Symbiotic dinoflagellates of the giant clam, Tridacna squamosa, express an extracellular alpha carbonic anhydrase associated with the plasma membrane to promote HCO3− dehydration and CO2 uptake during illumination
Giant clams generally harbor phototrophic Symbiodiniaceae dinoflagellates of genera Symbiodinium, Cladocopium, and Durusdinium . The coccoid symbiotic dinoflagellates (zooxanthellae) reside extracellularly inside the lumen of zooxanthellal tubules in the colorful outer mantle. They obtain from the h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Coral reefs 2022-08, Vol.41 (4), p.1097-1113 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Giant clams generally harbor phototrophic Symbiodiniaceae dinoflagellates of genera
Symbiodinium, Cladocopium,
and
Durusdinium
. The coccoid symbiotic dinoflagellates (zooxanthellae) reside extracellularly inside the lumen of zooxanthellal tubules in the colorful outer mantle. They obtain from the host inorganic carbon (C
i
) for photosynthesis and supply photosynthate to the host. The outer mantle has a host-derived carbon concentration mechanism (CCM) to facilitate the transport of C
i
from the hemolymph into the luminal fluid. To regulate C
i
uptake, the symbionts probably possess their own CCMs that comprise an extracellular
alpha carbonic anhydrase
(
αCA
) and a proton transporter. Indeed, we obtained from the outer mantle of the giant clam,
Tridacna squamosa
, three complete cDNA coding sequences of a membrane-associated
αCA
derived from
Symbiodinium
(
Symb-αCA
)
, Cladocopium
(
Clad-αCA
), and
Durusdinium
(
Duru-αCA
), which consisted of 2808, 2847, and 2829 bp, respectively. The respective encoded proteins had 935 (104.7 kDa), 948 (106.1 kDa), and 942 (105 kDa) amino acids, each containing a transmembrane domain. The outer mantle had the highest level of
Duru-αCA
transcripts. Phenogramic analyses denoted Duru-αCA as an extracellular CA closely associated with human CA4 and had a dinoflagellate-origin. Using an antibody that could react comprehensively with zooxanthellae-αCAs (Zoox-αCA) derived from all three genera of dinoflagellate, immunofluorescence microscopy revealed immuno-labeling at the dinoflagellate’s plasma membrane. As Symb-αCA, Clad-αCA, and Duru-αCA possessed extracellular catalytic domains, they could catalyze the dehydration of HCO
3
−
to CO
2
in the luminal fluid. Importantly, illumination led to significant increases in the gene and protein expression levels of
Zoox-αCA
/Zoox-αCA in the outer mantle of
T. squamosa
. Taken together, Zoox-αCA could be part of the symbiont’s light-enhanced external CCM to promote and regulate the acquisition of C
i
from the host for photosynthesis. Our results also suggested that the potentials of generating CO
2
adjacent to the symbionts’ plasma membrane could differ among different phylotypes of
Symbiodinium
and
Cladocopium
. |
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ISSN: | 0722-4028 1432-0975 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00338-022-02278-z |