Protein Information

ID 388
Name carbonic anhydrase
Synonyms CA IX; CA1; Carbonic anhydrase I; CA2; CAII; Carbonic anhydrase II; Carbonic dehydratase; Carbonic anhydrase III…

Compound Information

ID 966
Name potassium cyanate
CAS potassium cyanate

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
6404152 Lacy ER: Histochemical and biochemical studies of carbonic anhydrase activity in the opercular epithelium of the euryhaline teleost, Fundulus heteroclitus. Am J Anat. 1983 Jan;166(1):19-39.
Carbonic anhydrase (CAH) activity was biochemically measured and histochemically localized (at both the light and electron microscope levels) in isolated opercular membranes from teleost fish, Fundulus heteroclitus, adapted to freshwater (FW), seawater (SW), and double-strength seawater (2 x SW). The normal morphology of this membrane showed that its epithelial portion consisted of five cell types: (1) chloride cells, which have been previously implicated as responsible for the active chloride transport across the epithelium; (2) mucous cells; (3) pavement cells, which formed the major portion of the free epithelial surface; (4) supportive cells, which had an abundance of intermediate (10 nm)-type filaments suggesting a structural role for these cells; and (5) vesicular cells, which were characterized by various types of membrane-bound vesicles, including lysosomes, and numerous free ribosomes. Vesicular cells may be stem cells and/or endocrine cells. Hansson's histochemical method for CAH revealed cobalt sulfide reaction product confined to the following structures in fish from each environment: (1) chloride cells: throughout the cytoplasm and some nuclear staining; (2) mucous cells: throughout the cytoplasm, some nuclear staining, and some in mucous granules; (3) vesicular cells: confined to lysosomes, some of the vesicles, and nucleoli; (4) a small portion of the intracellular space between adjacent vesicular cells and supportive cells; and (5) supportive cells: in nucleoli and occasionally in larger membrane-bound lysosomelike structures. Acetazolamide (10 (-5) M) and potassium cyanate (KCNO) (10 (-1) M) in Hansson's incubation medium completely inhibited the formation of reaction product. Biochemical determination of CAH activity on vascularly perfused, isolated opercular membranes showed no statistically significant difference in enzyme activity between environmental groups. The following units of activity/mg opercular membrane protein were measured: FW: 0.63 +/- 0.02; SW: 0.43 +/- 0.08; 2 x SW: 0.64 +/- 0.09.
2(0,0,0,2)