Lee RW, Robinson JJ, Cavanaugh CM
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
J Exp Biol. 1999 Feb;202 (Pt 3):289-300. doi: 10.1242/jeb.202.3.289.
Symbioses between chemoautotrophic bacteria and marine invertebrates living at deep-sea hydrothermal vents and other sulfide-rich environments function autotrophically by oxidizing hydrogen sulfide as an energy source and fixing carbon dioxide into organic compounds. For chemoautotrophy to support growth, these symbioses must be capable of inorganic nitrogen assimilation, a process that is not well understood in these or other aquatic symbioses. Pathways of inorganic nitrogen assimilation were investigated in several of these symbioses: the vent tubeworms Riftia pachyptila and Tevnia jerichonana, the vent bivalves Calyptogena magnifica and Bathymodiolus thermophilus, and the coastal bivalve Solemya velum. Nitrate reductase activity was detected in R. pachyptila, T. jerichonana and B. thermophilus, but not in C. magnifica and S. velum. This is evidence for nitrate utilization, either assimilation or respiration, by some vent species and is consistent with the high levels of nitrate availability at vents. The ammonia assimilation enzymes glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) were detected in all symbioses tested, indicating that ammonia resulting from nitrate reduction or from environmental uptake can be incorporated into amino acids. A complicating factor is that GS and GDH are potentially of both host and symbiont origin, making it unclear which partner is involved in assimilation. GS, which is considered to be the primary ammonia-assimilating enzyme of autotrophs, was investigated further. Using a combination of molecular and biochemical approaches, host and symbiont GS were distinguished in the intact association. On the basis of Southern hybridizations, immunoreactivity, subunit size and thermal stability, symbiont GS was found to be a prokaryote GS. Host GS was distinct from prokaryote GS. The activities of host and symbiont GS were separated by anion-exchange chromatography and quantified. Virtually all activity in symbiont-containing tissue was due to symbiont GS in R. pachyptila, C. magnifica and B. thermophilus. In contrast, no symbiont GS activity was detected in the gill of S. velum, the predominant activity in this species appearing to be host GS. These findings suggest that ammonia is primarily assimilated by the symbionts in vent symbioses, whereas in S. velum ammonia is first assimilated by the host. The relationship between varying patterns of GS expression and host-symbiont nutritional exchange is discussed.
在深海热液喷口及其他富含硫化物的环境中,化能自养细菌与海洋无脊椎动物之间的共生关系通过将硫化氢氧化为能量来源,并将二氧化碳固定为有机化合物来实现自养功能。为了使化能自养支持生长,这些共生关系必须具备无机氮同化能力,而这一过程在这些或其他水生共生关系中尚未得到充分理解。本文研究了其中几种共生关系中的无机氮同化途径:热液管虫厚壳贻贝(Riftia pachyptila)和耶氏贻贝(Tevnia jerichonana)、热液双壳贝类大鳞片贻贝(Calyptogena magnifica)和嗜热深海贻贝(Bathymodiolus thermophilus)以及沿海双壳贝类帆蚌(Solemya velum)。在厚壳贻贝、耶氏贻贝和嗜热深海贻贝中检测到了硝酸还原酶活性,但在大鳞片贻贝和帆蚌中未检测到。这证明了一些热液物种能够利用硝酸盐,无论是用于同化还是呼吸,这与热液喷口处高浓度的硝酸盐可利用性是一致的。在所测试的所有共生关系中均检测到了氨同化酶谷氨酰胺合成酶(GS)和谷氨酸脱氢酶(GDH),这表明由硝酸盐还原或从环境中摄取产生的氨可以被纳入氨基酸中。一个复杂因素是,GS和GDH可能来自宿主和共生体双方,这使得不清楚是哪个伙伴参与了同化过程。对被认为是自养生物主要氨同化酶的GS进行了进一步研究。通过结合分子和生化方法,在完整的共生关系中区分了宿主和共生体的GS。基于Southern杂交、免疫反应性、亚基大小和热稳定性,发现共生体GS是一种原核生物GS。宿主GS与原核生物GS不同。通过阴离子交换色谱法分离并定量了宿主和共生体GS的活性。在厚壳贻贝、大鳞片贻贝和嗜热深海贻贝中,几乎所有含共生体组织中的活性都归因于共生体GS。相比之下,在帆蚌的鳃中未检测到共生体GS活性,该物种中的主要活性似乎是宿主GS。这些发现表明,在热液共生关系中,氨主要由共生体同化,而在帆蚌中,氨首先由宿主同化。本文还讨论了GS表达的不同模式与宿主 - 共生体营养交换之间的关系。