A mannose receptor is involved in the anti-Vibrio defense of red swamp crayfish

Publication date: Available online 9 August 2018Source: Fish & Shellfish ImmunologyAuthor(s): Xin Man, Xin-Tong Pan, Hong-Wei Zhang, Yue Wang, Xin-Cang Li, Xiao-Wen ZhangAbstractMannose receptor (MR), a member of pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs), is the first MR family member to be discovered that plays a critical role in immunity. The function of MRs has been reported in mammals and teleosts while none in invertebrates. In the present study, we identified a MR-like gene (designated as PcMR) from red swamp crayfish, Procambarus clarkii. The PcMR cDNA is 6848 bp long with a 6288 bp open reading frame that encodes a polypeptide with 2095 amino acid residues. PcMR transcripts were mainly detected in hepatopancreas and hemocytes, and upregulated by Vibrio anguillarum challenge. The PcMR protein contained 14 C-type lectin domains (CTLDs) and they were divided into four fragments (CTLD 1–3, CTLD 4–6, CTLD 7–10, CTLD 11–14). The four recombinant proteins encoded by the four fragments were all expressed and purified. Microorganism-binding and sugar-binding assay showed that CTLD 1–3, CTLD 4–6, CTLD 7–10, CTLD 11–14 could bind to a variety of bacteria, as well as glycoconjugates on the bacterial surface. Moreover, they agglutinated bacteria in a calcium-dependent manner. Bacteria clearance experiment manifested that the mixed proteins facilitated the clearance of injected bacteria in crayfish. PcMR silencing by siRNA interference impaired the bacterial clearance ...
Source: Fish and Shellfish Immunology - Category: Biology Source Type: research