CA is found within
proximal tubules where it immunolocalizes to the cytosol and brush border
membranes (Pelis and Renfro,
2004
; Georgalis et al.,
2006a
) (Fig. 6). In
trout kidney, the distal tubule appears to be a more important location of
renal CAc expression (Georgalis et al.,
2006a
). On the basis of the different migration patterns of
purified cytosolic CA and crude protein on non-denaturing gels, Pelis and
colleagues (Pelis et al.,
2003
) have suggested that a sub-fraction of CA in flounder
proximal tubules is directly associated with membranes. Additionally, two
membrane-specific CA isoforms have been identified in the fish kidney, CA IV
in rainbow trout (Georgalis et al.,
2006a
) and CA IX in zebrafish
(Esbaugh et al., 2009b
). In
trout, CA IV is localized specifically to the apical and basolateral membranes
of proximal tubule cells (Georgalis et
al., 2006a
) (Fig.
6).
|
Role of the kidney in acid–base regulation
Although a fair bit of interspecific variability exists, the freshwater
fish kidney generally plays a significant role in regulating systemic
acid–base disorders (Wood and
Caldwell, 1978
; Kobayashi and
Wood, 1980
; Cameron,
1980
; McDonald and Wood,
1981
; Cameron and Kormanik,
1982
; Wheatly et al.,
1984
; Perry et al.,
1987
; Wood, 1988
;
Ferguson and Boutilier, 1989
;
Curtis and Wood, 1992
;
Maren et al., 1992
). A few
studies (Wood and Caldwell,
1978
; McDonald and Wood,
1981
) have reported that changes in renal net H+
excretion could account for 100% of acid–base compensation, but it is
generally accepted that the kidney contributes about 5–30% to altered
rates of whole body H+ excretion during systemic pH changes. Thus,
the major route of regulated H+ secretion during acid–base
disorders is via the gill (see above). The majority of studies on
renal acid–base regulation have been conducted on freshwater species
that produce large volumes of dilute urine. Marine fish (teleosts and
elasmobranchs) produce small quantities of urine containing elevated levels of
Ca2+ and Mg2+ salts. The low urine volumes coupled with
an apparent requirement to acidify the urine to prevent the formation of
Ca2+ and Mg2+ precipitates are likely key factors
constraining the participation of the marine kidney in acid–base balance
(Hickman and Trump, 1969
).
McDonald and colleagues (McDonald et al.,
1982
) reported an insignificant contribution of the kidney of
marine lemon sole (Parophrys vetulus) to regulating metabolic
acidosis. The kidney of marine sculpin (Myoxocephalus
octodecimspinosus), while contributing significantly to the regulation of
metabolic acidosis, is not involved in regulating metabolic alkalosis
following infused loads of NaHCO3
(Maren et al., 1992
).
Interestingly, the imposition of a NaHCO3 load in sculpin was
associated with a marked alkalization of the urine without any detected
increase in urinary precipitates (Maren
et al., 1992
). Thus, the requirement to produce acidic urine to
prevent the formation of precipitates may not be as strict as originally
thought. Unlike in teleosts, the kidney of elasmobranchs appears to produce
urine of fixed acidity regardless of the prevailing blood acid–base
status (Hodler et al., 1955
;
Cross et al., 1969
;
Swenson and Maren, 1986
).
As noted above, fish generally regulate blood pH exclusively through
metabolic processes. For example, during respiratory acidosis, blood pH is
regulated at constant PCO2 by a gradual accumulation of
plasma HCO3–
(Heisler, 1984
) achieved
largely through altered rates of branchial ion exchange. Such a strategy can
be effective only if the filtered HCO3– is
reabsorbed, a process requiring increased renal H+ secretion. Thus,
the successful metabolic compensation of respiratory acidosis can only be
achieved if renal H+ secretion is increased to match the increasing
filtered HCO3– load
(Wood and Jackson, 1980
).
Depending on the species and the nature of the respiratory disturbance, plasma
HCO3– levels may exceed 70 mmol
l–1 in partially compensated animals
(McKenzie et al., 2003
),
resulting in a massive increase in filtered HCO3–
load that necessitates an equally massive increase in H+
secretion.
Renal H+ secretion and HCO3– reabsorption
The predominant site of renal H+ secretion and
HCO3– reabsorption in teleost fish, as in the
mammalian nephron, is thought to be the proximal tubule; the putative
mechanisms are depicted in Fig.
7. The addition of H+ to the filtrate is achieved by at
least two mechanisms, electroneutral exchange with Na+ or active
H+ pumping (Perry et al.,
2003a
; Perry et al.,
2003b
; Perry and Gilmour,
2006
). Available evidence suggests that electroneutral
Na+/H+ exchange is accomplished by NHE3 (SLC9A3), a
member of the NHE (SLC9) multi-gene family
(Hirata et al., 2003
;
Ivanis et al., 2008a
) while
active H+ secretion is driven by the V-type H+-ATPase
(Perry and Fryer, 1997
;
Perry et al., 2000
;
Perry et al., 2003a
;
Hirata et al., 2003
). The mRNA
levels for both the V-ATPase and NHE3 genes are increased during acidification
induced by hypercapnia (Perry et al.,
2003a
; Ivanis et al.,
2008a
) or exposure to water of low pH
(Hirata et al., 2003
). The
H+ ions fuelling the V-ATPase and NHE are derived from the
hydration of intracellular CO2 in the presence of cytosolic CA.
Once in the filtrate, the H+ combines with filtered
HCO3– to form CO2, a reaction catalysed
by membrane-associated CA IV (Georgalis et
al., 2006a
) which is oriented to face the extracellular
compartment (Fig. 7). The
CO2 then diffuses into the tubule and is hydrated in the presence
of CA to re-fuel the apical membrane H+ secretory mechanisms and to
provide HCO3– to be `reabsorbed' across the
basolateral membranes via the
Na+/HCO3– co-transporter isoform 1
(NBC1) (Hirata et al., 2003
;
Perry et al., 2003a
). In
trout, the levels of renal NBC1 mRNA are increased during hypercapnic
acidosis, presumably to match the increased rates of
HCO3– reabsorption
(Perry et al., 2003a
).
|
The most direct evidence for an important role of renal CA in H+
secretion and HCO3– reabsorption comes from in
vivo studies employing selective CA inhibitors under resting conditions
and periods of acid–base disturbance. Thus, the inhibition of total CA
activity in rainbow trout using acetazolamide caused a significant decrease in
renal net acid excretion (see Fig.
6) that was associated with a rise in urine pH
(Georgalis et al., 2006a
). In
that same study, the inhibition of total renal CA activity during compensated
hypercapnic acidosis was associated with marked increases in urinary losses of
Na+ and HCO3–
(Georgalis et al., 2006a
). The
fact that levels of HCO3– in the urine increased
from approximately 7 to 30 mmol l–1 after CA inhibition in
hypercapnic fish clearly reveals the critical roles of the kidney (and renal
CA) in preventing the loss of HCO3– that has
accumulated largely by adjustment of branchial ion transfers (see above). The
use of a membrane-permeant inhibitor such as acetazolamide does not permit an
assessment of the relative roles of the cytosolic and extracellular isoforms
of renal CA. Georgalis and colleagues
(Georgalis et al., 2006a
),
however, used F3500 (Conroy et al.,
1996
) to selectively inhibit renal extracellular CA in trout.
Although too large to cross cell membranes, the relatively low molecular mass
(3500 Da) of F3500 allows it to be filtered, thereby providing it with access
to luminal extracellular CA. Using this approach, it was demonstrated that
renal luminal extracellular CA was playing a significant role in the
reabsorption of filtered HCO3– in hypercapnic
trout although to a lesser extent than the cytosolic isoform
(Georgalis et al., 2006a
). The
proposed role of luminal extracellular CA in the dehydration of filtrate
HCO3– is depicted in
Fig. 7. Based on
immunocytochemical data, the CA IV isoform is implicated in catalysing the
dehydration of filtrate HCO3– but it is uncertain
whether other membrane-associated isoforms are also involved (e.g. CA XII or
XIV).
The relatively few studies that have examined the effects of
acid–base disturbances on renal CA expression have yielded conflicting
or ambiguous data. In rainbow trout, respiratory acidosis was accompanied by
increasing mRNA and protein expression of CAc; CA IV was unaffected
(Georgalis et al., 2006a
).
Similarly, Hirata and colleagues (Hirata
et al., 2003
) demonstrated increased renal expression of cytosolic
CA in Osorezan dace exposed to acidic water. Lungfish, while exhibiting a
significant renal component to the compensation of metabolic acidosis or
alkalosis, showed no changes in renal CA mRNA expression
(Gilmour et al., 2007b
). The
absence of any change in renal mRNA levels for cytosolic CA during metabolic
acidosis is surprising given that similar treatment in mammals causes a marked
increased in the expression of CA II
(Tsuruoka et al., 1998
).
Several explanations can be offered for the lack of an effect in the lungfish:
the sampling time may have been inappropriate thus preventing detection of a
transient change in mRNA expression; or CA was being modified
post-translationally. Alternatively, it is conceivable that CA activity was
already sufficient to cope with the imposed acid–base disturbances.
Because it is relatively easy to measure CA activity in tissues
(Henry, 1981
) concomitantly
with estimating protein (western blotting) and mRNA levels (real-time PCR),
researchers are encouraged to measure all three parameters to allow a complete
assessment of the underlying mechanisms contributing to changes in CA
activity. For tissues such as kidney, however, such an integrated approach is
not always feasible because of the difficulty in eliminating the contribution
of haematopoietic cells or RBCs to measurements of CA activity or protein
(unless isoform-specific antibodies are used).
The important role of CA in promoting renal H+ secretion and
HCO3– reabsorption in freshwater teleosts (i.e.
rainbow trout) contrasts with the apparent absence of this role for CA in the
kidney of marine fish (Hodler et al.,
1955
; Swenson and Maren,
1986
; Maren et al.,
1992
; Swenson,
2003
). Particularly striking is the marine elasmobranch
(Squalus acanthias) that has long been thought to lack renal CA but
nevertheless displays a remarkable capacity to reabsorb
HCO3– from the renal filtrate. Indeed, it has been
documented that even during periods of metabolic alkalosis when plasma
HCO3– levels increase to >30 mmol
l–1, urinary loss of HCO3–
remains minimal and constant (Swenson and
Maren, 1986
). In both dogfish
(Swenson and Maren, 1986
) and
long-horned sculpin (Hodler et al.,
1955
; Maren et al.,
1992
), CA inhibition is without effect on urine acid–base
status. In the light of these observations and additional in situ
measurements of renal acidification in the marine skate Raja
erinacea, a novel mechanism of HCO3–
reabsorption was proposed for elasmobranchs involving the direct transfer of
ionic HCO3– from filtrate to lumen
(Deetjen and Maren, 1974
).
Years later, Swenson and colleagues
(Swenson et al., 1994
)
proposed a mechanism for CA-independent urinary acidification involving the
secretion of H+ via a luminal
H+,K+-ATPase. Although these findings led to, or
supported, acceptance of the hypothesis that marine fish lack renal CA, this
conclusion is no longer believed given the physiological evidence for
cytosolic CA activity in proximal tubules of winter flounder
(Renfro et al., 1999
;
Pelis et al., 2003
;
Pelis and Renfro, 2004
) and
the finding of membrane-associated CA IV mRNA in dogfish kidney
(Gilmour et al., 2007a
). While
playing a role in renal SO42– excretion, the
potential involvement of CA in renal acidification and
HCO3– reabsorption may be constrained by other
factors such as the absence of suitable ion transporters (e.g. NHE or
V-ATPase) on the luminal membrane. Considering that only a few (three) species
have been examined and given the claims of radical differences in the
involvement of renal CA in freshwater and marine fish, we encourage a
re-examination of the involvement of CA in urinary acidification and
HCO3– reabsorption in marine fish species.
| CA in piscine-specific acid–base regulatory mechanisms |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Elasmobranch rectal gland
The rectal gland of elasmobranchs is a sausage-shaped structure that is
capable of secreting into the posterior intestine a solution of roughly 500
mmol l–1 NaCl (Burger and
Hess, 1960
). The volume of rectal gland secretion produced is
highly variable but is clearly increased by blood volume expansion associated
with feeding/ingestion of seawater (Evans,
1993
). While it has long been held that the rectal gland plays an
important role in extra-renal salt excretion (reviewed by
Shuttleworth, 1988
), studies
that have physically removed or ablated the gland have documented relatively
minor (Evans et al., 1982
;
Evans, 1993
) or no
(Chan et al., 1967
;
Wilson et al., 2002
;
Wilson and Laurent, 2002
)
significant impact on plasma ion levels. Obviously, therefore, other routes of
net salt excretion exist in elasmobranchs. The two sites that first spring to
mind are the kidney and the gill. As discussed by Evans et al.
(Evans et al., 2005
), because
marine elasmobranchs are slightly hyperosmotic, they gain water by osmosis
that is balanced by equivalent volumes of urine production, thereby providing
a route of salt efflux normally not present in most marine species. Although
the gill is generally discounted as a site of net NaCl excretion in
elasmobranchs (Shuttleworth,
1988
), its potential involvement in extrarenal salt excretion
should probably be reconsidered.
CA is abundant in the rectal gland
(Lacy, 1983
) where it plays an
important role in fluid secretion; in vivo administration of CA
inhibitors markedly reduced the rates of glandular secretion in dogfish
(Swenson and Maren, 1984
;
Shuttleworth et al., 2006
).
It has been suggested that the role of CA in rectal gland secretion is to
facilitate removal of metabolically produced CO2 so as to maintain
an appropriate intracellular acid–base status
(Swenson and Maren, 1984
).
Two mechanisms of CA action have been proposed; Swenson and Maren
(Swenson and Maren, 1984
)
suggested that cytosolic CA catalyses the inter-conversion of
HCO3– to CO2 while Shuttleworth and
colleagues (Shuttleworth et al.,
2006
) concluded that a more likely scenario was the catalysed
hydration of CO2 by membrane-associated CA in the extracellular
compartment. In both models, CA contributes to CO2 removal from
cells by enhancing CO2 diffusion gradients. Future studies should
incorporate specific permeant and impermeant inhibitors to differentiate the
potential roles of cytosolic versus extracellular
(membrane-associated) CA.
Rectal gland fluid output is directly related to blood pH, rising with
alkalosis and falling with acidosis
(Swenson and Maren, 1984
;
Shuttleworth et al., 2006
;
Wood et al., 2007
). Because
blood pH in dogfish increases after eating [alkaline tide
(Wood et al., 2005
)], there
would be an associated post-prandial increase in rectal gland secretion to aid
in the excretion of the additional salt and water gained during ingestion.
Similarly, a reduction in blood pH associated with exhaustive exercise would
act as a cue to inhibit glandular secretion and thus help to retain fluid
during periods of increased fluid entry into muscle
(Shuttleworth et al., 2006
;
Wood et al., 2007
).
The swimbladder
Inflation of the swimbladder in deep sea fish relies on the secretion of
O2 to generate exceedingly high partial pressures of O2
(Pelster, 2004
). The
O2 is derived from haemoglobin via the Root effect
following acidification of the blood by the swimbladder gas gland. In addition
to CO2, a variety of acidic metabolites contribute to the
acidification of the blood in the gas gland including lactic acid and
H+ originating from Na+/H+ exchange and
V-type H+-ATPase activities
(Pelster, 1995
). A role for
CA in gas gland acid secretion was first suggested by the results of
experiments showing that gas deposition was slowed by CA inhibition
(Fange, 1953
). Subsequent
experiments have shown that CA inhibition reduces lactate release by eel
swimbladder in vitro (Kutchai,
1971
) or acid secretion from isolated gas gland cells
(Pelster, 1995
). Because acid
secretion from isolated gas gland cells was inhibited by membrane-permeant and
-impermeant inhibitors, it was proposed that membrane-associated
(extracellular) CA IV was involved
(Pelster, 1995
). The
existence of membrane-associated CA (proposed to be CA IV) on the blood-facing
plasma membranes and capillary endothelium was later confirmed using
histochemistry (Wurtz et al.,
1999
). Future research should evaluate CA isoforms as well as the
relative involvement of membrane-associated and cytosolic CA in swimbladder
inflation.
The pseudobranch
Although the physiological function of the pseudobranch has long been
debated (Laurent and Rouzeau,
1972
; Laurent and Dunel-Erb,
1984
; Bridges et al.,
1998
), there is accumulating evidence that one of its roles is to
assist the O2-concentrating mechanisms occurring within the choroid
rete of the eye of certain marine teleosts. In these fish, the retina is thick
and non-vascularized, thereby impeding the delivery of O2 to the
retinal tissue. To meet the high metabolic demand of the retinal pigmented
epithelium, extremely high partial pressures of O2 are generated
(reported to exceed 1 atm,
101 kPa) to facilitate diffusion. As in the
swimbladder (Pelster, 2004
),
the mechanism thought to underlie the O2-concentrating mechanism is
the Root effect (for reviews, see Brittain,
1987
; Pelster and Weber,
1991
; Berenbrink,
2007
) whereby acidification of the blood entering the rete causes
O2 to be unloaded from haemoglobin for delivery to the eye. The
most compelling empirical evidence in support of a role for the Root effect is
the observation that O2 secretion into the ocular fluid of an
in vitro blood-perfused rainbow trout eye preparation occurs only
when blood exhibiting a Root effect is used as the perfusion fluid (i.e.
trout, but not human blood) (Waser and
Heisler, 2005
). Although blood can be acidified in the choroid
rete as well as in the eye itself, it has been proposed that the pseudobranch
plays a crucial role in the pre-conditioning of blood prior to its entry into
the rete (Bridges et al.,
1998
). The addition of CO2 and H+ to the
blood flowing within the pseudobranch is thought to acidify the RBCs so as to
approach the threshold for the onset of the Root effect. Such pre-conditioning
would allow maximal release of O2 from haemoglobin with minimal
acidification (Bridges et al.,
1998
). A minimally acidified environment is important because
unlike the swimbladder, which can tolerate extreme acidification (pH 6.5), the
retinal tissue is intolerant of comparable reductions in pH. The mechanism of
acidification of the blood within the pseudobranch involves the direct
excretion of CO2 and secretion of H+ via
Na+/H+ exchange and V-type H+-ATPase
(Kern et al., 2002
). The
importance of CA in sustaining these acidifying processes and allowing
O2 concentration within the eye was convincingly demonstrated
(Fairbanks et al., 1969
;
Fairbanks et al., 1974
)
although to date there are no data on the identification of the participating
isoforms. It also should be recognized that the pseudobranch is but one of
several sites participating in CA-mediated acidification of pre-occular
blood.
| Conclusions |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Bartels, H. and Potter, I. C. (2004). Cellular
composition and ultrastructure of the gill epithelium of larval and adult
lampreys: implications for osmoregulation in fresh and seawater. J.
Exp. Biol. 207,3447
-3462.
Berenbrink, M. (2007). Historical
reconstructions of evolving physiological complexity: O2 secretion
in the eye and swimbladder of fishes. J. Exp. Biol.
210,1641
-1652.
Boisen, A. M. Z., Amstrup, J., Novak, I. and Grosell, M. (2003). Sodium and chloride transport in soft water and hard water acclimated zebrafish (Danio rerio). Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1618,207 -218.[Medline]
Bridges, C. R., Berenbrink, M., Muller, R. and Waser, W. (1998). Physiology and biochemistry of the pseudobranch: an unanswered question? Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 119, 67-77.[CrossRef][Medline]
Brittain, T. (1987). The root effect. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. B 86,473 -481.[CrossRef][Medline]
Burger, J. W. and Hess, W. N. (1960). Function
of the rectal gland in the spiny dogfish. Science
131,670
-671.
Cameron, J. N. (1980). Body fluid pools, kidney
function, and acid-base regulation in the freshwater catfish Ictalurus
punctatus. J. Exp. Biol. 86,171
-185.
Cameron, J. N. and Kormanik, G. A. (1982). The
acid-base responses of gills and kidneys to infused acid and base loads in the
channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus. J. Exp. Biol.
99,143
-160.
Chan, D. K. O., Phillips, J. G. and Jones, I. C. (1967). Studies on electrolyte changes in lip-shark Hemiscyllium plagiosum (Bennett) with special reference to hormonal influence on rectal gland. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 23,185 -198.[Medline]
Chang, I. C. and Hwang, P. P. (2004). Cl– uptake mechanism in freshwater-adapted tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus). Physiol. Biochem. Zool. 77,406 -414.[CrossRef][Medline]
Chegwidden, W. R. and Carter, N. D. (2000). Introduction to the carbonic anhydrases. EXS 90, 13-28.
Choe, K. P., O'Brien, S., Evans, D. H., Toop, T. and Edwards, S. L. (2004). Immunolocalization of Na+/K+-ATPase, carbonic anhydrase II, and vacuolar H+-ATPase in the gills of freshwater adult lampreys, Geotria australis. J. Exp. Zool. 301A,654 -665.[CrossRef]
Choe, K. P., Kato, A., Hirose, S., Plata, C., Sindié, A., Romero, M. F., Claiborne, J. B. and Evans, D. H. (2005). NHE3 in an ancestral vertebrate: primary sequence, distribution, localization, and function in gills. Am. J. Physiol. 289,R1520 -R1534.
Claiborne, J. B., Edwards, S. L. and Morrison-Shetlar, A. I. (2002). Acid-base regulation in fishes: cellular and molecular mechanisms. J. Exp. Zool. 293,302 -319.[CrossRef][Medline]
Conley, D. M. and Mallatt, J. (1988). Histochemical localization of Na+-K+ ATPase and carbonic anhydrase activity in gills of 17 fish species. Can. J. Zool. 66,2398 -2405.[CrossRef]
Conroy, C. W., Wynns, G. C. and Maren, T. H. (1996). Synthesis and properties of two new membrane-impermeant high-molecular-weight carbonic anhydrase inhibitors. Bioorg. Chem. 24,262 -272.[CrossRef]
Craig, P. M., Wood, C. M. and McLelland, G. B.
(2007). Gill membrane remodeling with soft-water acclimation in
zebrafish (Danio rerio). Physiol. Genomics
30, 53-60.
Cross, C. E., Packer, B. S., Linta, J. M., Murdaugh, H. V., Jr
and Robin, E. D. (1969). H+ buffering and
excretion in response to acute hypercapnia in the dogfish Squalus
acanthias. Am. J. Physiol.
216,440
-452.
Curtis, B. J. and Wood, C. M. (1992). Kidney and urinary bladder responses of freshwater rainbow trout to isosmotic NaCl and NaHCO3 infusion. J. Exp. Biol. 173,181 -203.[Abstract]
Deetjen, P. and Maren, T. (1974). The dissociation between renal HCO3– reabsorption and H+ secretion in the skate, Raja erinacea. Pflugers Arch. 346,25 -30.[CrossRef][Medline]
Dimberg, K., Höglund, L. B., Knutsson, P. G. and Ridderstråle, Y. (1981). Histochemical localization of carbonic anhydrase in gill lamellae from young salmon (Salmo salar L.) adapted to fresh and salt water. Acta Physiol. Scand. 112,218 -220.[Medline]
Edwards, S. L., Claiborne, J. B., Morrison-Shetlar, A. and Toop, T. (2001). Expression of Na+/H+ exchanger mRNA in the gills of the Atlantic hagfish (Myxine glutinosa) in response to metabolic acidosis. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 130,81 -91.[CrossRef][Medline]
Edwards, S. L., Donald, J. A., Toop, T., Donowitz, M. and Tse, C.-M. (2002). Immunolocalisation of sodium/proton exchanger-like proteins in the gills of elasmobranchs. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 131,257 -265.[CrossRef][Medline]
Esaki, M., Hoshijima, K., Kobayashi, S., Fukuda, H., Kawakami, K. and Hirose, S. (2007). Visualization in zebrafish larvae of Na+ uptake in mitochondria-rich cells whose differentiation is dependent on foxi3a. Am. J. Physiol. 292,R470 -R480.
Esbaugh, A. and Tufts, B. L. (2006a). The structure and function of carbonic anhydrase isozymes in the respiratory system of vertebrates. Respir. Physiol. Neurobiol. 154,185 -198.[CrossRef][Medline]
Esbaugh, A. and Tufts, B. L. (2006b). Tribute
to R. G. Boutilier: evidence of a high activity carbonic anhydrase isozyme in
the red blood cells of an ancient vertebrate, the sea lamprey Petromyzon
marinus. J. Exp. Biol. 209,1169
-1178.
Esbaugh, A. and Tufts, B. L. (2007). Evidence for a carbonic anhydrase-related protein in the brain of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Comp. Biochem. Physiol. D 2,287 -294.
Esbaugh, A., Lund, S. G. and Tufts, B. L. (2004). Comparative physiology and molecular analysis of carbonic anhydrase from the red blood cells of teleost fish. J. Comp. Physiol. B 174,429 -438.[Medline]
Esbaugh, A., Perry, S. F., Bayaa, M., Georgalis, T., Nickerson,
J. G., Tufts, B. L. and Gilmour, K. M. (2005). Cytoplasmic
carbonic anhydrase isozymes in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss:
comparative physiology and molecular evolution. J. Exp.
Biol. 208,1951
-1961.
Esbaugh, A. J., Gilmour, K. M. and Perry, S. F. (2009a). Membrane-associated carbonic anhydrase in the respiratory system of the Pacific hagfish (Eptatretus stouti). Respir. Physiol. Neurobiol. 166,107 -116.[CrossRef][Medline]
Esbaugh, A. J., Perry, S. F. and Gilmour, K. M. (2009b). Hypoxia-inducible carbonic anhydrase IX expression is insufficient to alleviate intracellular metabolic acidosis in the muscle of zebrafish Danio rerio. Am. J. Physiol. 296,R150 -R160.
Evans, D. H. (1984). Gill
Na+/H+ and
Cl–/HCO3– exchange systems
evolved before the vertebrates entered fresh water. J. Exp.
Biol. 113,465
-469.
Evans, D. H. (1993). Osmotic and ionic regulation. In The Physiology of Fishes (ed. D. H. Evans), pp. 315-341. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
Evans, D. H., Oikari, A., Kormanik, G. A. and Mansberger, L.
(1982). Osmoregulation by the prenatal spiny dogfish, Squalus
acanthias. J. Exp. Biol.
101,295
-305.
Evans, D. H., Piermarini, P. M. and Choe, K. P. (2004). Homeostasis: Osmoregulation, pH regulation, and nitrogen excretion. In Biology of Sharks and Their Relatives (ed. J. C. Carrier, J. A. Musick and M. R. Heithaus), pp.247 -268. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
Evans, D. H., Piermarini, P. M. and Choe, K. P.
(2005). The multifunctional fish gill: dominant site of gas
exchange, osmoregulation, acid-base regulation, and excretion of nitrogenous
waste. Physiol. Rev. 85,97
-177.
Fairbanks, M. B., Hoffert, J. R. and Fromm, P. O.
(1969). The dependence of the oxygen-concentrating mechanism of
the teleost eye (Salmo gairdneri) on the enzyme carbonic anhydrase.
J. Gen. Physiol. 54,203
-211.
Fairbanks, M. B., Hoffert, J. R. and Fromm, P. O.
(1974). Short circuiting the ocular oxygen concentrating
mechanism in the teleost Salmo gairdneri using carbonic anhydrase
inhibitors. J. Gen. Physiol.
64,263
-273.
Fange, R. (1953). The mechanisms of gas transport in the euphysoclist swimbladder. Acta Physiol. Scand. Suppl. 30,1 -133.[Medline]
Ferguson, R. A. and Boutilier, R. G. (1989).
Metabolic-membrane coupling in red blood cells of trout: the effects of anoxia
and adrenergic stimulation. J. Exp. Biol.
143,149
-164.
Fernley, R. T., Wright, R. D. and Coghlan, J. P. (1988). Complete amino acid sequence of ovine salivary carbonic anhydrase. Biochemistry 27,2815 -2820.[CrossRef][Medline]
Flügel, C., Lütjen-Drecoll, E. and Zadunaisky, J. A. (1991). Histochemical demonstration of carbonic anhydrase in gills and opercular epithelium of seawater- and freshwater-adapted killyfish (Fundulus heteroclitus). Acta Histochem. 91,67 -75.[Medline]
Fujikawa-Adachi, K., Nishimori, I., Taguchi, T. and Onishi, S. (1999a). Human carbonic anhydrase XIV (CA14): cDNA cloning, mRNA expression, and mapping to chromosome 1. Genomics 61,74 -81.[CrossRef][Medline]
Fujikawa-Adachi, K., Nishimori, I., Taguchi, T. and Onishi,
S. (1999b). Human mitochondrial carbonic anhydrase VB: cDNA
cloning, mRNA expression, subcellular localization, and mapping to chromosome
X. J. Biol. Chem. 274,21228
-21233.
Galvez, F., Reid, S. D., Hawkings, G. S. and Goss, G. G. (2002). Isolation and characterization of mitochondria-rich cell types from the gill of freshwater rainbow trout. Am. J. Physiol. 282,R658 -R668.
Geers, C. and Gros, G. (2000). Carbon dioxide
transport and carbonic anhydrase in blood and muscle. Physiol.
Rev. 80,681
-715.
Georgalis, T., Gilmour, K. M., Yorston, J. and Perry, S. F. (2006a). The roles of cytosolic and membrane bound carbonic anhydrase in the renal control of acid-base balance in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. Am. J. Physiol. 291,F407 -F421.[CrossRef]
Georgalis, T., Perry, S. F. and Gilmour, K. M.
(2006b). The role of branchial carbonic anhydrase in acid-base
regulation in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). J. Exp.
Biol. 209,518
-530.
Gervais, M. R. and Tufts, B. L. (1998). Evidence for membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase in the air bladder of bowfin (Amia calva), a primitive air-breathing fish. J. Exp. Biol. 201,2205 -2212.[Abstract]
Gilmour, K. M. (1998a). Causes and consequences of acid-base disequilibria. In Fish Physiology Volume 17: Fish Respiration (ed. S. F. Perry and B. L. Tufts), pp.321 -348. San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
Gilmour, K. M. (1998b). The disequilibrium pH: a tool for the localization of carbonic anhydrase. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 119A,243 -254.
Gilmour, K. M. and Perry, S. F. (2004). Branchial membrane-associated carbonic anhydrase activity maintains CO2 excretion in severely anemic dogfish. Am. J. Physiol. 286,R1138 -R1148.
Gilmour, K. M., Randall, D. J. and Perry, S. F. (1994). Acid-base disequilibrium in the arterial blood of rainbow trout. Respir. Physiol. 96,259 -272.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gilmour, K. M., Perry, S. F., Bernier, N. J., Henry, R. P. and Wood, C. M. (2001). Extracellular carbonic anhydrase in dogfish, Squalus acanthias: a role in CO2 excretion. Physiol. Biochem. Zool. 74,477 -492.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gilmour, K. M., Shah, B. and Szebedinszky, C. (2002). An investigation of carbonic anhydrase activity in the gills and blood plasma of brown bullhead (Ameiurus nebulosus), longnose skate (Raja rhina), and spotted ratfish (Hydrolagus colliei). J. Comp. Physiol. B 172, 77-86.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gilmour, K. M., Bayaa, M., Kenney, L., McNeill, B. and Perry, S. F. (2007a). Type IV carbonic anhydrase is present in the gills of spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias). Am. J. Physiol. 292,R556 -R567.
Gilmour, K. M., Euverman, R., Esbaugh, A. J., Kenney, L., Chew,
S. F., Ip, Y. K. and Perry, S. F. (2007b). Mechanisms of
acid-base regulation in the African lungfish Protopterus annectens.J. Exp. Biol. 210,1944
-1959.
Goss, G. G. and Perry, S. F. (1994). Different mechanisms of acid-base regulation in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and American eel (Anguilla rostrata) during NaHCO3 infusion. Physiol. Zool. 67,381 -406.
Goss, G. G. and Wood, C. M. (1991). Two-substrate kinetic analysis: a novel approach linking ion and acid-base transport at the gills of freshwater trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. J. Comp. Physiol. B 161,635 -646.[CrossRef]
Goss, G. G., Laurent, P. and Perry, S. F. (1992a). Evidence for a morphological component in acid-base regulation during environmental hypercapnia in the brown bullhead (Ictalurus nebulosus). Cell Tissue Res. 268,539 -552.[CrossRef][Medline]
Goss, G. G., Perry, S. F., Wood, C. M. and Laurent, P. (1992b). Mechanisms of ion and acid-base regulation at the gills of freshwater fish. J. Exp. Zool. 263,143 -159.[CrossRef][Medline]
Goss, G. G., Adamia, S. and Galvez, F. (2001). Peanut lectin binds to a subpopulation of mitochondria-rich cells in the rainbow trout gill epithelium. Am. J. Physiol. 281,R1718 -R1725.
Grosell, M., Mager, E., Williams, C. and Taylor, J. R.
(2009). High rates of HCO3– secretion
and Cl– absorption against adverse gradients in the marine
teleost intestine: the involvement of an electrogenic anion exchanger and
H+-pump metabolon? J. Exp. Biol.
212,1684
-1696.
Haswell, M. S., Randall, D. J. and Perry, S. F. (1980). Fish gill carbonic anhydrase: acid-base regulation or salt transport? Am. J. Physiol. 238,R240 -R245.[Medline]
Heisler, N. (1984). Acid-base regulation in fishes. In Fish Physiology, vol.10A (ed. W. S. Hoar and D. J. Randall), pp.315 -401. New York: Academic Press.[CrossRef]
Heisler, N. (1986). Comparative aspects of acid-base regulation. In Acid-base Regulation in Animals (ed. N. Heisler), pp. 397-449. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
Heming, T. A. (1986). Carbon dioxide excretion and ammonia toxicity in fishes: is there a relationship? In Problems of Aquatic Toxicology, Biotesting, and Water Quality Management: Proceedings of USA-USSR Symposium, Borok, Jaroslavl Oblast, July 30-August 1, 1984 (ed. R. C. Ryans), pp.84 -94. Athens, GA: US Environmental Protection Agency.
Henry, R. P. (1981). Techniques for measuring carbonic anhydrase activity in vitro: the electrometric delta pH and pH stat assays. In The Carbonic Anhydrases: Cellular Physiology and Molecular Genetics (ed. S. J. Dodgson, R. E. Tashian, G. Gros and N. D. Carter), pp. 119-126. New York: Plenum.
Henry, R. P. and Heming, T. A. (1998). Carbonic anhydrase and respiratory gas exchange. In Fish Physiology Volume 17: Fish Respiration (ed. S. F. Perry and B. L. Tufts), pp.75 -111. San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
Henry, R. P. and Swenson, E. R. (2000). The distribution and physiological significance of carbonic anhydrase in vertebrate gas exchange organs. Respir. Physiol. 121, 1-12.[CrossRef][Medline]
Henry, R. P., Smatresk, N. J. and Cameron, J. N.
(1988). The distribution of branchial carbonic anhydrase and the
effects of gill and erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase inhibition in the channel
catfish Ictalurus punctatus. J. Exp. Biol.
134,201
-218.
Henry, R. P., Tufts, B. L. and Boutilier, R. G. (1993). The distribution of carbonic anhydrase type I and II isozymes in lamprey and trout: possible co-evolution with erythrocyte chloride/bicarbonate exchange. J. Comp. Physiol. B 163,380 -388.
Henry, R. P., Gilmour, K. M., Wood, C. M. and Perry, S. F. (1997). Extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity and carbonic anhydrase inhibitors in the circulatory system of fish. Physiol. Zool. 70,650 -659.[Medline]
Hewett-Emmett, D. (2000). Evolution and distribution of the carbonic anhydrase gene families. EXS 90,29 -76.[Medline]
Hickman, C. P. and Trump, B. F. (1969). The kidney. In Fish Physiology, vol.1 (ed. W. S. Hoar and D. J. Randall), pp.91 -239. New York: Academic Press.[CrossRef]
Hilvo, M., Tolvanen, M., Clark, A., Shen, B., Shah, G. N., Waheed, A., Halmi, P., Hänninen, M., Hämäläinen, J. M., Vihinen, M. et al. (2005). Characterization of CA XV, a new GPI-anchored form of carbonic anhydrase. Biochem. J. 392, 83-92.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hilvo, M., Innocenti, A., Monti, S. M., De Simone, G., Supuran, C. T. and Parkkila, S. (2008). Recent advances in research on the most novel carbonic anhydrases, CA XIII and XV. Curr. Pharmaceut. Des. 14,672 -678.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hirata, T., Kaneko, T., Ono, T., Nakazato, T., Furukawa, N., Hasegawa, S., Wakabayashi, S., Shigekawa, M., Chang, M. H., Romero, M. F. et al. (2003). Mechanism of acid adaptation of a fish living in a pH 3.5 lake. Am. J. Physiol. 284,R1199 -R1212.
Hiroi, J., Yasumasu, S., McCormick, S. D., Hwang, P. P. and
Kaneko, T. (2008). Evidence for an apical Na-Cl cotransporter
involved in ion uptake in a teleost fish. J. Exp.
Biol. 211,2584
-2599.
Hirose, S., Kaneko, T., Naito, N. and Takei, Y. (2003). Molecular biology of major components of chloride cells. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. B 136,593 -620.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hodler, J., Heinemann, H. O., Fishman, A. P. and Smith, H.
W. (1955). Urine pH and carbonic anhydrase activity in the
marine dogfish. Am. J. Physiol.
183,155
-162.
Horng, J. L., Lin, L. Y., Huang, C. Y., Katoh, F., Kaneko, T. and Hwang, P. P. (2007). Knockdown of V-ATPase subunit A (atp6v1a) impairs acid secretion and ion balance in zebrafish (Danio rerio). Am. J. Physiol. 292,R2068 -R2076.
Hwang, P.-P. (2009). Ion uptake and acid
secretion in zebrafish (Danio rerio). J. Exp.
Biol. 212,1745
-1752.
Hwang, P. P. and Lee, T. H. (2007). New insights into fish ion regulation and mitochondrion-fich cells. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 148,479 -497.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hyde, D. A. and Perry, S. F. (1989). Differential approaches to blood acid-base regulation during exposure to prolonged hypercapnia in two freshwater teleosts: the rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) and the American eel (Anguilla rostrata). Physiol. Zool. 62,1164 -1186.
Ivanis, G., Braun, M. and Perry, S. F. (2008a). Renal expression and localization of SLC9A3 sodium hydrogen exchanger (NHE3) and its possible role in acid-base regulation in freshwater rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Am. J. Physiol. 295,R971 -R978.
Ivanis, G., Esbaugh, A. and Perry, S. F.
(2008b). Branchial expression and localization of SLC9A2 and
SLC9A3 sodium/hydrogen exchangers and their possible role in acid-base
regulation in freshwater rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).
J. Exp. Biol. 211,2467
-2477.
Karnaky, K. J., Jr (1998). Osmotic and ionic regulation. In The Physiology of Fishes, 2nd edn (ed. D. H. Evans), pp. 157-176. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
Kern, G., Bosch, S. T., Unterhuber, E. and Pelster, B.
(2002). Mechanisms of acid secretion in pseudobranch cells of
rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). J. Exp.
Biol. 205,2943
-2954.
Kerstetter, T. H., Kirschner, L. B. and Rafuse, D. D.
(1970). On the mechanisms of sodium ion transport by the
irrigated gills of rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri). J.
Gen. Physiol. 56,342
-359.
Kobayashi, K. A. and Wood, C. M. (1980). The
response of the kidney of the freshwater rainbow trout to true metabolic
acidosis. J. Exp. Biol.
84,227
-244.
Kültz, D., Bastrop, R., Jürss, K. and Siebers, D. (1992). Mitochondria-rich (MR) cells and the activities of the Na+/K+-ATPase and carbonic anhydrase in the gill and opercular epithelium of Oreochromis mossambicus adapted to various salinities. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 102B,293 -301.[CrossRef]
Kutchai, H. (1971). Role of carbonic anhydrase in lactate secretion by swimbladder. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 39,357 -359.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lacy, E. R. (1983). Carbonic anhydrase localization in the elasmobranch rectal gland. J. Exp. Zool. 226,163 -169.[CrossRef][Medline]
Laurent, P. and Dunel-Erb, S. (1984). The pseudobranch: morphology and function. In Fish Physiology Volume 10B: Gills: Ion and Water Transfer (ed. W. S. Hoar and D. J. Randall), pp. 285-323. San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
Laurent, P. and Rouzeau, J. D. (1972). Afferent neural activity from pseudobranch of the teleosts. Effects of Po2, pH, osmotic pressure and Na+ ions. Respir. Physiol. 14,307 -3331.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lehtonen, J., Shen, B., Vihinen, M., Casini, A., Scozzafava, A.,
Supuran, C. T., Parkkila, A. K., Saarnio, J., Kivelä, A. J., Waheed, A.
et al. (2004). Characterization of CA XIII, a novel member of
the carbonic anhydrase isozyme family. J. Biol. Chem.
279,2719
-2727.
Lin, L. Y., Horng, J. L., Kunkel, J. G. and Hwang, P. P. (2006). Proton pump-rich cell secretes acid in skin of zebrafish larvae. Am. J. Physiol. 290,C371 -C378.[CrossRef]
Lin, T. Y., Liao, B. K., Horng, J. L., Yah, J. J., Hsiao, C. D. and Hwang, P. P. (2008). Carbonic anhydrase 2-like a and 15a are involved in acid-base regulation and Na+ uptake in zebrafish H+-ATPase-rich cells. Am. J. Physiol. 294,C1250 -C1260.[CrossRef]
Lund, S. G., Dyment, P., Gervais, M. R., Moyes, C. D. and Tufts, B. L. (2002). Characterization of erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase in an ancient fish, the longnose gar (Lepisosteus osseus). J. Comp. Physiol. B 172,467 -476.[CrossRef][Medline]
Maetz, J. (1956). Les échanges de sodium chez le poisson Carassius auratus L. Action d'un inhibiteur de l'anydrase carbonique. J. Physiol. Paris 48,1085 -1099.[Medline]
Maetz, J. (1971). Fish gills: mechanisms of
salt transfer in fresh water and sea water. Philos. Trans. R. Soc.
Lond. B Biol. Sci. 262,209
-249.
Maetz, J. and Bornancin, M. (1975). Biochemical and biophysical aspects of salt excretion by chloride cells in teleosts. Fortschr. Zool. 23,322 -362.[Medline]
Maetz, J. and Garcia-Romeu, F. (1964). The
mechanism of sodium and chloride uptake by the gills of a fresh-water fish,
Carassius auratus II. Evidence for
NH4+/Na+ and
HCO3–/Cl– exchanges.
J. Gen. Physiol. 47,1209
-1227.
Mallatt, J., Conley, D. M. and Ridgway, R. L. (1987). Why do hagfish have gill "chloride cells" when they need not regulate plasma NaCl concentration? Can. J. Zool. 65,1956 -1965.[CrossRef]
Maren, T. H. (1967). Carbonic anhydrase: chemistry, physiology and inhibition. Physiol. Rev. 47,598 -781.
Maren, T. H., Fine, A., Swenson, E. R. and Rothman, D. (1992). Renal acid-base physiology in marine teleost, the long-horned sculpin (Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus). Am. J. Physiol. 263,F49 -F55.[Medline]
Marshall, W. S. (2002). Na+, Cl–, Ca2+ and Zn2+ transport by fish gills: Retrospective review and prospective synthesis. J. Exp. Zool. 293,264 -283.[CrossRef][Medline]
Marshall, W. S. and Grosell, M. (2006). Ion transport, osmoregulation, and acid-base balance. In The Physiology of Fishes, 3rd edn (ed. D. H. Evans and J. B. Claiborne), pp.177 -230. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
McDonald, D. G. and Wood, C. M. (1981).
Branchial and renal acid and ion fluxes in the rainbow trout, Salmo
gairdneri, at low environmental pH. J. Exp. Biol.
93,101
-118.
McDonald, D. G., Walker, R. L., Wilkers, P. R. H. and Wood, C.
M. (1982). H+ excretion in the marine teleost,
Parophrys vetulus. J. Exp. Biol.
98,403
-414.
McKenzie, D. J., Piccolella, M., Dalla Valle, A. Z., Taylor, E.
W., Bolis, C. L. and Steffensen, J. F. (2003). Tolerance of
chronic hypercapnia by the European eel Anguilla anguilla. J. Exp.
Biol. 206,1717
-1726.
Mori, K., Ogawa, Y., Ebihara, K., Tamura, N., Tashiro, K.,
Kuwahara, T., Mukoyama, M., Sugawara, A., Ozaki, S., Tanaka, I. et al.
(1999). Isolation and characterization of CA XIV, a novel
membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase from mouse kidney. J. Biol.
Chem. 274,15701
-15705.
Nawata, C. M., Hung, C. C. Y., Tsui, T. K. N., Wilson, J. M.,
Wright, P. A. and Wood, C. M. (2007). Ammonia excretion in
rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss): evidence for Rh glycoprotein and
H+-ATPase involvement. Physiol. Genomics
31,463
-474.
Nishimura, H. (1977). Renal responses to diuretic drugs in freshwater catfish Ictalurus punctatus. Am. J. Physiol. 232,F278 -F285.[Medline]
Opavsky, R., Pastoreková, S., Zelník, V., Gibadulinová, A., Stanbridge, E. J., Závada, J., Kettmann, R. and Pastorek, J. (1996). Human MN/CA9 gene, a novel member of the carbonic anhydrase family: Structure and exon to protein domain relationships. Genomics 33,480 -487.[CrossRef][Medline]
Parks, S. K., Tresguerres, M. and Goss, G. G. (2007). Blood and gill responses to HCl infusions in the Pacific hagfish (Eptatretus stoutii). Can. J. Zool. 85,855 -862.[CrossRef]
Payan, P. and Maetz, J. (1973). Branchial
sodium transport mechanisms in Scyliorhinus canicula: evidence for
Na+/NH4+ exchanges and for a role of carbonic
anhydrase. J. Exp. Biol.
58,487
-502.
Payan, P., Matty, A. J. and Maetz, J. (1975). A study of the sodium pump in the perfused head preparation of the trout Salmo gairdneri in freshwater. J. Comp. Physiol. 104,33 -48.
Pelis, R. M. and Renfro, J. L. (2004). Role of tubular secretion and carbonic anhdyrase in vertebrate renal sulfate excretion. Am. J. Physiol. 287,R491 -R501.
Pelis, R. M., Goldmeyer, J. E., Crivello, J. and Renfro, J. L. (2003). Cortisol alters carbonic anhydrase-mediated renal sulfate secretion. Am. J. Physiol. 285,R1430 -R1438.
Pelster, B. (1995). Mechanisms of acid release in isolated gas gland cells of the European eel Anguilla anguilla.Am. J. Physiol. 269,R793 -R799.[Medline]
Pelster, B. (2004). pH regulation and swimbladder function in fish. Respir. Physiol. Neurobiol. 144,179 -190.[CrossRef][Medline]
Pelster, B. and Weber, R. E. (1991). The physiology of the root effect. In Advances in Comparative and Environmental Physiology, vol. 8 (ed. R. Gilles, R. E. Weber and C. P. Mangum), pp. 51-77. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
Perry, S. F. (1997). The chloride cell: structure and function in the gills of freshwater fishes. Annu. Rev. Physiol. 59,325 -347.[CrossRef][Medline]
Perry, S. F. and Fryer, J. N. (1997). Proton pumps in the fish gill and kidney. Fish Physiol. Biochem. 17,363 -369.[CrossRef]
Perry, S. F. and Gilmour, K. M. (2006). Acid-base balance and CO2 excretion in fish: unanswered questions and emerging models. Respir. Physiol. Neurobiol. 154,199 -215.[CrossRef][Medline]
Perry, S. F. and Laurent, P. (1990). The role of carbonic anhydrase in carbon dioxide excretion, acid-base balance and ionic regulation in aquatic gill breathers. In Animal Nutrition and Transport Processes 2: Transport, Respiration and Excretion: Comparative and Environmental Aspects (ed. J. P. Truchot and B. Lahlou), pp.39 -57. Basel: Karger.
Perry, S. F., Malone, S. and Ewing, D. (1987). Hypercapnic acidosis in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri). II. Renal ionic fluxes. Can. J. Zool. 65,896 -902.[CrossRef]
Perry, S. F., Gilmour, K. M., Bernier, N. J. and Wood, C. M. (1999). Does gill boundary layer carbonic anhydrase contribute to carbon dioxide excretion: a comparison between dogfish (Squalus acanthias) and rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). J. Exp. Biol. 202,749 -756.[Abstract]
Perry, S. F., Beyers, M. L. and Johnson, D. J. (2000). Cloning and molecular characterisation of the trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) vacuolar H+-ATPase B subunit. J. Exp. Biol. 203,459 -470.[Abstract]
Perry, S. F., Furimsky, M., Bayaa, M., Georgalis, T., Shahsavarani, A., Nickerson, J. G. and Moon, T. W. (2003a). Integrated responses of Na+/HCO3– cotransporters and V-type H+-ATPases in the fish gill and kidney during respiratory acidosis. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1618,175 -184.[Medline]
Perry, S. F., Shahsavarani, A., Georgalis, T., Bayaa, M., Furimsky, M. and Thomas, S. (2003b). Channels, pumps, and exchangers in the gill and kidney of freshwater fishes: their role in ionic and acid-base regulation. J. Exp. Zool. 300A,53 -62.
Peterson, R. E., Tu, C. and Linser, P. J. (1997). Isolation and characterization of a carbonic anhydrase homologue from the zebrafish (Danio rerio). J. Mol. Evol. 44,432 -439.[CrossRef][Medline]
Piermarini, P. M. and Evans, D. H. (2001).
Immunochemical analysis of the vacuolar proton-ATPase B-subunit in the gills
of a euryhaline stingray (Dasyatis sabina): effects of salinity and
relation to Na+/K+-ATPase. J. Exp.
Biol. 204,3251
-3259.
Piermarini, P. M., Verlander, J. W., Royauz, I. E. and Evans, D. H. (2002). Pendrin immunoreactivity in the gill epithelium of a euryhaline elasmobranch. Am. J. Physiol. 283,R983 -R992.
Purkerson, J. M. and Schwartz, G. J. (2007). The role of carbonic anhydrases in renal physiology. Kidney Int. 71,103 -115.[CrossRef][Medline]
Rahim, S. M., Delaunoy, J. P. and Laurent, P. (1988). Identification and immunocytochemical localization of two different carbonic anhydrase isoenzymes in teleostean fish erythrocytes and gill epithelia. Histochemie 89,451 -459.[CrossRef]
Randall, D. J. (1982). The control of
respiration and circulation in fish during exercise and hypoxia. J.
Exp. Biol. 100,275
-288.
Randall, D. J. and Val, A. L. (1995). The role of carbonic anhydrase in aquatic gas exchange. In Advances in Comparative and Environmental Physiology, vol.21 (ed. N. Heisler), pp.25 -39. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
Reis-Santos, P., McCormick, S. D. and Wilson, J. M.
(2008). Ionoregulatory changes during metamorphosis and salinity
exposure of juvenile sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus L.).
J. Exp. Biol. 211,978
-988.
Renfro, J. L., Maren, T. H., Zeien, C. and Swenson, E. R. (1999). Renal sulfate secretion is carbonic anhydrase dependent in a marine teleost, Pleuronectes americanus. Am. J. Physiol. 276,F288 -F294.[Medline]
Schwartz, G. J. (2002). Physiology and molecular biology of renal carbonic anhydrase. J. Nephrol. 15,S61 -S74.[Medline]
Schwartz, G. J., Kittelberger, A. M., Watkins, R. H. and O'Reilly, M. A. (2001). Carbonic anhydrase XII mRNA encodes a hydratase that is differentially expressed along the rabbit nephron. Am. J. Physiol. 284,F399 -F410.
Scott, G. R., Claiborne, J. B., Edwards, S. L., Schulte, P. M.
and Wood, C. M. (2005). Gene expression after freshwater
transfer in gills and opercular epithelia of killifish: insight into divergent
mechanisms of ion transport. J. Exp. Biol.
208,2719
-2729.
Scott, G. R., Baker, D. W., Schulte, P. M. and Wood, C. M.
(2008). Physiological and molecular mechanisms of osmoregulatory
plasticity in killifish after seawater transfer. J. Exp.
Biol. 211,2450
-2459.
Sender, S., Böttcher, K., Cetin, Y. and Gros, G.
(1999). Carbonic anhydrase in the gills of seawater- and
freshwater-acclimated flounders Platichthys flesus: purification,
characterization, and immunohistochemical localization. J.
Histochem. Cytochem. 47,43
-50.
Shuttleworth, T. J. (1988). Salt and water balance: extrarenal mechanisms. In Physiology of Elasmobranch Fishes (ed. T. J. Shuttleworth), pp.171 -199. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
Shuttleworth, T. J., Thompson, J., Munger, R. S. and Wood, C.
M. (2006). A critical analysis of carbonic anhydrase
function, respiratory gas exchange, and the acid-base control of secretion in
the rectal gland of Squalus acanthias. J. Exp. Biol.
209,4701
-4716.
Sly, W. S. (2000). The membrane carbonic anhydrases: from CO2 transport to tumor markers. EXS 90,95 -104.[Medline]
Sly, W. S. and Hu, P. Y. (1995). Human carbonic anhydrases and carbonic anhydrase deficiencies. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 64,375 -401.[CrossRef][Medline]
Swenson, E. R. (2000). Respiratory and renal roles of carbonic anhydrase in gas exchange and acid-base regulation. EXS 90,281 -341.[Medline]
Swenson, E. R. (2003). A comparative approach to carbonic anhydrase: the work of Thomas H. Maren. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 136,229 -241.[CrossRef][Medline]
Swenson, E. R. and Maren, T. H. (1984). Effects of acidosis and carbonic anhydrase inhibition in the elasmobranch rectal gland. Am. J. Physiol. 247,F86 -F92.[Medline]
Swenson, E. R. and Maren, T. H. (1986). Dissociation of CO2 hydration and renal acid secretion in the dogfish, squalus acanthias. Am. J. Physiol. 250,F288 -F293.[Medline]
Swenson, E. R. and Maren, T. H. (1987). Roles of gill and red cell carbonic anhydrase in elasmobranch HCO3– and CO2 excretion. Am. J. Physiol. 253,R450 -R458.[Medline]
Swenson, E. R., Fine, A. D., Maren, T. H., Reale, E., Lacy, E.
R. and Smolka, A. J. (1994). Physiological and
immunocytochemical evidence for a putative H-K-ATPase in elasmobranch renal
acid secretion. Am. J. Physiol. Renal Physiol.
267,F639
-F645.
Swenson, E. R., Lippincott, L. and Maren, T. H. (1995). Effect of gill membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase inhibition on branchial bicarbonate excretion in the dogfish shark, Squalus acanthias. Bull. MDI Biol. Lab. 34, 94-95.
Swenson, E. R., Taschner, B. C. and Maren, T. H. (1996). Effect of membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibition on bicarbonate excretion in the shark, Squalus acanthias.Bull. MDI Biol. Lab. 35,47 .
Tashian, R. E., Hewett-Emmett, D., Carter, N. and Bergenhem, N. C. H. (2000). Carbonic anhydrase (CA)-related proteins (CA-RPs), and transmembrane proteins with CA or CA-RP domains. In The Carbonic Anhydrases: New Horizons (ed. W. R. Chegwidden, N. Carter and Y. H. Edwards), pp.105 -120. Basel, Switzerland: Birkhäuser Verlag.
Tresguerres, M., Katoh, F., Fenton, H., Jasinska, E. and Goss,
G. G. (2005). Regulation of branchial V-H+-ATPase,
Na+/K+-ATPase and NHE2 in response to acid and base
infusions in the Pacific spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias).
J. Exp. Biol. 208,345
-354.
Tresguerres, M., Katoh, F., Orr, E., Parks, S. K. and Goss, G. G. (2006a). Chloride uptake and base secretion in freshwater fish: a transepithelial ion-transport metabolon? Physiol. Biochem. Zool. 79,981 -996.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tresguerres, M., Parks, S. K. and Goss, G. G. (2006b). V-H+-ATPase, Na+/K+-ATPase and NHE2 immunoreactivity in the gill epithelium of the Pacific hagfish (Eptatretus stoutii). Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 145,312 -321.[Medline]
Tresguerres, M., Parks, S. K., Katoh, F. and Goss, G. G.
(2006c). Microtubule-dependent relocation of branchial
V-H+-ATPase to the basolateral membrane in the Pacific spiny
dogfish (Squalus acanthias): a role in base secretion. J.
Exp. Biol. 209,599
-609.
Tresguerres, M., Parks, S. K. and Goss, G. G. (2007a). Recovery from blood alkalosis in the Pacific hagfish (Eptatretus stoutii): involvement of gill V-H+-ATPase and Na+/K+-ATPase. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 148,133 -141.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tresguerres, M., Parks, S. K., Wood, C. M. and Goss, G. G. (2007b). V-H+-ATPase translocation during blood alkalosis in dogfish gills: interaction with carbonic anhydrase and involvement in the postfeeding alkaline tide. Am. J. Physiol. 292,R2012 -R2019.
Tsuruoka, S., Kittelberger, A. M. and Schwartz, G. J. (1998). Carbonic anhydrase II and IV mRNA in rabbit nephron segments: stimulation during metabolic acidosis. Am. J. Physiol. 274,F259 -F267.[Medline]
Tufts, B. L. and Perry, S. F. (1998). Carbon dioxide transport and excretion. In Fish Physiology Volume 17: Fish Respiration (ed. S. F. Perry and B. L. Tufts), pp.229 -281. San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
Tufts, B. L., Gervais, M. R., Staebler, M. and Weaver, J. (2002). Subcellular distribution and characterization of gill carbonic anhydrase and evidence for a plasma carbonic anhydrase inhibitor in Antarctic fish. J. Comp. Physiol. B 172,287 -295.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tufts, B. L., Esbaugh, A. and Lund, S. G. (2003). Comparative physiology and molecular evolution of carbonic anhydrase in the erythrocytes of early vertebrates. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A 136,259 -269.[CrossRef][Medline]
Türeci, Ö., Sahin, U., Vollmar, E., Siemer, S.,
Gõttert, E., Seitz, G., Parkkila, A. K., Shah, G. N., Grubb, J.,
Pfreundschuh, M. et al. (1998). Human carbonic anhydrase XII:
cDNA cloning, expression, and chromosomal localization of a carbonic anhydrase
gene that is overexpressed in some renal cell cancers. Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA 95,7608
-7613.
Waheed, A., Zhu, X. L. and Sly, W. S. (1992).
Membrane-associated carbonic anhydrase from rat lung. J. Biol.
Chem. 267,3308
-3311.
Waheed, A., Okuyama, T., Heyduk, T. and Sly, W. S. (1996). Carbonic anhydrase IV: purification of a secretory form of the recombinant human enzyme and identification of the positions and importance of its disulfide bonds. Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 333,432 -438.[CrossRef][Medline]
Waser, W. and Heisler, N. (2005). Oxygen
delivery to the fish eye: root effect as crucial factor for elevated retinal
PO2. J. Exp. Biol.
208,4035
-4047.
Wheatly, M. G., Hobe, H. and Wood, C. M. (1984). The mechanisms of acid-base and ionoregulation in the freshwater rainbow trout during environmental hyperoxia and subsequent normoxia. II. The role of the kidney. Respir. Physiol. 55,155 -173.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wilson, J. M. and Laurent, P. (2002). Fish gill morphology: inside out. J. Exp. Zool. 293,192 -213.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wilson, J. M., Randall, D. J., Donowitz, M., Vogl, A. W. and Ip, A. K. Y. (2000a). Immunolocalization of ion-transport proteins to branchial epithelium mitochondria-rich cells in the mudskipper (Periophthalmodon schlosseri). J. Exp. Biol. 203,2297 -2310.[Abstract]
Wilson, J. M., Randall, D. J., Vogl, A. W., Harris, J., Sly, W. S. and Iwama, G. K. (2000b). Branchial carbonic anhydrase is present in the dogfish, Squalus acanthias. Fish Physiol. Biochem. 22,329 -336.[CrossRef]
Wilson, J. M., Morgan, J. D., Vogl, A. W. and Randall, D. J. (2002). Branchial mitochondria-rich cells in the dogfish Squalus acanthias. Comp Biochem. Physiol. A 132,365 -374.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wood, C. M. (1988). Acid-base and ionic
exchanges at gills and kidney after exhaustive exercise in the rainbow trout.
J. Exp. Biol. 136,461
-481.
Wood, C. M. and Caldwell, F. H. (1978). Renal regulation of acid-base balance in a freshwater fish. J. Exp. Zool. 205,301 -307.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wood, C. M. and Jackson, E. B. (1980). Blood acid-base regulation during environmental hyperoxia in the rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri). Respir. Physiol. 42,351 -372.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wood, C. M., Milligan, C. L. and Walsh, P. J. (1999). Renal responses of trout to chronic respiratory and metabolic acidoses and metabolic alkalosis. Am. J. Physiol. 277,R482 -R492.[Medline]
Wood, C. M., Kajimura, M., Mommsen, T. P. and Walsh, P. J.
(2005). Alkaline tide and nitrogen conservation after feeding in
an elasmobranch (Squalus acanthias). J. Exp. Biol.
208,2693
-2705.
Wood, C. M., Munger, R. S., Thompson, J. and Shuttleworth, T. J. (2007). Control of rectal gland secretion by blood acid-base status in the intact dogfish shark (Squalus acanthias). Respir. Physiol. Neurobiol. 156,220 -228.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wright, P. A., Heming, T. A. and Randall, D. J.
(1986). Downstream pH changes in water flowing over the gills of
rainbow trout. J. Exp. Biol.
126,499
-512.
Wurtz, J., Salvenmoser, W. and Pelster, B. (1999). Localization of carbonic anhydrase in swimbladder of European eel (Anguilla anguilla) and perch (Perca fluviatilis). Acta Physiol. Scand. 165,219 -224.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zhu, X. L. and Sly, W. S. (1990). Carbonic
anhydrase IV from human lung: purification, characterization, and comparison
with membrane carbonic anhydrase from human kidney. J. Biol.
Chem. 265,8795
-8801.
![]()
CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter What's this?
Related articles in JEB:
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
K. M. Gilmour, K. Thomas, A. J. Esbaugh, and S. F. Perry Carbonic anhydrase expression and CO2 excretion during early development in zebrafish Danio rerio J. Exp. Biol., December 1, 2009; 212(23): 3837 - 3845. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||