Abstract
BackgroundCarbonic anhydrases (CAs) are ubiquitous, essential enzymes which catalyze the conversion of carbon dioxide and water to bicarbonate and H+ ions. Vertebrate genomes generally contain gene loci for 15–21 different CA isoforms, three of which are enzymatically inactive. CA VI is the only secretory protein of the enzymatically active isoforms. We discovered that non-mammalian CA VI contains a C-terminal pentraxin (PTX) domain, a novel combination for both CAs and PTXs.MethodsWe isolated and sequenced zebrafish (Danio rerio) CA VI cDNA, complete with the sequence coding for the PTX domain, and produced the recombinant CA VI–PTX protein. Enzymatic activity and kinetic parameters were measured with a stopped-flow instrument. Mass spectrometry, analytical gel filtration and dynamic light scattering were used for biophysical characterization. Sequence analyses and Bayesian phylogenetics were used in generating hypotheses of protein structure and CA VI gene evolution. A CA VI–PTX antiserum was produced, and the expression of CA VI protein was studied by immunohistochemistry. A knock-down zebrafish model was constructed, and larvae were observed up to five days post-fertilization (dpf). The expression of ca6 mRNA was quantitated by qRT-PCR in different developmental times in morphant and wild-type larvae and in different adult fish tissues. Finally, the swimming behavior of the morphant fish was compared to that of wild-type fish.ResultsThe recombinant enzyme has a very high carbonate dehydratase activity. Sequencing confirms a 530-residue protein identical to one of the predicted proteins in the Ensembl database (ensembl.org). The protein is pentameric in solution, as studied by gel filtration and light scattering, presumably joined by the PTX domains. Mass spectrometry confirms the predicted signal peptide cleavage and disulfides, and N-glycosylation in two of the four observed glycosylation motifs. Molecular modeling of the pentamer is consistent with the modifications observed in mass spectrometry. Phylogenetics and sequence analyses provide a consistent hypothesis of the evolutionary history of domains associated with CA VI in mammals and non-mammals. Briefly, the evidence suggests that ancestral CA VI was a transmembrane protein, the exon coding for the cytoplasmic domain was replaced by one coding for PTX domain, and finally, in the therian lineage, the PTX-coding exon was lost. We knocked down CA VI expression in zebrafish embryos with antisense morpholino oligonucleotides, resulting in phenotype features of decreased buoyancy and swim bladder deflation in 4 dpf larvae.DiscussionThese findings provide novel insights into the evolution, structure, and function of this unique CA form.
Highlights
Carbonic anhydrase VI (CA VI) is the only secretory Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) enzyme in mammals
This study consists of the characterization of a novel type of a CA, CAVI containing a PTX domain, by means of sequence analyses, phylogenetics, molecular modeling, experiments on a recombinantly produced protein, knockdown of the ca6 gene in zebrafish embryos, and expression studies by immunohistochemistry and Quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR)
Based on our previous work and the findings in this study, we propose that CA VI–PTX in zebrafish is needed for filling the swim bladder, and possibly in a novel type of membrane anchoring and immune function
Summary
In its very first reporting, Henkin et al (1975) described a novel protein, gustin, from human saliva, which was later shown to be CA VI (Thatcher et al, 1998). The first immunohistochemical studies on human CA VI indicated that it is highly expressed in the serous acinar cells of the parotid and submandibular glands (Parkkila et al, 1990) It is one of the major protein constituents of human saliva (Parkkila et al, 1993), and found in human and rat milk (Karhumaa et al, 2001). The protein is pentameric in solution, as studied by gel filtration and light scattering, presumably joined by the PTX domains
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