The role of the antennal glands and gills in acid-base regulation and ammonia excretion of a marine osmoconforming brachyuran

Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol. 2024 Jun:292:111619. doi: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2024.111619. Epub 2024 Mar 2.

Abstract

The excretory mechanisms of stenohaline marine osmoconforming crabs are often compared to those of the more extensively characterized euryhaline osmoregulating crabs. These comparisons may have limitations, given that unlike euryhaline brachyurans the gills of stenohaline marine osmoconformers possess ion-leaky paracellular pathways and lack the capacity to undergo ultrastructural changes that can promote ion-transport processes in dilute media. Furthermore, the antennal glands of stenohaline marine osmoconformers are poorly characterized making it difficult to determine what role urinary processes play in excretion. In the presented study, ammonia excretory processes as well as related acid-base equivalent transport rates and mechanisms were investigated in the Dungeness crab, Metacarcinus magister - an economically valuable stenohaline marine osmoconforming crab. Isolated and perfused gills were found to predominantly eliminate ammonia through a microtubule network-dependent active NH4+ transport mechanism that is likely performed by cells lining the arterial pockets of the gill lamella where critical Na+/K+-ATPase detection was observed. The V-type H+-ATPase - a vital component to transbranchial ammonia excretion mechanisms of euryhaline crabs - was not found to contribute significantly to ammonia excretion; however, this may be due to the transporter's unexpected apical localization. Although unconnected to ammonia excretion rates, a membrane-bound isoform of carbonic anhydrase was localized to the apical and basolateral membranes of lamella suited for respiration. Urine was found to contain significantly less ammonia as well as carbonate species than the hemolymph, indicating that unlike those of some euryhaline crabs the antennal glands of the Dungeness crab reabsorb these molecules rather than eliminate them for excretion.

Keywords: Acid-base regulation; Bicarbonate; Carbon dioxide; Homeostasis; Metacarcinus magister; Perfused gill; ammonia.

MeSH terms

  • Ammonia / metabolism
  • Animals
  • Biological Transport
  • Brachyura* / physiology
  • Gills / metabolism
  • Sodium / metabolism
  • Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase / metabolism
  • Vacuolar Proton-Translocating ATPases* / metabolism

Substances

  • Ammonia
  • Sodium
  • Vacuolar Proton-Translocating ATPases
  • Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase