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Feeding through your gills and turning a toxicant into a resource: how the dogfish shark scavenges ammonia from its environment
- Source :
- The Journal of experimental biology. 219(Pt 20)
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Nitrogen (N) appears to be a limiting dietary resource for elasmobranchs, required not only for protein growth but also for urea-based osmoregulation. Building on recent evidence that the toxicant ammonia can be taken up actively at the gills of the shark and made into the valuable osmolyte urea, we demonstrate that the uptake exhibits classic Michaelis–Menten saturation kinetics with an affinity constant (Km) of 379 µmol l−1, resulting in net N retention at environmentally realistic ammonia concentrations (100–400 µmol l−1) and net N loss through stimulated urea-N excretion at higher levels. Ammonia-N uptake rate increased or decreased with alterations in seawater pH, but the changes were much less than predicted by the associated changes in seawater PNH3, and more closely paralleled changes in seawater NH4+ concentration. Ammonia-N uptake rate was insensitive to amiloride (0.1 mmol l−1) or to a 10-fold elevation in seawater K+ concentration (to 100 mmol l−1), suggesting that the mechanism does not directly involve Na+ or K+ transporters, but was inhibited by blockade of glutamine synthetase, the enzyme that traps ammonia-N to fuel the ornithine–urea cycle. High seawater ammonia inhibited uptake of the ammonia analogue [14C]methylamine. The results suggest that branchial ammonia-N uptake may significantly supplement dietary N intake, amounting to about 31% of the nitrogen acquired from the diet. They further indicate the involvement of Rh glycoproteins (ammonia channels), which are expressed in dogfish gills, in normal ammonia-N uptake and retention.
- Subjects :
- 030110 physiology
0301 basic medicine
Gills
Male
Physiology
Nitrogen
Aquatic Science
Biology
Environment
Excretion
Amiloride
03 medical and health sciences
Ammonia
chemistry.chemical_compound
Methylamines
Glutamine synthetase
Methionine Sulfoximine
Animals
Urea
Seawater
14. Life underwater
Carbon Radioisotopes
Molecular Biology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Methylamine
Water
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
chemistry
Biochemistry
Osmolyte
Dogfish
Insect Science
Osmoregulation
Potassium
Animal Science and Zoology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14779145
- Volume :
- 219
- Issue :
- Pt 20
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of experimental biology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7325a71de43710a9c6cdaf56189556b6