Why is there no carbonic anhydrase activity available to fish plasma?
J Lessard, A Val, S Aota and D Randall Carbonic anhydrase (CA) is absent from the plasma of vertebrates. In vitro, CA in fish plasma will short-circuit the effect of catecholamines, which is to increase red blood cell (RBC) pH and volume, both of which enhance the affinity of hemoglobin for O2. CA was infused into trout for a period of 6 h and injected after 48 h, during which the animal was submitted to deep hypoxia (PO2=3035 mmHg; 4.04.7 kPa). O2 content, lactate content, catecholamine levels, hematocrit, hemoglobin concentration and pHi were similar to those in the saline-infused control group. In contrast, cell volume was significantly higher and pHe, total CO2 content and organic phosphate levels were significantly lower than in the control group. The concentration of CA was not high enough completely to short-circuit the increase in pHi and red blood cell volume caused by catecholamines. The lower pHe in the CA-infused animals could enhance the activity of the Na+/H+ pu