AI Article Synopsis

  • Ongoing ocean acidification negatively affects calcifying marine organisms by reducing their ability to produce shells and skeletons, complicating predictions about their responses to environmental changes.
  • Calcification in these organisms is primarily driven by the transformation of bicarbonate into carbonate inside their cells, supported by active proton pumping that maintains this process across various levels of carbon dioxide.
  • A specific enzyme, V-type H ATPase, is identified as key in facilitating this proton flux, suggesting that biomineralization can continue despite low levels of carbonate ions, potentially stabilizing global marine carbonate production.

Article Abstract

Ongoing ocean acidification is widely reported to reduce the ability of calcifying marine organisms to produce their shells and skeletons. Whereas increased dissolution due to acidification is a largely inorganic process, strong organismal control over biomineralization influences calcification and hence complicates predicting the response of marine calcifyers. Here we show that calcification is driven by rapid transformation of bicarbonate into carbonate inside the cytoplasm, achieved by active outward proton pumping. Moreover, this proton flux is maintained over a wide range of pCO levels. We furthermore show that a V-type H ATPase is responsible for the proton flux and thereby calcification. External transformation of bicarbonate into CO due to the proton pumping implies that biomineralization does not rely on availability of carbonate ions, but total dissolved CO may not reduce calcification, thereby potentially maintaining the current global marine carbonate production.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5290161PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14145DOI Listing

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