Giant clams harbor symbiotic zooxanthellae and
manifest light-enhanced calcification. In light, they also
increase the absorption and assimilation of exogenous
ammonia, but the roles of the host and symbionts are
unclear and the reason for light dependency remains
enigmatic. Here, we report the complete coding cDNA
sequence of a glutamine synthetase (GS), from the ctenidia
(gill) of Tridacna squamosa. The deduced GS amino acid
sequence was closely related to other animal GSs, indicating
a host origin. The GS/GS transcript level and protein
abundance increased significantly in the ctenidia after 12 h
of light exposure. These results denote the ctenidia as the
site of light-enhanced ammonia absorption with the
ab... More
Giant clams harbor symbiotic zooxanthellae and
manifest light-enhanced calcification. In light, they also
increase the absorption and assimilation of exogenous
ammonia, but the roles of the host and symbionts are
unclear and the reason for light dependency remains
enigmatic. Here, we report the complete coding cDNA
sequence of a glutamine synthetase (GS), from the ctenidia
(gill) of Tridacna squamosa. The deduced GS amino acid
sequence was closely related to other animal GSs, indicating
a host origin. The GS/GS transcript level and protein
abundance increased significantly in the ctenidia after 12 h
of light exposure. These results denote the ctenidia as the
site of light-enhanced ammonia absorption with the
absorbed ammonia being assimilated to glutamine by the
host GS. Immunofluorescence microscopy confirmed that
GS was expressed predominantly in the cytoplasm of the
epithelial cells separating the tertiary water channels from
the hemolymph inside the ctenidia. Hence, unlike symbiotic
cnidarians, the host clam probably supplies exogenous
nitrogen as glutamine from the ctenidia, through the
hemolymph and tubular fluid, to the nitrogen-deficient
zooxanthellae which reside extracellularly in the extensible
outer mantle. This is the first report on light-dependent
gene and protein expression of a host enzyme involved in
nitrogen metabolism in an alga–invertebrate association