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Carbonic Anhydrase is Required for Statoconia Homeostasis in Organ Cultures of Statocysts from Aplysia californica

Authors :
Pedrozo, H. A
Schwartz, Z
Nakaya, H
Harrison, J. L
Dean, D. D
Wiederhold, M. L
Boyan, B. D
Source :
Journal of Comparative Physiology A. Sensory, Neural and Behavioral Physiology. (177)
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1995.

Abstract

A novel organ culture system has been developed to study the regulation of statoconia production in the gravity sensing organ in Aplysia californica. Statocysts were cultured in Leibovitz (LI5) medium supplemented with salts and Aplysia haemolymph for four days at 17 C. The viability of the system was evaluated by examining four parameters: statocyst morphology, the activity of the mechanosensory cilia in the statocyst, production of new statoconia during culture and change in statoconia volume after culture. There were no morphological differences in statocysts before and after culture when ciliary beating was maintained. There was a 29% increase in the number of statoconia after four days in culture. Mean statocyst, statolith and statoconia volumes were not affected by culture conditions. The presence of carbonic anhydrase in the statocysts was shown using immunohistochemistry. When statocysts were cultured in the presence of 4.0 x 10(exp -4) M acetazolamide to inhibit the enzyme activity, there was a decrease in statoconia production and statoconia volume, indicating a role for this enzyme in statoconia homeostasis, potentially, via pH regulation. These studies are the first to report a novel system for the culture of statocysts and show that carbonic anhydrase is involved in the regulation of statoconia volume and production.

Subjects

Subjects :
Life Sciences (General)

Details

Language :
English
Issue :
177
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Journal of Comparative Physiology A. Sensory, Neural and Behavioral Physiology
Notes :
NAG2-730, , USPHS- DE05937, , NAG2-442, , NSF EEC-92-09612
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19970028203
Document Type :
Report