Dinoflagellate symbioses: strategies and adaptations for the acquisition and fixation of inorganic carbon
William Leggat, Elessa M. Marendy, Brett Baillie, Spencer M. Whitney, Martha Ludwig, Murray R. Badger and David Yellowlees
Functional Plant Biology 29(3) 309 - 322
Abstract
Dinoflagellates exist in symbiosis with a number of marine invertebrates
including giant clams, which are the largest of these symbiotic organisms. The
dinoflagellates (Symbiodinium sp.) live intercellularly
within tubules in the mantle of the host clam. The transport of inorganic
carbon (Ci) from seawater to Symbiodinium
(=zooxanthellae) is an essential function of hosts that derive the
majority of their respiratory energy from the photosynthate exported by the
zooxanthellae. Immunolocalisation studies show that the host has adapted its
physiology to acquire, rather than remove CO2, from the
haemolymph and clam tissues. Two carbonic anhydrase (CA) isoforms (32 and 70
kDa) play an essential part in this process. These have been localised to the
mantle and gill tissues where they catalyse the interconversion of
HCO3- to
CO2, which then diffuses into the host tissues. The
zooxanthellae exhibit a number of strategies to maximise Ci acquisition and
utilisation. This is necessary as they express a form II Rubisco that has poor
discrimination between CO2 and O2.
Evidence is presented for a carbon concentrating mechanism (CCM) to overcome
this disadvantage. The CCM incorporates the presence of a light-activated CA
activity, a capacity to take up both
HCO3-and
CO2, an ability to accumulate an elevated concentration
of Ci within the algal cell, and localisation of Rubisco to the pyrenoid.
These algae also express both external and intracellular CAs, with the
intracellular isoforms being localised to the thylakoid lumen and pyrenoid.
These results have been incorporated into a model that explains the transport
of Ci from seawater through the clam to the zooxanthellae.
Keywords: carbonic anhydrase, CCM, clam, cnidarian,
dinoflagellate,
Full text doi:10.1071/PP01202
© CSIRO 2002





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