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First published online May 15, 2009
Journal of Experimental Biology 212, 1745-1752 (2009)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2009
doi: 10.1242/jeb.026054
Review Article |
Ion uptake and acid secretion in zebrafish (Danio rerio)
Institute of Cellular and Organismic Biology, Academia Sinica, Nankang, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China
e-mail: pphwang{at}gate.sinica.edu.tw
Accepted 21 January 2009
| Summary |
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Key words: mitochondria-rich cells, embryo, ion regulation, acid–base regulation
| Introduction |
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| H+-ATPase rich (HR) cells |
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Apical Na+-uptake pathway
The next question concerns the apical Na+-uptake pathways in
zebrafish HR cells. According to the current models described above, ENaC or
NHE was the first candidate to be considered. In a study by Boisen and
colleagues (Boisen et al.,
2003
), 10–5 to 10–4 mol
l–1 of amiloride (a Na+-uptake inhibitor) did not
affect the Na+ uptake in zebrafish acclimated to soft fresh water
(FW) ([Na+]=0.035 mmol l–1,
[Ca2+]=0.004 mmol l–1, pH 6.0), while
5x10–5 mol l–1 EIPA (an NHE-specific
inhibitor) enhanced its uptake; thus it was concluded that the pathway for
Na+ uptake may be distinct from ENaC. In a study by Esaki and
colleagues (Esaki et al.,
2007
), Na+ accumulation (monitored by Sodium Green) in
HR cells in the skin of zebrafish embryo was inhibited by both
10–4 mol l–1 amiloride and
10–5 mol l–1 EIPA, but not by a lower
concentration (10–5 mol l–1) of amiloride,
and NHE was therefore suggested to be the major player in the
Na+-uptake pathway. Subsequently, Yan and colleagues
(Yan et al., 2007
) provided
convincing molecular physiological evidence to support the argument proposed
by Boisen and colleagues (Boisen et al.,
2003
) and Esaki and coworkers
(Esaki et al., 2007
). In the
zebrafish SL9 family, eight members, zNHE1, -2, -3a, -3b, -5, -6, -7 and -8,
were identified, and all of them, except zNHE3a, are expressed in gills.
However, triple ISH and ICC experiments demonstrated that only zNHE3b mRNA is
specifically and predominantly expressed in HR cells
(Yan et al., 2007
).
Acclimation to a low-Na+ artificial FW that stimulated fish
Na+ uptake (Chang et al.,
2001
) also caused upregulation of zNHE3b mRNA expression in
zebrafish gills (Yan et al.,
2007
), indicating the major role of NHE3b in the apical
Na+-uptake pathway of zebrafish HR cells.
So far, no orthologues of the mammalian ENaC have been found in databases
of the genomes of zebrafish, fugu and other fish species. However, several
studies on other species including rainbow trout favoured the operation of
ENaC-like channels in the apical Na+-uptake pathway. Goss and
colleagues (Reid et al., 2003
;
Parks et al., 2007
) used
peanut lectin agglutinin (PNA) to isolate two types of ionocytes,
PNA– and PNA+ cells, from rainbow trout
(Oncorhynchus mykiss) gills and demonstrated phenamil-sensitive
22Na+ uptake and intracellular acidification in the
isolated PNA– MR cells, providing in vitro
pharmacological and physiological evidence for the involvement of ENaC-like
channels in the Na+-uptake mechanism of fish gills. In a recent
review, Parks and colleagues (Parks et
al., 2008
) emphasized the thermodynamic constraints that prevent
electroneutral apical NHE from functioning in most FW environments, thus
favouring the applicability of ENaC-like channels to fish
Na+-uptake mechanisms. Interestingly, Perry and colleagues
(Ivanis et al., 2008
) recently
used double ISH and/or ICC to colocalize the mRNA and protein of both NHE2 and
-3 in PNA+ MR cells in gill sections of rainbow trout. This
evidence appears to be against the argument of Goss's group, as described
above, of the unfavourable operation of NHE in isolated trout gill cells
(Parks et al., 2007
;
Parks et al., 2008
). These
differences between zebrafish and rainbow trout indicate that apical
Na+-uptake mechanisms may be species specific. However, several
urgent issues remain to be resolved to comprehensively clarify these diverse
pathways; convincing molecular evidence for the existence of ENaC or
equivalent channels and the mechanism to drive NHE's electroneutral operation.
In mammals, amiloride-sensitive cation channels (ASICs) are members of the
same gene family of ENaC, but ISH data indicated that none of the six
zebrafish ASIC paralogues was specifically expressed in zebrafish gills
(Paukert et al., 2004
). On the
other hand, the NHE family and another Na+/H+ antiporter
(NHA) family belong to the same monovalent cation proton antiporter (CPA)
superfamily (Brett et al.,
2005
). Bacterial NHA was proven to show electrogenic stoichiometry
with 2 H+ for every Na+
(Taglicht et al., 1993
). In
zebrafish genetic databases, we found an orthologue of bacterial NHA. It will
be challenging and interesting to study whether zebrafish NHA is also
electrogenic so that it can transport Na+ and H+ in
situations that might not favour the operation of zebrafish NHE3 (S. F. Perry,
personal communication).
Membrane-associated and cytosolic carbonic anhydrases
Zebrafish HR cells specifically express apical H+-ATPase and NHE
as do mammalian renal proximal tubular cells
(Yan et al., 2007
), which are
responsible for about 70% of sodium and 80% of bicarbonate reabsorption in
mammalian nephrons (Wagner et al.,
2004
). As HR cells were demonstrated to have similar functions of
acid–base regulation and Na+ uptake, they should also express
carbonic anhydrases (CAs) and the basolateral
H+–HCO3+ cotransporter (NBC) to fulfill
the transepithelial transport mechanisms, as do proximal tubular cells.
Recently, Lin and colleagues (Lin et al.,
2008
) identified 20 CA isoforms and cloned 10 of them. Triple ISH
and ICC results showed that only two isoforms, zCA2-like a and zCA15a, were
specifically expressed in HR cells but not in other cells in zebrafish
skin/gills. Subsequent zCA2-like a or zCA15a knockdown experiments provided
molecular physiological evidence to support the roles of the two CA isoforms
in the acid–base regulation and Na+-uptake functions of
zebrafish HR cells. Morphants of zCA15a had increased H+ activity
at the apical surface of HR cells at 24 h post-fertilization, while those of
zCA2-like a showed no change. Later, at 96 h post-fertilization, both zCA15a
and zCA2-like a showed decreased H+ activity and increased
Na+ uptake, with concomitant upregulation of zNHE3b and
downregulation of zATP6V1a (H+-ATPase A-subunit) expression
(Lin et al., 2008
),
demonstrating the roles of the 2 CA isoforms in the functions of HR cells. A
study by Hirose's group (Esaki et al.,
2007
) also supported this notion; zCA2-like mRNA was colocalized
in Sodium Green-accumulating HR cells, and 10 µmol l–1
ethoxzolamide (a CA inhibitor) was found to abolish 65% of the Sodium Green
accumulation in zebrafish HR cells. On the other hand, acclimation to both
acidic and low-Na+ FW caused upregulation of zCA15a expression but
did not change the zCA2-like a mRNA level in zebrafish gills
(Lin et al., 2008
).
Interestingly, knockdown of zCA2-like a caused upregulation of zCA15a
expression, while knockdown of zCA15a did not affect the expression of
zCA2-like a in zebrafish morphants. It is probable that the intact zCA2-like a
is sufficient to overcome the physiological defects caused by zCA15a
knockdown, and it may provide sufficient CA activity to fulfill the
physiological needs in zebrafish coping with different environments. In
mammalian kidneys, CA2 accounts for 95% of CA activity and shows the highest
catalytic rate, compared with other membrane-associated CA paralogues
(Purkerson and Schwartz,
2007
). Taken together, zebrafish HR cells appear to be similar to
mammal renal proximal tubular cells
(Purkerson and Schwartz,
2007
), in which apical CA4 (an orthologue of zCA15a) and cytosolic
CA2 (an orthologue of zCA2-like a) are involved in driving NHE3. In structural
terms, zCA15a has a glycosylphosphatidylinositol lipid anchor, through which
the enzyme may be tethered to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane, as are
trout and human CA4 in apical and basolateral membranes of kidney cells
(Georgalis et al., 2006
;
Purkerson and Schwartz, 2007
).
Impairing the function of zCA15a by injecting specific morpholinos caused a
direct decline in the H+ concentration at the apical surface of HR
cells within 24 h, supporting the apical localization of the enzyme. This,
however, needs to be verified using a specific antibody in the future. On the
other hand, it is interesting and important to study whether there are other
CA isoforms, like CA12 and CA14, which are also expressed and function in
zebrafish HR cells as in mammalian kidney cells
(Purkerson and Schwartz,
2007
).
Basolateral transport pathways
NBC1 has been immunocytochemically identified in gill ionocytes of Osorezan
dace (Tribolodon hakonensis)
(Hirata et al., 2003
) and
rainbow trout (Parks et al.,
2007
). In a study on isolated rainbow trout gill
PNA– cells (Parks et al.,
2007
), electrogenic NBC activity was supported by DIDS (an NBC
inhibitor)-sensitive, Na+-induced membrane potential depolarization
as observed via imaging of the voltage-sensitive dye bis-oxonol. The
identification and functional analysis of NBC in zebrafish HR cells remain to
be done. Our preliminary experiments showed that an NBC1 isoform was expressed
in a specific group of cells in zebrafish skin/gills cells
(Fig. 2B), and further
experiments are needed to identify the cell type that expresses NBC1. In
mammalian proximal tubular cells, Na+–K+-ATPase
(NKA) pumps cytosolic Na+ across the basolateral membrane and also
provides an intracellular negative potential to drive the electrogenic
Na+/HCO3– transport of basolateral
kNBC1 (Purkerson and Schwartz,
2007
). On the other hand, Esaki and colleagues
(Esaki et al., 2007
) reported
that HR cells express only a slightly lower level of NKA than
Na+–K+-ATPase-rich (NaR) cells, implying a role of
NKA in providing intracellular low-Na+ and negative gradients to
drive the basolateral transport pathways in HR cells.
Regulation of NHE and H+-ATPase
Interestingly, environmental situations appear to cause differential
expression and function of the related transporters and enzymes in zebrafish
HR cells. Acclimation to low-Na+ FW caused upregulation of zNHE3b
and downregulation of H+-ATPase, while an acidic environment
induced reverse responses, downregulation of zNHE3b and upregulation of
H+-ATPase, in zebrafish HR cells
(Yan et al., 2007
). Knockdown
of zCA2-like a or zCA14b also caused stimulation of zNHE3b and suppression of
H+-ATPase (Lin et al.,
2008
). Taking all these findings together, a model for
Na+-uptake and acid–base regulation in zebrafish HR cells was
proposed (Yan et al., 2007
):
in low-Na+ environments, apical H+-ATPase is
downregulated to maintain an intracellular H+ gradient to
facilitate Na+ uptake via apical zNHE3b, which is the
dominant player in regulating the internal Na+ balance. In acidic
environments, however, H+-ATPase, the dominant player, is
upregulated to enhance acid secretion to maintain the internal acid–base
balance, and zNHE3b is greatly downregulated because the high ambient
H+ does not favour its operation. This reflects partitioning of the
apical zNHE3b and H+-ATPase in HR cell functions to meet different
physiological requirements in various harsh environments. However, it is
notable that the situation may be species specific. In rainbow trout gills,
NHE2 and H+-ATPase are respectively expressed in PNA+
and PNA– cells (Ivanis et
al., 2008
), and hypercapnia treatment was found to upregulate the
expression of the two transporters in the respective cells
(Galvez et al., 2002
;
Ivanis et al., 2008
).
| NaR cells |
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5) against 1020 amino acids of the avian
subunit core polypeptide (Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank of Iowa
University; Fig. 2A). The
function and expression patterns of transporters in NaR cells appear to be
more conclusive compared with those in HR cells (as described above) and
Na+–Cl–-cotransporter (NCC) cells (see
below). According to the current model in mammals, active transcellular
Ca2+ transport is carried out through the operation of apical
epithelial Ca2+ channels (ECaC, TRPV5 and/or TRPV6), and the
basolateral plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase (PMCA) and
Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX)
(Hoenderop et al., 2005
The expression and function of Ca2+ transporters in zebrafish
skin/gill ionocytes are supported by studies of other species. In tilapia
(O. mossambicus), mRNAs of ECaC, PMCA2 and NCX1b were all
co-localized in MR cells (with NKA as the marker), and ECaC expression was
also stimulated by a low-Ca2+ environment (B. K. Liao, A. N. Deng
and P.-P.H., unpublished data). Similarly, in rainbow trout, ECaC mRNA and
protein were localized in gill cells
(Shahsavarani et al., 2006
)
and were upregulated by soft FW (20–30 mmol l–1
Ca2+) or hypercapnia
(Shahsavarani and Perry,
2006
). However, localization of ECaC in gill cell populations
appears to be much more complicated in rainbow trout than in zebrafish and
tilapia. The mRNA and protein of ECaC were localized in PNA+ and
PNA– MR cell populations as well as pavement cells
(Shahsavarani et al., 2006
).
On the other hand, the Ca+-uptake capacity in isolated rainbow
trout gill PNA+ cells was about 3-fold higher than that in
PNA– cells, indicating the major role of PNA+
cells in the trout gill Ca+-uptake mechanism
(Galvez et al., 2006
), while
ECaC mRNA levels in PNA– cells were lower, although
non-significantly, than in PNA+ cells
(Shahsavarani et al., 2006
).
Taken together, it may be that only PNA+ cells express ECaC and
basolateral transporters (PMCA and NCX) and thus can achieve the entire
transepithelial Ca+ pathway, although no data for the existence
PMCA and NCX in trout gill cells are available so far. Indeed, it was also
found that not all ECaC-expressing cells co-expressed both zPMCA2 and zNCX1b
in zebrafish gill NaR cell populations
(Liao et al., 2007
), which may
be analogous to trout PNA+ cells (see below). Fish gill cells that
express only one or two (never all) of the three major Ca2+
transporters may be in the process of terminal differentiation as Hsiao and
coworkers (Hsiao et al., 2007
)
reported in zebrafish embryonic skin ionocytes. Alternatively, the
Ca2+ transporter(s) expressed in these cells may be involved in
intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis or other cellular events
(Prasad et al., 2007
;
Reppel et al., 2007
), and this
needs to be clarified in further investigations. Whether NaR cells are
responsible for ion-transport functions other than Ca2+ uptake is
another issue that should be considered.
| NCC cells |
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The next question concerns how NCC cells accomplish the overall
transepithelial Cl–-uptake pathway. Na+
concentrations ranging from 35 to 77 mmol l–1 in the lumen of
mammalian DCTs (Good et al.,
1984
) and low intracellular Na+ resulting from
basolateral NKA provide a sufficient Na+ gradient to drive the
operation of the apical NCC in DCT cells
(Reilly and Ellison, 2000
). In
contrast, in ambient FW (local tap water in Taipei), zebrafish normally have
much lower Na+/Cl– levels, creating ion gradients
that may not be favourable for the operation of NCC in apical membranes of NCC
cells in zebrafish. Hiroi and colleagues
(Hiroi et al., 2008
) proposed
that basolateral NKA may maintain a low intracellular Na+, at least
in the apical region, thus providing a gradient to drive the operation of the
NCC in tilapia MR cells. Another possibility is that zebrafish and tilapia
NCCs may differ from the mammalian orthologue in transport kinetics or
stoichiometry. All these issues remain to be resolved.
Basolateral Cl– transport
Pathways for the basolateral Cl– exit from zebrafish NCC
cells should also be taken into consideration with the overall transcellular
Cl– transport machinery. The final step, basolateral
Cl– exit, in human renal Cl– reabsorption is
mainly achieved via Cl– channels (ClCs) composed of
the pore-forming unit ClC-Kb, and the β-subunit barttin
(Lang et al., 2005
). From
zebrafish genetic databases, nine orthologues of mammalian ClCs were
identified. Very few studies have investigated ClCs in other fish species. In
tilapia, ClC3 and -5 were cloned and found to be expressed in various organs
including gills, but they were suggested to function as intracellular
Cl– channels based on an in vitro functional
analysis (Miyazaki et al.,
2002
). Recently, higher protein expression analysed by an anti-rat
ClC3 antibody was found in FW pufferfish gills than in SW ones
(Tang and Lee, 2007
). On the
other hand, a cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) was
also proposed to be a candidate for basolateral Cl– exit
based on its basolateral localization in pavement and MR cells in killifish
operculum (Marshall, 2002
). In
NCC cells, basolateral NKA may provide the intracellular negative gradient for
driving the basolateral Cl– channels to transport
Cl– out of NCC cells, as in mammalian DCT cells. Further
studies are needed to draw definitive conclusions on the mechanisms for
basolateral Cl– exit from NCC cells.
| Other pathways |
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| Comparison of ionocytes between species |
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and β cells,
in gills of several species acclimated to FW based on the transmission
electron microscopic ultrastructure and the location in gill filaments. By
examining the effects of environmental salinity or ion levels and exogenous
hormones on the density of
and β MR cells
(Pisam et al., 1993
MR cells exerted dual functions: Cl– secretion in SW
and Na+ uptake in FW (Pisam et
al., 1993
Recently, particularly in zebrafish, rainbow trout and tilapia, different
types of ionocytes were identified and characterized with specific molecular
markers, and their functions were further analysed by various cellular and
molecular physiological approaches. As discussed above in zebrafish
skin/gills, at least three types of ionocytes, HR cells, NaR cells and NCC
cells, have been identified by double/triple ISH and/or ICC for the related
ion transporters and enzymes, and their respective ion-transport functions of
Na+ uptake/acid secretion, Ca2+ uptake and
Cl– uptake were demonstrated based on a loss-of-function
approach with specific transport (or enzyme) morpholinos or on correlations of
a transporter's expression and ion influxes. Ionocytes in zebrafish provide an
alternative platform for further molecular physiological investigations of the
functions and their regulation in fish ion-uptake and acid–base balance
mechanisms. As shown in Fig. 4,
we attempted to make models for other species analogous to the model of
zebrafish ionocytes, from the point of view of expression patterns of
transporters. In tilapia, type-II and type-III MR cells are analogous to
zebrafish NCC cells and HR cells, respectively. However, localization of
H+-ATPase (with an anti-bovine adrenal medulla V-ATPase subunit A
antibody) in tilapia embryonic skin was found to be confined to the apical
membrane of pavement cells in a previous study
(Hiroi et al., 1998
), and this
needs to be confirmed because different results were obtained using an
anti-killifish V-ATPase A subunit antibody
(Katoh et al., 2003
) (T.
Kaneko and J. Hiroi, personal communication). Moreover, ECaC, the mRNA of
which was specifically expressed in zebrafish NaR cells, was localized using a
homologous antibody to most tilapia MR cells (T. Kaneko, personal
communication).
|
| Conclusions and perspectives |
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List of abbreviations
| Footnotes |
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