Ultraviolet-Light-Absorbing Tunic Cells in Didemnid Ascidians Hosting a Symbiotic Photo-oxygenic Prokaryote,Prochloron

Abstract
Coral reef invertebrates that host phototrophic symbionts are thought to protect themselves and their symbionts with mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs)-UV-absorbing substances that act as sunscreens (Dunlap, W. C., and J. M. Shick, 1998. J. Phycol. 34: 418-430). However, the histological distribution of MAAs in the host tissues has not yet been visualized. We have localized the UV-absorbing substances in the tissues of two colonial didemnid ascidians-Lissoclinum patella and Diplosoma sp.-that contain the symbiotic photo-oxygenic prokaryote Prochloron sp. Cross-sections of unfixed tissue from these ascidians were examined by UV-light microscopy at 320 or 330 nm, wavelengths at which UV light is absorbed by MAAs. Within the tunic, the gelatinous integument of the colony, UV light was exclusively absorbed by a particular type of cell, the tunic bladder cell. Tunic bladder cells with strong UV absorption were denser in the upper tunic, which lies over a colony's zooids, than in the basal tunic underlying the zooid. In the upper tunic, those cells with strong UV absorption were most dense near the surface. The tunic bladder cell is highly vacuolated, and the vacuole contains strong acid, which destabilizes MAAs. Furthermore, the UV-absorbing portion of tunic bladder cells seemed to be cup-shaped, indicating that the MAAs are not localized in the vacuole, but in the cytoplasm. These results strongly suggest that didemnid ascidians accumulate MAAs in tunic bladder cells as a protection against UV radiation.

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