The small cichlid fish Alcolapia grahami lives in Lake Magadi, Kenya, one of the most extreme aquatic environments on Earth (pH ~10, carbonate alkalinity ~300 mequiv l−1). The Magadi tilapia is the only 100% ureotelic teleost; it normally excretes no ammonia. This is interpreted as an evolutionary adaptation to overcome the near impossibility of sustaining an NH3 diffusion gradient across the gills against the high external pH. In standard ammoniotelic teleosts, branchial ammonia excretion is facilitated by Rh glycoproteins, and cortisol plays a role in upregulating these carriers, together with other components of a transport metabolon, so as to actively excrete ammonia during high environmental ammonia (HEA) exposure. In Magadi tilapia, we show that at least three Rh proteins (Rhag, Rhbg and Rhcg2) are expressed at the mRNA level in various tissues, and are recognized in the gills by specific antibodies. During HEA exposure, plasma ammonia levels and urea excretion rates increase markedly, and mRNA expression for the branchial urea transporter mtUT is elevated. Plasma cortisol increases and branchial mRNAs for Rhbg, Rhcg2 and Na+,K+-ATPase are all upregulated. Enzymatic activity of the latter is activated preferentially by NH4+ (versus K+), suggesting it can function as an NH4+-transporter. Model calculations suggest that active ammonia excretion against the gradient may become possible through a combination of Rh protein and NH4+-activated Na+-ATPase function.

Alcolapia grahami, a small cichlid fish living in the extreme environment of Lake Magadi, Kenya [pH ~10, carbonate alkalinity ~300 mequiv l−1 (Coe, 1966)], is unique. The Magadi tilapia is the only teleost fish known to be 100% ureotelic; it excretes no ammonia (Randall et al., 1989; Wood et al., 1989). The ornithine-urea cycle (OUC) is present in the muscle tissue as well as in the liver, explaining the exceptionally high rates of production of urea (Randall et al., 1989; Lindley et al., 1999), which is excreted across the gills by a facilitated diffusion type urea transporter (mtUT) (Walsh et al., 2001). While this is interpreted as an evolutionary adaptation to overcome the near impossibility of sustaining an ammonia diffusion gradient across the gills against an external pH of 10 (Pörtner et al., 2010), it is noteworthy that the characteristic of 100% ureotelism is obligate. Even when provided with an opportunity to excrete ammonia by acute exposure to neutralized Magadi water or gradual acclimation to freshwater, the Magadi tilapia continues to be 100% ureotelic (Wood et al., 1989; Wood et al., 1994; Wood et al., 2002).

Only recently has it been realized that ammonia excretion across the gills of ammoniotelic fish is facilitated by Rhesus (Rh) glycoproteins. These have been cloned (Nakada et al., 2007; Hung et al., 2007; Nawata et al., 2007) and shown by in vitro expression analysis to bind NH4+ but facilitate the movement of NH3 (Nawata et al., 2010a). The transepithelial movement of H+ ions by other mechanisms appears to play a key role in acid-trapping of NH3 in the external boundary layer, thereby sustaining the NH3 movement through the Rh channels [see models in Weihrauch et al. (Weihrauch et al., 2009) and Wright and Wood (Wright and Wood, 2009)]. The system is capable of actively excreting ammonia against gradients, and is activated by elevated external or internal ammonia levels, which cause increased mRNA expression of the Rh proteins and allied transporters such as Na+,K+-ATPase (Nawata et al., 2007; Nawata et al., 2010b; Nawata and Wood, 2009). An accompanying elevation of plasma cortisol plays a role in this response (Tsui et al., 2009).

With this background in mind, we questioned whether Rh proteins would be expressed at all at the mRNA or protein levels in the gills or other tissues in a fish that never apparently excretes ammonia, and/or whether they could be activated by high environmental ammonia (HEA). Magadi tilapia are exceptionally ammonia tolerant (Walsh et al., 1993), and HEA is an environmentally relevant treatment because the bacterial degradation of large amounts of flamingo guano in some areas of the lake can produce high water ammonia concentrations (Wilson et al., 2004). Transport of ammonia by branchial Na+,K+-ATPase (i.e. ‘NH4+-activated Na+-ATPase’) has also been implicated in ammonia tolerance in some species (Mallery, 1983; Balm et al., 1988; Randall et al., 1999; Nawata et al., 2010b), so we examined the response of this enzyme to HEA exposure in terms of gene transcription, enzyme activity and substrate specificity. HEA exposure was previously shown to quickly increase urea excretion in this species (Wood et al., 1989), presumably because ammonia enters across the gills and activates urea production by the OUC in the tissues (Wood et al., 1994; Lindley et al., 1999; Wilson et al., 2004). We therefore also assayed whether the branchial mtUT urea transporter was activated at the transcriptional level by HEA. Surprisingly, we show that this 100% ureotelic fish does express Rh proteins; Rh mRNA expression in the gills and related physiological parameters respond to HEA in a manner similar to that seen in ‘normal’ ammoniotelic fish, mtUT is activated, and branchial Na+-ATPase activity is more responsive to NH4+ than to K+. Model calculations suggest that active ammonia excretion against the gradient may become possible through a combination of Rh protein and NH4+-activated Na+-ATPase function.

All experiments complied with the laws of Kenya, and were performed under a research permit issued by the National Council for Science and Technology of the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, and Technology of the Republic of Kenya.

Experimental animals

Magadi tilapia [Alcolapia grahami (Boulenger 1912), formerly Oreochromis alcalicus grahami, formerly Sarotherodon alcalicus grahami, formerly Tilapia grahami] with a mean mass of 4.11 g (range 2.05–7.57 g) were collected by seine net in July and August 2010 from Fish Springs Lagoon on the edge of Lake Magadi [for maps, see Coe (Coe, 1966) and Narahara et al. (Narahara et al., 1996)]. Collections were made between 06:30 and 08:30 h, and experiments were started within 2–4 h of capture because these highly active fish do not survive well in captivity. All experiments were performed in an outdoor laboratory set up on the balcony of a house kindly provided by the Magadi Soda Company (Tata Chemicals Magadi) in the nearby Magadi township. Although air temperature fluctuated greatly (22–40°C), a water bath ensured that experimental temperature was held at 28–30°C, the same as at the collection site in early morning.

Respirometry series

In previous studies we have found it useful to normalize urea-N production rates to O2 consumption rates (), because of great variations in spontaneous activity levels of these wild fish (Wood et al., 1994; Wood et al., 2002; Wilson et al., 2004). Animals were transferred to individual 0.75 l respirometers filled with freshly collected Lake Magadi water from Fish Springs Lagoon (pH 9.92; Na+=356, Ca2+=1.30, Mg2+=0.08, Cl=112 and titratable carbonate alkalinity=290 mequiv l−1). The chambers were served with individual aeration and could be sealed as respirometers. After a 1–2 h settling period, the experiment was started. Urea-N excretion rates () were measured over a 3 h control period immediately after which HEA (N=21) or continued control exposure (N=12) were instituted (time 0 h), with additional measurements made at 0–3, 3–6, 6–9, 9–18 and 18–24 h. Aeration was stopped and the respirometers sealed for 1 h measurements of in the middle of each period. The nominal ammonia concentration during HEA was 500 μmol l−1, achieved by the addition of NH4HCO3, which did not alter water pH. As NH3 is volatile at pH 9.92, ~90% of the water was renewed and fresh NH4HCO3 was added at the beginning of each flux period, taking care to minimize disturbance. In one typical 24 h HEA run (five flux periods on five fish), the mean overall measured ammonia-N concentration was 472±13 μmol l−1 (N=25) at the start of flux periods and 443±16 μmol l−1 (N=25) at the end; water ammonia concentrations remained less than 5 μmol l−1 in the control treatment. Each run included control and HEA blank chambers to correct measurements of and data for microbial activity. This proved negligible for the former, but accounted for up to 25% of .

Tissue and blood sampling series

Tilapia were put through identical HEA and control protocols, but without the measurements of and . HEA-exposed fish were killed at 4, 12 and 24 h, and control fish at 0 and 24 h (N=10–16 at each time, but not all samples were taken from all fish). For sampling, fish were rapidly anaesthetized (~30 s) by transfer to HEA water or control water (as appropriate) at 1°C, and then killed by cephalic concussion. A blood sample (25–75 μl) was drawn by caudal puncture using a gas-tight Hamilton 100 μl syringe with a bevelled needle customized to sample at the correct depth. The syringe had been pre-rinsed with Cortland saline adjusted to 175 mmol l−1 NaCl (Wolf, 1963) and heparinized (1000 i.u. ml−1 lithium heparin). After immediate centrifugation (5000 g, 30 s), plasma was decanted and frozen in liquid N2 for later measurements of plasma total ammonia (TAmm), cortisol, glucose, lactate and ions, whereas the red blood cell pellet was resuspended in approximately five volumes of RNAlater (Ambion, Austin, TX, USA) and stored at 4°C. The gills and a sample of lateral posterior skin were similarly preserved in RNAlater. Additional fish were killed in the same manner at 24 h HEA, and at 0 and 24 h control (N=6–8) for plasma metabolites, gill ATPase activity and tissue-specific screening of Rh gene expression. Tissues (gills, brain, liver, intestine, white muscle, skin) were harvested, wrapped in aluminium foil, and immediately frozen in liquid N2. In addition, some gills were preserved for morphology and immunohistochemistry by immersion fixation in 3% paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline and then processed for embedding in either paraffin or Tissue-Tek OCT compound (Sakura Finetek, Torrance, CA, USA)

Analytical techniques

Water dissolved O2 concentration was measured using a portable Accumet polarographic electrode and AB15 meter (Fisher Scientific, Mississauga, ON, Canada) and water urea-N concentration by the diacetyl monoxime method (Rahmatullah and Boyde, 1980). and were calculated from changes in concentration (corrected for the microbial blank), factored by time, chamber volume and fish mass. To adjust for variations in activity levels, was also normalized to O2 consumption as /. Water ammonia-N concentration was checked by the salicylate hypochlorite method (Verdouw et al., 1978). Plasma [TAmm] was measured using a kit (Raichem, San Diego, CA, USA) based on the glutamate dehydrogenase/NAD method. Plasma [cortisol] was measured using a commercial 125I radioimmunoassay kit (CA-1529 GammaCoat, DiaSorin, Stillwater, MN, USA). Plasma [Na+], [K+], [Ca2+] and [Mg2+] were measured by flame atomic absorption spectroscopy (Varian SpectrAA-220FS, Mulgrave, Australia). Clinical micrometers, calibrated with standards made up in Cortland saline, were used for assay of plasma [glucose] (Accu-Chek GT Compact Plus, Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany) and [lactate] (Lactate Pro LT-1710, Arkray, Kyoto, Japan). Branchial Na+,K+-ATPase and V-type H+-ATPase activities were measured using methods from McCormick (McCormick, 1993) and Lin and Randall (Lin and Randall, 1993) respectively, as modified by Nawata et al. (Nawata et al., 2007). Protein concentrations were measured with Bradford Reagent and BSA standards (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA). Na+,K+-ATPase and V-type H+-ATPase assays on the same samples were run simultaneously at both pH 7.5 and pH 8.0 to check pH sensitivity. In order to test whether NH4+ could activate branchial Na+,K+-ATPase, various concentrations of NH4+ (as NH4Cl) and/or K+ (as KCl) were added to the assay media (see Results).

Molecular and immunohistochemical analyses

Total RNA was extracted from tissues with Trizol (Invitrogen, Burlington, ON, Canada) and concentrations were determined with a Nanodrop ND-1000 spectrophotometer (Nanodrop Technologies, Wilmington, DE, USA). One microgram of total RNA (DNaseI-treated; Invitrogen) was used to synthesize first strand cDNA with Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). Rh glycoprotein cDNA fragments were first amplified with cloning primers (Table 1). Full-length cDNA sequences of Rhag, Rhbg and Rhcg2 were then obtained by 5′- and 3′-rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) (Smart RACE cDNA amplification kit, BD Biosciences Clontech, Mississauga, ON, Canada) using the RACE primers (Table 1) and the protocol described previously (Nawata et al., 2007). However, in the case of Rhcg2, 3′ RACE was unsuccessful and the remainder of the 3′ open reading frame was obtained by PCR using a 3′ untranscribed region (UTR) reverse primer designed from Oreochromis niloticus Rhcg2 and a gene-specific forward primer. Phylogenetic analyses were conducted using ClustalW (Thompson et al., 1994) and MEGA 5.1 software (Tamura et al., 2011) by the neighbour-joining method with support for each node using 1000 bootstrap replicates. Amino acid sequence analyses were performed using BioEdit (Hall, 1999). Hydropathy profile and N-glycosylation site predictions were made using TMHMM (Krogh et al., 2001; Sonnhammer et al., 1998) and ScanProsite (de Castro et al., 2006), respectively.

Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) was performed on the above synthesized cDNA with the primers for Rhag, Rhbg, Rhcg2, glutamine synthetase, Na+,K+-ATPase (α1-subunit) and urea transporter (mtUT) as listed in Table 1, using Platinum SYBR Green qPCR SuperMix-UDG (Invitrogen) on an Mx3000P QPCR System (Stratagene, Cedar Creek, TX, USA). Prior to qPCR analyses, amplification products of all primer pairs were sequenced to verify primer specificity. Expression of the three Rh mRNAs was assessed in the gill, skin and red blood cells, and of glutamine synthetase, Na+,K+-ATPase and mtUT in the gill. No-template controls were run in parallel and melt-curve analysis verified the production of a single product. Data were extrapolated from standard curves generated by serial dilution of one randomly selected control sample. Beta actin mRNA expression remained stable across treatments and was used for normalization.

Immunohistochemical localization and immunoblotting of Rhcg2, Rhbg and Rhag proteins were detected using rabbit polyclonal antibodies against pufferfish (‘fugu’) Rh proteins (Nakada et al., 2007). Immunohistochemistry was performed as described in Laurent et al. (Laurent et al., 1994) and Wilson et al. (Wilson et al., 2007) for HRP-DAB (horse radish peroxidase, 3,3′-diaminobenzidine) and fluorescence detection, respectively. Using immunofluorescence, some sections were also double-labeled for Rh glycoproteins with Na+,K+-ATPase α subunit using the pan-specific α5 monoclonal antibody. Branchial ionocytes can be identified by high Na+,K+-ATPase expression (Wilson and Laurent, 2002). Immunoblotting was performed according to Wilson et al. (Wilson et al., 2007) using a Bio-Rad Mini-Protean 3 system and semi-dry transfer apparatus (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA) with enhanced chemiluminescent detection (LAS 4000mini, FujiFilm, Tokyo, Japan). Only control fish were available for immunoblotting.

Statistical analyses

Data have been expressed as means ± 1 s.e.m. (N=number of fish). The Michaelis–Menten equation was fitted to enzyme kinetic data using Sigmaplot Windows Version 10.0 (Systat Software, San Jose, CA, USA). and were compared between HEA and simultaneous control treatments at each measurement period by Student' unpaired t-tests. Metabolite, ion, ATPase and mRNA data were analyzed by ANOVA followed by specific post hoc multiple comparison tests (Fisher's least significant difference for mRNA, Bonferroni for all others). The 24 h control means were compared with 0 h control means, and HEA means at each sample time were compared with both the 0 h control mean and the 24 h control mean. For mRNA data, overall effects were evaluated by comparing means from all fish at all three HEA times with means from all fish at the two control times. All tests were two-tailed and a significance level of 0.05 was used throughout.

O2 consumption and urea-N excretion

HEA had no effect on , which remained the same as in the control throughout the 24 h exposure (Fig. 1A). However, became greater in the HEA treatment in the first 3 h, and remained elevated relative to the control throughout most periods of the 24 h exposure (Fig. 1B). When normalized to O2 consumption (i.e. /), the elevation reached ~85% from 9 through 24 h (Fig. 1C).

Plasma metabolites and ions

In addition to the increased , plasma TAmm data provided clear evidence of internal ammonia loading during HEA. At 4 h, plasma TAmm increased approximately 2.5-fold from resting levels of ~1.6 mmol l−1 and remained significantly elevated at 12 h, relative to both the 0 h and 24 h control means, but was no longer elevated at 24 h (Fig. 2A). This response in plasma TAmm was accompanied by increases in plasma lactate (Fig. 2B), glucose (Fig. 2C) and especially cortisol concentrations (Fig. 2D), which more than doubled by 12 h HEA. For all these parameters, there was a tendency for 24 h control means to be lower than 0 h controls, but this was significant only for glucose (Fig. 2C). In the HEA treatment, lactate, but not glucose or cortisol, remained significantly elevated at 24 h.

The 0 h control levels of plasma [Na+] (182±3 mmol l−1, N=13), [Cl] (171±5 mmol l−1, N=13) and [K+] (4.98±0.70 mmol l−1, N=6) did not change significantly during 24 h of HEA exposure, or at the 24 h control time (data not shown). However, plasma [Ca2+] and [Mg2+] both increased significantly during HEA exposure (Table 2).

Rh gene expression and molecular responses

Three full-length Rh glycoprotein cDNAs were identified in A. grahami: Rhag (accession no. JQ710654), 1844 bp, encoding a protein of 488 amino acid residues with 12 predicted transmembrane spanning regions; Rhbg (JQ710655), 1691 bp, encoding a protein of 463 amino acid residues with 10 predicted transmembrane regions; and Rhcg2 (JQ710656), 1578 bp, encoding a protein of 489 amino acid residues with 10 predicted transmembrane regions. However, the complete 3′ UTR was not obtained for Rhcg2. All three proteins have a putative N-glycosylation site in the first extracellular domain (Asn-48, -46 and -62 for Rhag, Rhbg and Rhcg2, respectively). The full sequences are shown in supplementary material Fig. S1A. Notably, while Rhag exhibits the standard 12 transmembrane domains, both Rhbg and Rhcg2 have only 10. In the case of Rhbg, this difference appears to be because of a substitution of hydrophobic amino acid residues for hydrophilic ones, rather than deletions; the same phenomenon is seen in the Nile tilapia, O. niloticus. However, in the case of Rhcg2, the Magadi sequence is truncated at the 5′ end; this is not the case in O. niloticus, which exhibits the full 12 transmembrane domains. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that each paralogue (Rhag, Rhbg and Rhcg2) clearly clusters with its respective orthologue clade (Fig. 3). It was not possible to isolate an Rhcg1 homologue from gill tissue using the above PCR approach. Attempts using gene-specific primers for Rhcg1 from the closely related O. niloticus were also unsuccessful.

Rhbg and Rhcg2 mRNAs exhibited the highest expression in gill, followed by brain and skin, and were also detected in intestine, liver and muscle (Fig. 4, note the logarithmic scale). However, both were below detectable levels in the red blood cells, so differences in tissue-specific distribution were not due to trapped blood. Rhag expression was high in the red blood cells but could not be assessed at other sites as it was not possible to clear the tissues of blood in these very small fish.

Expression of Rhcg2 in the gills approximately doubled at both 4 and 12 h but had returned to 0 h control levels by 24 h of HEA (Fig. 5A). The elevation at 4 h was significant relative to both controls, whereas that at 12 h was significant only relative to the 24 h control. The overall increase during HEA was significant. Rhbg expression in the gills also tended to increase at all three sample times during HEA exposure, which was significant overall, but none of the individual changes were significant (Fig. 5B). Na+,K+ - ATPase expression more than doubled at both 4 and 24 h of HEA exposure, increases that were significant relative to both controls and overall (Fig. 5C). Branchial expression of mtUT also increased significantly overall during HEA; the increase at 4 h was significant relative to the 24 h control, and at 24 h relative to both controls (Fig. 5D).

Expression of glutamine synthetase in the gill (shown in supplementary material Fig. S2A) and of Rhag in the red blood cells (supplementary material Fig. S2B) did not vary significantly during HEA exposure. Rhbg and Rhcg2 expression in the skin were measured only on 0 h control, 24 h control and 24 h HEA samples. The only difference was a significant decrease in Rhcg2 expression at 24 h HEA relative to both controls (supplementary material Fig. S2C).

Immunodetection of Rh proteins

Na+,K+-ATPase-rich cells, identified by strong whole-cell cytoplasmic immunoreactivity, were found exclusively in the filament epithelium and at the bases of the lamellae on the efferent side of the gill filament of A. grahami (Fig. 6A). The whole-cell signal is explained by the invasive nature of the basolateral tubular membrane system in these cells, which is rich in Na+,K+-ATPase. The shapes of these cells ranged from cuboidal to ovoid with the apical surface being either flat or forming a crypt (deep invagination). Rhag, Rhbg and Rhcg2-like immunoreactivities were found associated with the lamellae in the downstream (efferent) side of the filament (Fig. 6B,C,D, respectively). Specifically, Rhag and Rhcg2 staining was associated with lamellar pillar cells while Rhbg staining were found in the basal region of the lamellar epithelium (i.e. pavement cells). The HEA exposure did not markedly alter the pattern of Rhcg2, Rhbg or Rhag staining.

Immunoblotting corroborated the specificity of the antibodies used. Na+,K+-ATPase α subunit antibody α5 cross-reacted with a band of ~110 kDa, which corresponds to the predicted size range (Fig. 6E). The dominant Rh glycoproteins Rhag, Rhbg and Rhcg2-like immunoreactive bands detected by fugu antibodies were smaller than predicted although within the size range of the unglycosylated peptide (Nawata et al., 2010b). C-terminal peptide sequence alignment homologies for these fugu antibodies against the Magadi tilapia proteins were 74% (Rhag), 53% (Rhbg) and 81% (Rhcg2), respectively.

Branchial ATPase activities during HEA exposure

Na+-ATPase and V-type H+-ATPase activities of 0 h control, 24 h control and 24 h HEA gill samples were compared at assay pHs of 7.5 and 8.0, in the presence of either K+ (10 mmol l−1) or NH4+ (10 mmol l−1). Despite the increase in mRNA levels of Na+,K+-ATPase during HEA exposure (Fig. 5C), there were no significant differences for the different sample times within each of the four assay conditions (data not shown), so the data were averaged for all sample times (Fig. 7). However, there were clear effects of assay conditions. Na+-ATPase activity at pH 7.5 was significantly higher by approximately 60% in the presence of 10 mmol l−1 NH4+ (i.e. Na+, NH4+-ATPase activity) than in the presence of 10 mmol l−1 K+ (i.e. Na+,K+-ATPase activity); a similar though non-significant difference was seen at pH 8.0 (Fig. 7A). There were no significant effects of pH on Na+-ATPase activities. In contrast, increasing the pH of the assay buffer from 7.5 to 8.0 significantly decreased the activity of V-type H+-ATPase by 23–30% regardless of the substitution of NH4+ for K+, a change that had no significant effect itself (Fig. 7B).

To further explore the ability of NH4+ to activate Na+-ATPase activity and its relevance under in vivo conditions, five pools were made from control gill tissues and tested simultaneously under a range of assay conditions, all at pH 7.5. In these pools, 10 mmol l−1 NH4+ again produced an activity approximately 60% higher than that produced by 10 mmol l−1 K+ (0.811±0.097 versus 0.486±0.029 μmol ADP mg−1 protein h−1). When 10 mmol l−1 NH4+ was added to 10 mmol l−1 K+ (the standard concentration in the assay medium) rather than substituted for it as shown in Fig. 7A, activity again increased significantly by approximately 60% (0.776±0.118 μmol ADP mg−1 protein h−1). When activity was tested at various K+ concentrations (1, 3, 10, 20 mmol l−1) in the absence of NH4+, there was no concentration dependency whatsoever (Fig. 8). However, when activity was tested over the same range of NH4+ concentrations (1, 3, 10, 20 mmol l−1) in the absence of K+, 3 mmol l−1 NH4+ provided significantly greater activity, and saturation occurred at 10 and 20 mmol l−1 K+ (Fig. 8). These data were well described by a Michaelis–Menten relationship (r2=0.90) with Km=1.18±0.43 mmol l−1 NH4+ and Vmax=1.20±0.09 μmol ADP mg−1 protein h−1. Thus the measured increase in plasma TAmm to 3–4 mmol l−1 (Fig. 2A) would likely have stimulated Na+-ATPase activity in vivo. None of these treatments had any significant effect on V-type H+-ATPase activity (data not shown).

Overview – responses to HEA

The Magadi tilapia expresses at least three Rh proteins (Rhag, Rhcg2 and Rhbg) at the mRNA level in the gills, and these are seen at the protein level by immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting using fugu antibodies. The mRNA expression of two of the types (Rhbg – usually basolateral; Rhcg2 – usually apical) increases during HEA. The staining pattern of the various Rh proteins appears typical, as first elucidated in pufferfish (Nakada et al., 2007), but with one exception: Rhcg2 is associated basolaterally with lamellar pillar cells in Magadi tilapia whereas in pufferfish, it is located apically in lamellar pavement cells. The mass of bands on the immunoblots is smaller than expected, although within the range of the deglycosylated peptides, as has been demonstrated by Nawata et al. (Nawata et al., 2010b) in pufferfish. Otherwise, these responses are comparable to those seen in several ammoniotelic teleosts such as freshwater and marine rainbow trout (Nawata et al., 2007; Tsui et al., 2009; Wood and Nawata, 2011), freshwater zebrafish larvae (Braun et al., 2009), mangrove killifish at intermediate salinity (Hung et al., 2007) and marine pufferfish (Nawata et al., 2010b). This finding is remarkable in that the Magadi tilapia is 100% ureotelic. Ammonia excretion has never been seen in this fish, despite repeated attempts to create favourable conditions for it to occur, such as acute or chronic exposure to lower external pH and/or low external buffering capacity (Wood et al., 1989; Wood et al., 1994; Wood et al., 2002).

Although we were unable to clone Rhcg1 from Magadi tilapia, we did test the fugu polyclonal Rhcg1 antibody generated by Nakada et al. (Nakada et al., 2007). In contrast to the other Rh antibodies used (Rhcg2, Rhbg and Rhag), this antibody detected multiple bands on the immunoblot, all of which were larger than the predicted molecular mass range (data not shown). Nevertheless, the Rhg1 antibody did clearly label the apical crypts of some Na+,K+-ATPase-rich cells in the filament epithelium (data not shown), in accord with the typical distribution of Rhcg1 in other species (e.g. Nakada et al., 2007; Wright and Wood, 2009). The significance of this observation is unclear at present and more work is needed.

Additional findings that fit with previous HEA studies on some ammoniotelic teleosts include increased plasma cortisol levels [trout (Tsui et al., 2009; Wood and Nawata, 2011)] and Na+,K+-ATPase expression [pufferfish (Nawata et al., 2010b)]. Cortisol mobilization may be involved in both the Na+,K+-ATPase and the Rh responses (Dang et al., 2000; Tsui et al., 2009). The present results also confirm that HEA exposure results in a rapid increase in urea-N excretion in the Magadi tilapia (Wood et al., 1989), and illuminate this response by showing that plasma [TAmm] is markedly elevated, and that the branchial urea transporter mtUT is activated at the transcriptional level. Presumably ammonia enters across the gills and stimulates urea production by the OUC (Wood et al., 1994; Lindley et al., 1999; Wilson et al., 2004). This fits with recent reports (McDonald et al., 2009; Rodela et al., 2011) that cortisol stimulates transcription of the gill urea transporter tUT in the toadfish, a facultatively ureotelic teleost. The increases in plasma glucose and lactate observed during HEA are commonly associated with cortisol mobilization in fish (De Boeck et al., 2001), and the increases in plasma [Ca2+] and [Mg2+] may reflect the formation of divalent cation–lactate complexes (Schaer and Bachmann, 1974). Lactic acid production could also serve to combat alkalosis during ammonia loading (Wilkie and Wood, 1991); ammonia is reported to specifically activate phosphofructokinase, a key regulatory enzyme in glycolysis (Kühn et al., 1974).

The role of Rh proteins in Magadi tilapia

Although the Magadi tilapia is an obligate ureotele, its exceptionally high rate of aerobic metabolism (Franklin et al., 1995; Narahara et al., 1996) and N-rich diet [cyanobacteria (Coe, 1966)] likely produces large amounts of ammonia internally. Indeed, both plasma and tissue TAmm levels are comparable to or greater than those in ammoniotelic teleosts (see Wood et al., 1989). Furthermore, the OUC is unusual relative to other ureogenic fish, inasmuch as the key regulatory enzyme carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase III (CPSase III) has kinetic properties that favour ammonia rather than glutamine as its primary substrate (Lindley et al., 1999). Therefore, CPSase III is set up to trap metabolic ammonia directly, and funnel it immediately into urea-N production. The presence of Rhag in red blood cells, and of Rhbg and Rhcg2 in OUC tissues such as white muscle and liver, likely facilitates the shuttling of ammonia to sites where it can be trapped by glutamine synthetase and/or detoxified through the OUC by conversion into urea-N. Microbial activity in the faeces also produces ammonia (Wood et al., 1989), which may explain the Rh expression in the intestine (Bucking and Wood, 2012). Rh expression levels are relatively high in brain, which suggests that future studies should check the brain for both OUC activity and other detoxification mechanisms such as glutamine synthesis.

But what about high levels of Rh expression in gills, which cannot be explained by the above argument? One possibility is that gill Rh proteins serve another function, the facilitation of CO2 rather than NH3 flux. This idea remains controversial [for background, see Nawata and Wood (Nawata and Wood, 2008), Wright and Wood (Wright and Wood, 2009) and Weihrauch et al. (Weihrauch et al., 2009)], but some preliminary evidence in favour of this idea has recently been presented in zebrafish (Perry et al., 2010). However, because of the high external water pH, Magadi tilapia live in a ‘CO2 vacuum’ (Johansen et al., 1975); it is difficult to see why there would be a need to facilitate CO2 excretion, and why the system would respond to HEA if it is present to manage CO2 excretion. There may well be other roles for Rh proteins. Notably, the Rhbg and Rhcg2 proteins in Magadi tilapia are unusual, with only 10 transmembrane domains, rather than the 12 that are considered normal (Huang and Ye, 2010). Far simpler changes such as a mere two amino acid substitution can change a mammalian RhAG glycoprotein into a cation-selective channel (Bruce et al., 2009). In mammals, normal and mutated Rh proteins have been implicated in infertility, depression, tumour suppression, migraines and even HCO3 transport (Huang and Ye, 2010). The latter is worthy of future investigation, because the Magadi tilapia must actively excrete HCO3 across its gills (Wood et al., 2012).

Nevertheless, the facts remain that Rhbg and Rhcg2 responded to HEA at the mRNA level, and HEA is a relevant environmental stressor in Lake Magadi (Wilson et al., 2004). Therefore, at present we favour the idea that the branchial Rh proteins are present in the gills to function as ammonia transporters. Under normal conditions, they might well be inactive. However, during HEA, the branchial Rh proteins would function to facilitate ammonia efflux, by working in concert with a basolateral Na+-ATPase activated by high plasma [NH4+]. While NH4+ sensitivity has been reported in several teleosts (Mallery, 1983; Randall et al., 1999; Nawata et al., 2010b), preferential activation by NH4+ relative to K+ has only been reported in one other species, another tilapia (Balm et al., 1988). Acting as an Na+,NH4+-ATPase rather than as an Na+,K+-ATPase, this enzyme could potentially transport NH4+ across the basolateral membranes, building up very high intracellular concentrations of ammonia in the gill cells.

Model calculations have been performed to see whether this scenario to achieve active ammonia excretion during HEA exposure is feasible. Intracellular pH (pHi) as well as extracellular pH (pHe) appear to be unusually high in Magadi tilapia (Johansen et al., 1975; Wood et al., 1994; Pörtner et al., 2010). In Fig. 9, we have used estimates of pHe=8.6 for blood plasma, and pHi=8.0 for gill ionocytes, measurements of transepithelial potential=+7 mV (blood plasma side) relative to the external environment (Wood et al., 2012), and present data on environmental pHext=9.9, environmental [TAmm]ext=0.45 mmol l−1, and plasma [TAmm]e levels=4 mmol l−1 (Fig. 2A) during HEA exposure. We calculate that the NH4+-activated Na+-ATPase would have to maintain a branchial intracellular [TAmm]i of approximately 10 mmol l−1 and a membrane potential of approximately −28 mV relative to the blood plasma in order for there to be a gradient facilitating NH3 movement through the Rh channels from blood to cell and from cell to water (Fig. 9). These values do not appear unreasonable, so the changes in gene transcription during HEA we have seen may facilitate a functional response to actively excrete ammonia against a gradient. There are several problems with this model, not the least of which is that we have no firm evidence that apical Rh proteins (presumably Rhcg) are expressed in the same epithelial gill cells as basolateral Rh proteins (presumably Rhbg). Furthermore, the source of H+ supply to sustain apical diffusion trapping in this highly buffered environment remains problematic. More work is needed to determine whether this model is realistic, indeed whether the increased expression of Rh mRNAs has any adaptive significance, or is rather a remnant response of fossil genes and proteins that are no longer functional in this most unusual ureotelic teleost.

We thank the Magadi Soda Company, particularly John Ndonga and John Kabera, for their cooperation, the University of Nairobi for logistic support, and Professor S. Hirose for the gift of pufferfish antibodies. Two anonymous reviewers provided constructive criticism. Dishon Muthee and George Muthee furnished invaluable assistance in the field, and Linda Diao provided excellent technical support at McMaster University.

FUNDING

C.M.W. is supported by the Canada Research Chair Program. A.B. is a Research Fellow from the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq, Brazil) and is supported by the International Canada Research Chair Program from the International Development Research Centre (IDRC; Ottawa, Canada). This research was funded by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Discovery grant to C.M.W., a grant from the Brazilian CNPq to A.B., and a grant from the National Research Foundation of South Africa to J.M.

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