6533b854fe1ef96bd12af27b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Identification of Two Carbonic Anhydrases in the Mantle of the European Abalone Haliotis tuberculata (Gastropoda, Haliotidae): Phylogenetic Implications

Sidney DelgadoMichel BecchiNathalie GuichardStéphanie Auzoux-bordenaveStéphanie Auzoux-bordenaveFrédéric MarinBenjamin MarieBenjamin MarieNathalie Le RoyIsabelle Zanella-cléonJean-yves SireBéatrice Gaume

subject

0106 biological sciencesfood.ingredientAbalone010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesfoodGastropodaGeneticsPinctada fucata14. Life underwaterHaliotisMantle (mollusc)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesPhylogenetic treebiologyEcologyUnio pictorumbiology.organism_classificationEvolutionary biologyMolecular MedicineAnimal Science and ZoologyDevelopmental BiologyBiomineralization

description

Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) represent a diversified family of metalloenzymes that reversibly catalyze the hydration of carbon dioxide. They are involved in a wide range of functions, among which is the formation of CaCO(3) skeletons in metazoans. In the shell-forming mantle tissues of mollusks, the location of the CA catalytic activity is elusive and gives birth to contradicting views. In the present paper, using the European abalone Haliotis tuberculata, a key model gastropod in biomineralization studies, we identified and characterized two CAs (htCA1 and htCA2) that are specific of the shell-forming mantle tissue. We analyzed them in a phylogenetic context. Combining various approaches, including proteomics, activity tests, and in silico analyses, we showed that htCA1 is secreted but is not incorporated in the organic matrix of the abalone shell and that htCA2 is transmembrane. Together with previous studies dealing with molluskan CAs, our findings suggest two possible modes of action for shell mineralization: the first mode applies to, for example, the bivalves Unio pictorum and Pinctada fucata, and involves a true CA activity in their shell matrix; the second mode corresponds to, for example, the European abalone, and does not include CA activity in the shell matrix. Our work provides new insight on the diversity of the extracellular macromolecular tools used for shell biomineralization study in mollusks.

https://doi.org/10.1002/jez.b.22452