Lecture #17 Flashcards

1
Q

What Phylum do coral belong to?

A

-Scleractinia

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2
Q

What are the names of coral’s two embryonic cell layers?

A

-epidermis and gastrodermis

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3
Q

What are the four tissue layers in an adult coral, and what are their embryonic origin?

A
  • oral ectoderm, aboral ectoderm, oral endoderm, aboral endoderm
  • evolved from endoderm and ectoderm, originally two circles
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4
Q

What cell types are present in each tissue layer of a coral?

A
  • epidermis: cnidocytes with nematocysts, mucus secreting cells, interaction with bacteria
    gastrodermis: algae-hosting cells
    calicodermis: calcifying cells (make the skeleton), desmocytes (anchor tissue to skeleton)
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5
Q

What are the main physiological functions of each tissue layer?

A
  • epidermis: fire nematocysts when provoked or to capture prey, interact with bacteria
    gastrodermis: contain zooxanthellae
    calicodermis: precipitate the skeleton and anchor the corals
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6
Q

What are cnidocytes and nematocysts? How are nematocysts fired?

A
  • cnidocyte: Cell that produces and contains the nematocyst
  • nematocysts: tiny osmotically-driven venomous harpoons
  • Ca2+ is released into the cnidocytes, so water diffuses into this area of higher osmolarity, forcing the nematocyst out rapidly
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7
Q

How do coral obtain carbohydrates? And nitrogen?

A
  • the coral holobiont fixes nitrogen (~20%)
  • heterotrophy provides the other 80%
  • photosynthesis by symbiotic algae provides more than 100% of needed carbohydrates
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8
Q

Mention three functions of the bacteria that live in the mucus at the coral surface

A
  • Nitrogen fixation
  • Phosphate and sulfur cycling
  • Niche occupation
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9
Q

How are symbiotic algae acquired? In which coral cell type are symbiotic algae hosted? What is the symbiosome?

A
  • cnidarians pass large volumes of water through their gastrovascular system for respiration and waste removal, the water contains free-living Symbiodiniums pp. OR
  • coral gastrodermal cells pick up specific symbiodiniumstrains from the coelenteron (gastrovascular cavity)
  • contained in gastrodermis
  • symbiosome is space where symbiotic algae are kept
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10
Q

What are the two domains that comprise the vacuolar proton pump? (VHA). What is the function of each domain?

A
  • V1 domain = rotating head that hydrolyzes ATP => provides the energy for H+ movement
  • V0 domain = makes a channel across the membrane that allows H+ movement
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11
Q

What is an advantage of excreting acid using VHA instead of by secondarily active transport by NHE & NKA?

A

-VHA can secrete H+against a steeper gradient compared to secondary active transport powered by NKA

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12
Q

Where is the VHA located in coral cells? What is the physiological role of VHA in that compartment?

A
  • abundantly expressed in the coral symbiosome membrane of coral gastrodermal cells
  • VHA activity acidifies the symbiosome space
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13
Q

“Bleaching” is one a coral colony loses the majority of its algal symbionts. How do you predict it will affect its energy metabolic pathways?

A
  • it loses its main energy source, will rely more heavily on heterotrophic mechanisms
  • would react similarly to anoxic conditions, try to preserve ATP
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14
Q

What coral tissue layer makes the skeleton? What are the two cell types in that epithelium?

A
  • calicoblastic epithelium
  • cell types are calcifying cells (make the calcium carbonate skeleton) and desmocytes (anchor coral tissues to skeleton)
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15
Q

What is the “aragonite saturation state” and how does it relate to calcification?

A
  • a measure of how likely is aragonite to precipitate (the higher, the better for calcification)
  • numbers greater than 1 indicate precipitation and less than 1 are dissolution
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16
Q

What are the two potential pathways for [Ca2+] transport to the site of calcification?

A
  • Paracellular pathway (in between cells)

- Transcellular vesicles

17
Q

What would happen if Ca2+ was transported through the cytoplasm of calcifying cells on their way to the skeleton?

A
  • high intracellular [Ca2+] would precipitate with phosphates making crystals that would kill the cell
  • high intracellular [Ca2+] may trigger apoptosis
18
Q

What are the two pathways for DIC transport to the site of calcification?

A
  • HCO3- from mitochondrial CO2 (from aerobic respiration, catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase)
  • from the coelenteron
19
Q

What are two ways in which coral decrease the aragonite solubility constant (Ksp) at the site of calcification? How does this promote calcification?

A
  • isolate calcifying site from seawater

- produce proteins that favor CaCO3 precipitation (“nucleation proteins”)

20
Q

Describe how acidic pH favors photosynthesis, and how alkaline pH favor calcification.

A
  • Extreme and opposite pHs in symbiosome and SCM respectively drive photosynthesis and calcification in coral
  • ph 4 promotes CO2 formation and photosynthesis at surface of coral
  • ph 9 promotes CO32- formation and calcification at skeleton
  • differing pH changes the favorable form of DIC