Carbonic anhydrase in the midgut of larval Aedes aegypti: cloning, localization and inhibition
1 The Whitney Laboratory, University of Florida, Saint Augustine, FL 32080, USA,
2 Department of Biology, Hamilton College, Clinton, NY 13323, USA and
3 Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: pjl{at}whitney.ufl.edu)
Accepted 12 December 2001
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Summary |
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Key words: carbonic anhydrase, mosquito, Aedes aegypti, Drosophila melanogaster, larva, midgut, arthropod, alkalization, cDNA, bicarbonate.
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Introduction |
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An interesting and perplexing feature of the mosquito larva midgut is that the luminal compartment exhibits one of the highest pH values known to be generated by a biological system. The pH inside the lumen varies from around 8.0 in the gastric caeca to 11.0 in the anterior midgut to approximately 7.0 in the posterior midgut. The role of the alkaline pH in the anterior midgut is a point of some controversy. It has been suggested that the high pH contributes to the digestion of plant detritus and, in particular, to the dissociation of tanninprotein complexes that ultimately result in enhanced assimilation of proteins (Martin et al., 1980). A detailed model that describes the mechanisms that drive alkalization of the midgut has not been elucidated, but several enzymes have been hypothetically implicated in the process. Among the functions that must be regulated by components of the gut system are the transfer of H+ and the maintenance of the pH gradient generated by this transfer.
There is strong immunohistochemical (Zhuang et al., 1999) and physiological (Clark et al., 1999
; Boudko et al., 2001b
) evidence that an electrogenic, basal H+ V-ATPase energizes luminal alkalization in the anterior midgut by producing a net extrusion of protons out of the lumen and a hyperpolarization of the basal membrane. In contrast, V-ATPase appears to be localized in the apical membrane of the posterior midgut and gastric caeca, providing a reversed H+-pumping capacity relative to the anterior midgut (Zhuang et al., 1999
). A system capable of generating a high luminal pH is likely to be buffered by CO32, which has a pKa of approximately 10.3. Bicarbonate (and ultimately carbonate) ions are produced in vivo primarily by the enzymatic action of carbonic anhydrase. This enzyme catalyzes the reversible hydration/dehydration of carbon dioxide and bicarbonate in most complex organisms. Its activity contributes to the transfer and accumulation of H+ or HCO3 in bacteria, plants, vertebrates and invertebrates. Although there are innumerable reports related to the isolation of carbonic anhydrase from vertebrates, studies involving carbonic anhydrase from invertebrates are very rare, and there are no reports of the isolation of carbonic anhydrase from adult mosquitoes or their larvae.
The purpose of this study was to determine the presence and location of carbonic anhydrase in the midgut of the larva of Aedes aegypti and to clone and characterize the enzyme. To investigate the role of carbonic anhydrase in the alkalization of the larval midgut, the effects of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors were tested. Here, we report the cloning and localization of the first carbonic anhydrase from mosquito larvae and, in particular, from the midgut epithelium of larval Aedes aegypti. A cDNA clone isolated from fourth-instar Aedes aegypti midgut (termed A-CA) revealed sequence homology to the -carbonic anhydrases (Hewett-Emmett, 2000
). Histochemistry and in situ hybridization showed that the enzyme appears to be localized throughout the midgut, although preferentially in the gastric caeca and posterior regions. In addition, classic carbonic anhydrase inhibitors such as acetazolamide and methazolamide inhibit the mosquito enzyme in the midgut.
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Materials and methods |
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Preparation and fixation of tissue
To dissect out the midgut, the cold-immobilized larvae were pinned down by the head (using fine stainless-steel pins) to a Sylgard layer at the bottom of a Petri dish. The anal segment and the saddle papillae were removed using ultra-fine scissors and forceps, and an incision was made longitudinally along the thorax. The cuticle was gently pulled apart, and the midgut and gastric caeca were removed. In some cases, the gut contents enclosed in the peritrophic membrane slid out, leaving behind the empty midgut. In other cases, it was necessary to remove the peritrophic membrane and its contents manually. For enzyme histochemistry, fixation was in 3 % glutaraldehyde in 0.1 mol l1 phosphate buffer, pH 7.3, overnight at 4°C (Ridgway and Moffet, 1986). For in situ hybridization, dissected tissues were fixed overnight in 4 % paraformaldehyde in 0.1 mol l1 cacodylate buffer (pH 7.2).
In some cases, the dissected larval midguts were photographed using a Nikon FX-35DX camera mounted on a Nikon SMZ-10 dissecting microscope. In other cases, digital images were acquired using a Leica DMR microscope equipped with a Hammamatsu CCD camera. All images were assembled using CorelDraw-9 software.
Bromothymol Blue qualitative assay
A qualitative test to detect carbonic anhydrase activity in mosquito larval midgut homogenates was adapted from the test described by Tashian (1969). The procedure included immersing a piece of Whatman no.1 paper in a solution made with 0.15 % Bromothymol Blue (BTB) in ice-cold 25 mmol l1 Tris-HCl, 0.1 mol l1 Na2SO4, pH 8.0. The paper was allowed to soak completely in this blue solution and was placed on ice for 30 min. The colored filter was then transferred to a Petri dish with a hole in the lid. Samples of mosquito larval midgut homogenate were prepared by sonicating midguts of early fourth-instar larvae in ice-cold 25 mmol l1 Tris-HCl, 0.1 mol l1 Na2SO4, pH 8.0 containing protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma-Aldrich; diluted 1:1000). An autopipette was used to spot exactly 4 µl samples on the paper. Controls were also spotted. The controls included a buffer with protease inhibitor and controls for the liver/yeast food added to the medium in which the mosquito larvae were reared. These food controls included a range of concentration from 1 to 100 µg ml1 liver powder and yeast. Carbonic anhydrase from bovine erythrocytes (Sigma-Aldrich) dissolved in the buffer described above was used as an additional control.
A steady stream of CO2 at 34.5 kPa was blown for 3 s through the opening on the lid of the Petri dish, and the dish was sealed and kept on ice. The formation of yellow spots in a few seconds was indicative of carbonic anhydrase activity.
Effect of methazolamide on the alkalization of the midgut of live larvae
The effect of a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor (methazolamide) on gut alkalization and the capacity of whole larvae to alkalize their culture medium was examined. Flat-bottomed 24-well tissue culture plates (Sarstedt, Inc.) were filled with 1 ml of 25 mmol l1 Tris-HCl, 0.1 mol l1 Na2SO4 buffer, pH 8.5. BTB solution was added to each well to a final concentration of 0.003 %. Five live early fourth-instar larvae that had been placed in BTB indicator solution for 2 h were added to each of the wells, and the larvae were allowed to adjust to their new environment for 30 min. Methazolamide dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at concentrations ranging from 106 to 8x103 mol l1 was added to the wells. Controls included DMSO with indicator and no inhibitor and controls with buffer, indicator and no DMSO. The plates were scanned, using a Hewlett Packard ScanJet 6100C scanner, before addition of the inhibitor and 5 h later. In addition, the midguts were dissected and photographed to record the pH within the gut lumen as revealed by the color of ingested BTB.
18O-exchange method to measure carbonic anhydrase activity
Tissue homogenate carbonic anhydrase activity was measured using the 18O-exchange method (Silverman and Tu, 1986). Midguts were dissected, and the peritrophic membrane was removed together with its contents. Individual measurements of carbonic anhydrase activity were performed with pooled samples of gastric caeca, anterior midgut, posterior midgut and Malpighian tubules. The method involved adding 18O-labeled NaHCO3 to 0.1 mol l1 Hepes buffer, pH 7.6, at 9.5°C. The disappearance of 18O from CO2 and/or HCO3 upon addition of the enzyme preparations was monitored. Measurements of 18O in CO2 were accomplished with a mass spectrometer, using a CO2-permeable inlet that allowed very rapid, continuous measurement of the isotopic content of CO2 in solution. All samples were centrifuged at 14 000 revs min1 at room temperature (2425°C) prior to the assay to remove food and insoluble material. Inhibition was accomplished by adding methazolamide to a final concentration of 106 mol l1.
Isolation of RNA and synthesis of cDNA
Total RNA was isolated from freshly dissected mosquito larval midguts using TRI Reagent (Molecular Research Center, Inc., Cincinnati, OH, USA) according to the manufacturers instructions. Briefly, 100 A. aegypti gut epithelial organs, including fore-, mid- and hindgut (approximately 20 mg), were dissected into 200 µl of ice-cold TRI Reagent and homogenized in a sterile microcentrifuge tube. TRI Reagent (600 µl) was added to the homogenate and incubated for 5 min at room temperature. The homogenate was then extracted with chloroform and precipitated with isopropanol. The RNA pellet was washed with 75 % ethanol, dried in air and resuspended in diethylpyrocarbonate-treated water. RNA concentrations were calculated from the absorbance at 260 nm.
Total RNA (10 µg) was reverse-transcribed in a 20 µl reaction mixture using 5 pmol of oligo(dT)12-18 and 200 units of Superscript II RNase H-reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies, Inc., Grand Island, NY, USA), according to the manufacturers instructions.
Cloning of carbonic anhydrase from mosquito larval midgut
Degenerate oligonucleotides were designed for the regions of conserved amino acids among carbonic anhydrase proteins as determined by BLAST analysis of several vertebrate and two putative, but annotated, carbonic anhydrases from the Drosophila melanogaster sequence data base.
The primer sequences used initially were: CA5F, 5'-GARCARTTYCAYTKY CAYTGGGG-3'; and CA3R, 5'-GTIARISWNCCYTCRTA-3', where N=G, A, T or C, K=G or T, S=G or C, W=A or T, Y=C or T and R=A or G. PCR reactions were performed in a total volume of 20 µl, and the reaction mixture contained 0.1 µg of cDNA as template, 0.2 µmol l1 of each primer, 200 µmol l1 each of deoxynucleotidyl triphosphates, 1x PCR buffer and 1 unit of Taq polymerase (Clontech). The PCR cycling profile was: 94°C for 5 min, 55°C for 2 min and 72°C for 3 min, followed by six cycles of 94°C for 0.5 min, 53°C (in increments of 2°C per cycle) for 1 min and 72°C for 1 min and 35 cycles of 94°C for 0.5 min, 45°C for 1 min and 72°C for 2 min followed by a final extension at 72°C for 15 min. The PCR products were visualized on 1 % agarose gels, and specific products were gel-extracted (Qiagen, Inc, Valencia, CA, USA), diluted 1:100 in water and used as template for a second, identical PCR. The resulting 297-base-pair (bp) product was gel-purified, ligated into pGem-T and transformed into JM109 Escherichia coli for subcloning.
3' and 5' rapid amplification of cDNA ends
The cDNA was extended into the 3'-and 5'-untranslated regions (UTRs) by rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE), modified from the method of Zhang and Frohman (1997). Exact primers were then defined on the basis of UTRs. Reverse-transcriptase/polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was then used to produce a single product whose consensus start and stop codons bracket 894 nucleotides encoding a 298-residue polypeptide.
Sequencing
Plasmid DNA from individual colonies was purified using a Qiaprep Plasmid Mini kit (Qiagen Inc., Valencia, CA, USA). The plasmid DNA was then sequenced using the ABI Prism Big Dye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Kit (PE Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) and the reaction products were analyzed on an ABI Prism 310 Genetic Analyzer.
In situ hybridization
Sense and antisense digoxygenin (DIG)-labeled carbonic anhydrase cRNA probes were generated by in vitro transcription of the original 297 bp A-CA cDNA according to the manufacturers protocols (Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Indianapolis, IN, USA).
For in situ hybridization, methods were adapted from Westerfield (1994). Briefly, the midguts of fourth-instar A. aegypti larvae were dissected free from surrounding tissue in hemolymph substitute solution (HSS) (Clark et al., 1999
) consisting of 42.5 mmol l1 NaCl, 3.0 mmol l1 KCl, 0.6 mmol l1 MgSO4, 5.0 mmol l1 CaCl2, 5.0 mmol l1 NaHCO3, 5.0 mmol l1 L-succinic acid, 5.0 mmol l1 L-malic acid, 5.0 mmol l1 L-proline, 9.1 mmol l1 L-glutamine, 8.7 mmol l1 L-histidine, 3.3 mmol l1 L-arginine, 10.0 mmol l1 dextrose, 25 mmol l1 Hepes, pH 7.0 adjusted with NaOH. The guts were immediately fixed with 4 % paraformaldehyde in 0.1 mol l1 sodium cacodylate buffer overnight at 4°C. The midguts were washed with PBS at room temperature and then incubated in 100 % methanol at 20°C for 30 min to ensure permeabilization of the gut tissue. The tissue was washed (5 min each wash) in 50 % methanol in PBST [Dulbeccos phosphate-buffered saline (Sigma) plus 0.1 % Tween-20], followed by 30 % methanol in PBST and then PBST alone. The tissue was fixed in 4 % paraformaldehyde in 0.1 mol l1 sodium cacodylate buffer for 20 min at room temperature and washed with PBST. The larval midguts were digested with proteinase K (10 µg ml1 in PBST) at room temperature for 10 min, washed briefly with PBST and fixed again, as described above.
Prehybridization of the tissue was accomplished by incubation in HYB solution [50 % formamide, 5x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 mol l1 NaCl, 0.015 mol l1 sodium citrate buffer, pH 7.0), 0.1 % Tween-20] for 24 h at 55°C. The larval midguts were transferred to HYB+ solution (HYB plus 5 mg ml1 tRNA, 50 µg ml1 heparin) containing 5 ng ml1 DIG-labeled probe and incubated overnight at 55°C. Excess probe was removed by washing at 55°C with 50 % formamide in 2x SSCT for 30 min (twice), 2x SSCT for 15 min and 0.2x SSCT for 30 min (twice). For detection, the tissue was incubated in PBST containing 1 % blocking solution (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) for 1 h at room temperature. The tissue was incubated with anti-DIG alkaline phosphatase (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) diluted 1:5000 in blocking solution for 4 h at room temperature. The tissue was washed with PBST and incubated in alkaline phosphatase substrate solution (Bio Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA) until the desired intensity of staining was achieved.
Histochemistry
Carbonic anhydrase activity was detected in isolated A. aegypti midgut using Hanssons method (Hansson, 1967) as modified by Ridgway and Moffet (1986
). Briefly, the procedure involved incubation of isolated, glutaraldehyde-fixed midguts in 1.75x103 mol l1 CoSO4, 5.3x102 mol l1 H2SO4, 11.7x103 mol l1 KH2PO4 and 1.57x102 mol l1 NaHCO3 (pH 6.8). The cobalt precipitate in the midguts was visualized using 0.5 % (NH4)2S in distilled water. Removal of the substrate (NaHCO3) eliminated staining.
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Results |
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Bromothymol Blue qualitative assay
This assay allowed the identification of samples of solubilized midgut tissue containing carbonic anhydrase activity by spotting them onto a filter paper soaked in a basic buffered solution containing a pH indicator (BTB). As stated previously, BTB changes color from yellow at pH<7.6 to blue when the pH increases above this value. This assay is based on the principle that carbonic anhydrase catalyzes the conversion of CO2 into bicarbonate with the concomitant release of protons (Donaldson and Quinn, 1974). The presence of protons lowers the pH in those regions of the paper where the spotted samples contain the enzyme. As the pH falls below 7.6, these spots rapidly change color from blue to yellow. This assay is not effective for samples in acidic solution, and the tissue homogenization must be accomplished in alkaline buffer. The enzymatic reaction takes only a few seconds, and it can be delayed if the solutions, the paper and the samples are kept cold on ice. However, a few seconds is usually sufficient to discriminate the samples that contain carbonic anhydrase from those lacking enzymatic activity. The assay must be performed quickly since, after approximately 1 min, the entire filter paper turns yellow, probably as a result of the uncatalyzed hydration of carbon dioxide absorbed by the solution at this basic pH.
The test has proved useful in determining the presence of small amounts of carbonic anhydrase in homogenates of mosquito larvae. The assay was also useful for detecting carbonic anhydrase activity qualitatively in fractions obtained from affinity chromatography (Osborne and Tashian, 1975) of larval homogenates. The affinity chromatographic procedure, which employs a bound carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, p-aminomethyl benzyl sulfonamide (p-AMBS; Sigma), produced two peaks of carbonic anhydrase activity upon exposure to the standard elution buffers. The amount of protein that we were able to produce by this technique was, however, very small and resisted several efforts at direct microsequencing. This change in color was inhibited by acetazolamide and methazolamide when these inhibitors (105 mol l1) were added to the samples prior to spotting on the dye-impregnated filter papers. Inhibition of the reaction resulted in blue spots that did not change color upon addition of CO2. The positive control containing commercial carbonic anhydrase turned yellow when carbon dioxide was added, and this color change was also inhibited by acetazolamide and methazolamide. This finding confirmed that the yellow color of the spots was due to the action of carbonic anhydrase and that the mosquito larva contains active carbonic anhydrase.
Carbonic anhydrase activity and alkalization
The classic and specific carbonic anhydrase inhibitor methazolamide was tested in live fourth-instar larvae to examine the influence of carbonic anhydrase on the maintenance of the pH extremes inside the midgut and the effect of the enzyme on the net alkalization of the growth medium by the intact animals. Previous investigations have shown that living mosquito larvae excrete bicarbonate, which results in the net alkalization of their surrounding aqueous medium (Stobbart, 1971). Equal numbers of living larvae of equivalent age and size were placed in culture plate wells containing lightly buffered medium and the pH indicator BTB. The tissue culture plates used in this assay were scanned before and after addition of various concentrations of methazolamide. In the absence of methazolamide, the blue color of the medium, indicating a pH of at least 7.6, was maintained (Stobbart, 1971
). Actual measurement of the pH in each well showed a slow increase over time (data not shown). Upon addition of methazolamide, the culture medium slowly became acidic, with a resulting change in color to yellow as the pH dropped below 7.6 (Fig. 1). All the controls that did not contain methazolamide remained blue. Addition of methazolamide, at the various concentrations used here, to culture plate wells containing only medium with BTB (no mosquito larva control) had no effect on their color; they remained blue. These data show that carbonic anhydrase activity is present in the living larvae and that it plays some role in acidbase excretion.
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We produced degenerate PCR primers from consensus regions of the carbonic anhydrase gene family. The generation of an initial 297 bp partial sequence from which we derived exact PCR primers for 3'- and 5'-RACE (Zhang and Frohman, 1997), facilitated the eventual cloning of a single contiguous cDNA. The final contiguous region spanned both the start and stop codons and encoded a polypeptide of 298 residues (sequence submitted to GenBank, accession number AF395662). Fig. 4A shows an alignment of the A. aegypti carbonic anhydrase (A-CA) amino acid sequence with several other previously characterized members of this extensive gene family. Fig. 4B shows the homology tree generated using DNAman software. Fig. 5A shows the alignment between A-CA and six putative carbonic anhydrase gene sequences from the Drosophila melanogaster genome that our homology search (BLAST) revealed. Four of the Drosophila melanogaster genes (AAF54494, AAF56666, AAF57140 and AAF57141) had not previously been annotated. Fig. 5B shows the homology tree generated with these sequences. A-CA has a putative molecular mass of 32.7 kDa. Hydrophobicity analysis suggests that this protein is a typical soluble enzyme and possesses a characteristic eukaryotic-type carbonic anhydrase signature sequence within the polypeptide (amino acid residues 99115) (Fernley, 1988
).
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Discussion |
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The presence of carbonic anhydrase in the midgut of the larval mosquito has been suggested before by investigations of the epithelium of larval lepidopteran midgut. Carbonic anhydrase has been studied in Manduca sexta, where the enzyme has been associated with the fat body, midgut and integumentary epithelium (Jungreis et al., 1981). The enzyme has also been localized in the goblet cells of the epithelium of Hyalophora cecropia using Hanssons histochemical stain. The same procedure showed that the columnar cells were devoid of activity (Turbeck and Foder, 1970
).
Even though a number of genes and their products have been isolated from the midgut of Aedes aegypti, and a role for carbonic anhydrase in the alkalization of the midgut has been suggested (Turbeck and Foder, 1970; Haskell et al., 1965
; Ridgway and Moffett, 1986
; Boudko et al., 2001b
), there have been no reports of the isolation or cloning of carbonic anhydrase or of the localization of the enzyme within the midgut of larval mosquitoes.
Our results show that at least one (and perhaps more) carbonic anhydrase is present in the midgut of larval Aedes aegypti. The carbonic anhydrase of larval Aedes aegypti (A-CA) is inhibited by classical carbonic anhydrase inhibitors such as methazolamide and acetazolamide. Methazolamide has the most potent effect on A-CA. Direct physiological measurements of ion fluxes from living larval mosquito midgut epithelial cells also show methazolamide to be a very potent inhibitor of ion movements and balance (Boudko et al., 2001a).
In spite of the fact that isolation of the enzyme using conventional techniques for protein purification did not yield a microsequenceable protein, a carbonic anhydrase cDNA was cloned from larval midgut. This is the first recorded cloning of a mosquito carbonic anhydrase and, indeed, it is the first to be cloned from any arthropod. Two gene sequences with significant homology to eukaryotic -carbonic anhydrases were previously annotated in the Drosophila melanogaster sequence data base. These sequences were used in our cloning strategy. Our subsequent analyses of the mosquito carbonic anhydrase revealed that four additional carbonic-anhydrase-like gene sequences are readily detected in the Drosophila melanogaster genome data base. Thus, it appears that the fruit fly possesses multiple carbonic anhydrase genes, perhaps even more than the six that we have addressed in this paper. The mammalian genome possesses at least 11 carbonic anhydrase genes (Hewett-Emmett, 2000
), so the existence of multiple forms in dipterans is perhaps not surprising. Our PCR analysis (Fig. 6) suggests that Aedes aegypti also possesses more than one carbonic anhydrase, and we are now attempting to isolate additional isoforms.
To investigate the distribution of carbonic anhydrase in the midgut of the larval mosquito, we employed both in situ hybridization and enzyme histochemistry. Our results indicated that enzymatic activity was greatest in the gastric caeca and the posterior midgut, as demonstrated by the intense staining obtained using Hanssons method and by in situ hybridization using cRNA probes. Measurements of activity using the O18-exchange method in pools of dissected regions of the gut corroborated these findings. In addition, the enzyme seems to be preferentially associated with the small cuboidal cells in the midgut epithelium, as determined both by enzyme histochemistry and by in situ hybridization.
As reviewed by Clements (1992), two major cell types have been defined in the gastric caeca by inferring functional states from cytological findings. These two major cell types have been called ion-transporting cells and resorbing/secreting cells (Volkmann and Peters, 1989a
,b
) and they correspond to the columnar and cuboidal cells mentioned above, with the ion-transporting cells being equivalent to the columnar cells and the resorbing/secreting cells being the cuboidal cells (Zhuang et al., 1999
). Neither of these cell types, as characterized in the larval mosquito gut, parallels the structurally unique qualities of the lepidopteran goblet cell. Nonetheless, our results indicate that, as in lepidopterans, carbonic anhydrase activity is preferentially associated with one of two distinct cell types whose functional complementation must produce the alkalization and ionic balances regulated by the gut. These results are consistent with the observations of lepidopteran midgut by Turbeck and Foder (1970
). In the larval lepidopteran midgut, two morphologically distinct cell types have long been recognized: goblet cells and columnar cells. Goblet cells possess both the proton-pumping V-ATPase and carbonic anhydrase activity (Harvey, 1992
; Ridgway and Moffet, 1986
; Wieczorek et al., 1999
). One of the enigmas of using the pioneering analyses of insect model systems such as Manduca sexta to produce testable hypotheses for gut alkalization in mosquito larvae has been the apparent absence of goblet cells from mosquitoes. Previous investigations have inferred different functional cell types in the larval mosquito gut epithelium. We are currently developing antibody probes for A-CA. Immunocytochemical analyses of A-CA distribution in comparison with other key components of gut function, such as V-ATPase (Zhuang et al., 1999
), should provide new insights into the cell biology of this intriguing epithelial system.
It is interesting to note that the lowest concentration of carbonic anhydrase in the midgut epithelium occurs in the region that surrounds and probably regulates the region of highest luminal pH, the anterior midgut. The pKa of CO32 is approximately 10.3 and, hence, this anion is likely to be the primary buffer of the pH 10.511 gut contents in the anterior midgut. Our results therefore suggest that the major buffering anion in this area of the midgut is probably not produced by local carbonic anhydrase but instead either upstream, in the gastric caeca, or downstream, in the posterior midgut, where carbonic anhydrase levels are very high. This result, and results presented elsewhere (Boudko et al., 2001a), are consistent with a model in which a major function of the anterior midgut is to pump protons out of this region of the gut lumen, promoting the conversion of HCO3 to CO32. A comprehensive model of the regulation of ion homeostasis and gut alkalization in the larval mosquito awaits the characterization and localization of other major components of the system in addition to carbonic anhydrase. It will also be very important to resolve the question of whether multiple carbonic anhydrases are expressed in the midgut and how each is distributed in this dynamic tissue.
Quantitative evidence corroborating the distribution of carbonic anhydrase within the midgut and supporting the histochemical and in situ observations was obtained using the 18O-exchange mass spectrometric method. The results obtained with this method indicate that the gastric caeca exhibit the highest level of carbonic anhydrase, relative to total protein content, followed by the posterior midgut and the Malpighian tubules. The anterior midgut showed levels of activity so low that two possibilities could be considered: either the method could not detect the enzyme or it is absent from the anterior midgut. The presence of faint staining using the histochemical and in situ methods suggests that the levels of activity in the anterior midgut might be too low to be detected using the 18O-exchange method, but that the enzyme is present throughout the entire length of the midgut.
In summary, our evidence demonstrates the existence of carbonic anhydrase in Aedes aegypti larvae and it also suggests that the gastric caeca and posterior midgut exhibit the highest levels of carbonic anhydrase activity. In addition, the enzyme seems to be associated with the small cuboidal cells of the midgut epithelium. Our cDNA sequence evidence also suggests that carbonic anhydrase is a soluble, cytosolic enzyme. However, enzyme activity has also been detected in membrane preparations isolated from whole midguts and could be due to the presence of more than one isoenzyme (M. P. Corena and P. J. Linser, unpublished observations). Carbonic anhydrase activity has previously been demonstrated in the epithelium of the larval midgut of six species of lepidopteran, in which it has been associated with the particulate fractions of the homogenate (Turbeck and Foder, 1970). This is consistent with our hypothesis that there might be more than one carbonic anhydrase and that one of these enzymes may be associated with the plasma membrane.
What is the role of carbonic anhydrase in the alkalization mechanism? BTB proved useful in monitoring the impact of carbonic anhydrase inhibition on the maintenance of gut luminal pH and the excretion of acidbase equivalents. As mentioned above, Aedes aegypti larvae typically alkalize the medium in which they are reared by secreting bicarbonate (Stobbart, 1971). The ingestion of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors altered the metabolism of the larvae to the point that the metabolic products secreted into the medium changed the pH of the environment, shifting it towards more acidic values than those observed in the absence of inhibitors.
The lowering of the pH of the medium might be related to a decrease in the rate of secretion of HCO3. The effect of the ingestion of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors on the secretion of bicarbonate into the medium remains to be explored. However, as indicated by measurements with ion-selective microelectrodes, inhibition of carbonic anhydrase in the midgut has an extreme effect on the maintenance of an alkaline pH within the midgut lumen (Boudko et al., 2001a). It is plausible that a decrease in the rate of secretion of bicarbonate is elicited by inhibiting the enzyme.
A simple model of bicarbonate transport fails to explain how the high pH is achieved within the mosquito larval anterior midgut. At a pH of approximately 11, similar to that observed within the anterior midgut, the majority of bicarbonate is present as carbonate. In fact, measurements of lepidopteran midgut fluid have shown that it contains 37 mmol l1 carbonate and 17 mmol l1 bicarbonate (Turbeck and Foder, 1970). Since the pH of a 0.1 mol l1 solution of sodium bicarbonate is only approximately 8.3, secretion of bicarbonate alone cannot be responsible for the high pH observed in the anterior midgut (Dow, 1984
). It could, however, explain the pH values at the gastric caeca and posterior midgut. The mechanism for maintenance of an alkaline pH within the anterior midgut must be more complex than just a simple buffering of a physiological solution with bicarbonate. Although this mechanism has been investigated (Wieczorek et al., 1999
; Boudko et al., 2001a
; Zhuang et al., 1999
), its details remain unclear. However, the evidence suggests that a basal, electrogenic H+ V-ATPase energizes luminal alkalization in the midgut of larval mosquitoes (Boudko et al., 2001b
; Zhuang et al., 1999
). Although the electrogenic transport of K+ drives the pH gradient, there must also be flux of one or more weak anions in the opposite direction to maintain homeostasis. Several transporters are thought to participate in this mechanism.
Another line of evidence suggests that the levels of carbon dioxide in the hemolymph of lepidopterans are lower than those within the midgut lumen. The concentration of CO2 has been determined to be near 5 mmol l1 in the hemolymph and 50 mmol l1 in the midgut lumen in larval Hyalophora cecropia (Turbeck and Foder, 1970). Recent measurements using capillary zone electrophoresis of larval Aedes aegypti fluids have revealed a bicarbonate/carbonate level as high as 50.8±4.21 mmol l1 in the midgut lumen compared with 3.96±2.89 mmol l1 in the hemolymph (means ± S.E.M., N=4) (Boudko et al., 2001a
). These values correlate with those observed by Turbeck and Foder (1970
). This combined evidence suggests that the CO2 that reaches the midgut lumen in the larvae of lepidopterans is rapidly converted to a mixture of bicarbonate and carbonate. The role of carbonic anhydrase in the alkalization process would be of great significance.
Additional evidence involving the transport of CO2 comes from studies performed on the rectal salt gland of Aedes dorsalis (Strange and Phillips, 1984; Strange et al., 1984
). The pronounced inhibitory effect of serosal acetazolamide suggests that carbonic anhydrase may also play a critical role in bicarbonate secretion by the salt gland. The generation of antibodies against A-CA will facilitate a detailed analysis of the cellular and subcellular distribution of this key enzyme in this system.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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