Previous work with isolated outer membrane vesicles of lobster branchiostegite epithelial cells has shown that Ca uptake by these structures is significantly (p < 0.02) reduced by an incremental decrease in saline pH (increased proton concentration) and that this decrease is due to competitive inhibition between carrier-mediated transport of Ca and hydrogen ions. The present paper extends these previous findings and describes the combined effects of pH and cationic heavy metals on branchiostegite uptake of Ca. Partially purified membrane vesicles of branchiostegite cells were produced by a homogenization/centrifugation method and were loaded with mannitol at pH 7.0. The time course of 1 mM Ca uptake in a mannitol medium at pH 8.5 containing 100 µM verapamil (Ca channel blocker) was hyperbolic and approached equilibrium at 30 min. This uptake was either significantly reduced (p < 0.05) by the addition of 5 µM Zn or essentially abolished with the addition of 5 µM Cu. Increasing zinc concentrations (5-500 µM) reduced 1 mM Ca uptake at pH 8.5 or 7.5 in a hyperbolic fashion with the remaining non-inhibited uptake due to apparent non-specific binding. Uptake of 1 mM Ca at pH 8.5, 7.5, 7.5 + Zn, and 7.5 + Zn + Cu + Cd in the presence of 100 µM verapamil displayed a stepwise reduction of Ca uptake with the addition of each treatment until only non-specific isotope binding occurred with all cation inhibitors. Ca influxes (15 s uptakes; 0.25-5.0 mM calcium + 100 µM verapamil) in the presence and absence of 10 µM Zn were both hyperbolic functions of calcium concentration. The curve with Zn displayed a transport K twice that of the control (p < 0.05), while inhibitor and control curve J values were not significantly different (p > 0.05), suggesting competitive inhibition between Ca and Zn influxes. Analysis of the relative inhibitory effects of increased proton or heavy metal interaction with Ca uptake suggests that divalent metals may reduce the calcium transport about twice as much as a drop in pH, but together, they appear to abolish carrier-mediated transport.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00360-019-01227-7 | DOI Listing |
J Comp Physiol B
October 2019
Department of Biology, University of North Florida, Jacksonville, FL, 32224, USA.
Previous work with isolated outer membrane vesicles of lobster branchiostegite epithelial cells has shown that Ca uptake by these structures is significantly (p < 0.02) reduced by an incremental decrease in saline pH (increased proton concentration) and that this decrease is due to competitive inhibition between carrier-mediated transport of Ca and hydrogen ions. The present paper extends these previous findings and describes the combined effects of pH and cationic heavy metals on branchiostegite uptake of Ca.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Comp Physiol B
September 2018
Department of Biology, University of North Florida, Jacksonville, FL, 32224, USA.
Gill chambers of the Atlantic lobster, Homarus americanus, possess three structures that are involved with respiration and ion regulation: gill filaments, epipodites, and branchiostegites. This paper describes ion transport mechanisms present in the plasma membranes of branchiostegite epithelial cells and the effects of pH on the uptake of Ca by these processes. Partially purified membrane vesicles (PPMV) of branchiostegite cells were produced by a homogenization/centrifugation method that has previously been used to define ion transport processes in both crab and lobster gill tissues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFish Shellfish Immunol
December 2010
Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA.
Epizootic shell disease is a poorly understood condition that has significantly affected the American lobster fishery in New England (northeastern US) since the 1990s. Here we present the results of a study to identify changes in gene expression in lobsters exhibiting symptoms of epizootic shell disease. Suppressive subtractive hybridization (SSH) was used to compare gene expression between cDNA pools from diseased (symptomatic) and apparently healthy (asymptomatic) lobsters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegr Comp Biol
December 2006
Center for Marine Functional Genomics, Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory Salsbury Cove, Maine 04672, USA.
Expressed sequence tags (ESTs) were produced for normalized cDNA libraries prepared from several tissues of 2 marine crustaceans, the green shore crab Carcinus maenas and the American lobster Homarus americanus. Tissues represented in the Carcinus library were anterior and posterior gills, hypodermis, heart, hepatopancreas, antennal gland, brain, testis, and skeletal muscle, obtained from animals acclimated to 35 and 10‰ salinity. Tissues represented in the Homarus library were gill, epipodite, branchiostegite, heart, ovary, testis, antennal gland, skeletal muscle, hepatopancreas, and brain, obtained from intermolt and post-molt animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Histochem Cytochem
August 2001
Laboratoire d' Ecophysiologie des Invertébrés, Université de Montpellier II, Montpellier, France.
We examined the ontogeny of the osmoregulatory sites of the branchial cavity in embryonic and early postembryonic stages of the European lobster Homarus gammarus through transmission electron microscopy, immunofluorescence microscopy, and immunogold electron microscopy using a monoclonal antibody IgGalpha(5) raised against the avian alpha-subunit of the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase. In mid-late embryos, Na(+),K(+)-ATPase was located along the pleurites and within the epipodite buds. In late embryos just before hatching, the enzyme was confined to the epipodite epithelia.
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