6533b7d8fe1ef96bd126af46
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Carbonic anhydrase activity in a calcium-mobilizing epithelium of the crustacean Orchestia cavimana during molting
François GrafJean-claude MeyranJ Fourniesubject
MaleHistologychemistry.chemical_elementCalciumEpitheliumCrustaceaCarbonic anhydrasemedicineAnimalsMolecular BiologyCarbonic Anhydraseschemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyHistocytochemistryReabsorptionMidgutCell BiologyGeneral MedicineEpitheliumAcetazolamideMedical Laboratory Technologymedicine.anatomical_structureEnzymeBiochemistrychemistrybiology.proteinCalciumAnatomyGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesAcetazolamideDigestive SystemMoultingmedicine.drugdescription
We investigated the involvement of the enzyme, carbonic anhydrase, in the calcification-decalcification processes occurring in the posterior caeca of the midgut of the terrestrial crustacean, Orchestia cavimana, before and after exuviation. This enzyme was ultrahistochemically localized throughout the membranes of the caecal epithelium as well as extracellularly, i.e., within pre-exuvial calcareous concretions and postexuvial calcified spherules. During the molt cycle, the pattern of carbonic anhydrase activity in the posterior caeca was correlated with the calcium content at this level. Acetazolamide treatment in vivo inhibited about 50% of the calcium uptake during both pre-exuvial secretion and postexuvial reabsorption. The role of carbonic anhydrase in this mineralizing-demineralizing epithelium is discussed and compared with that of other mechanisms involved in this calcium turnover.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1987-01-01 | Histochemistry |