Identification of a molecular pH sensor in coral

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Abstract

Maintaining stable intracellular pH (pHi) is essential for homeostasis, and requires the ability to both sense pH changes that may result from internal and external sources, and to regulate downstream compensatory pHpathways. Herewe identified the cAMP-producing enzymesoluble adenylyl cyclase (sAC) as the first molecular pHsensor in corals. sAC proteinwas detected throughout coral tissues, including those involved in symbiosis and calcification. Application of a sAC-specific inhibitor caused significant and reversible pHi acidosis in isolated coral cells under both dark and light conditions, indicating sAC is essential for sensing and regulating pHi perturbations caused by respiration and photosynthesis. Furthermore, pHi regulation during external acidificationwas also dependent on sAC activity. Thus, sAC is a sensor and regulator of pH disturbances from both metabolic and external origin in corals. Since sAC is present in all coral cell types, and the cAMP pathway can regulate virtually every aspect of cell physiology through post-translational modifications of proteins, sAC is likely to trigger multiple homeostatic mechanisms in response to pH disturbances. This is also the first evidence that sAC modulates pHi in any non-mammalian animal. Since corals are basal metazoans, our results indicate this function is evolutionarily conserved across animals.

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Barott, K. L., Barron, M. E., & Tresguerres, M. (2017). Identification of a molecular pH sensor in coral. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 284(1866). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2017.1769

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