Selective expression of a “correct cloud” of Dscam in crayfish survivors after second exposure to the same pathogen

Publication date: Available online 12 June 2019Source: Fish & Shellfish ImmunologyAuthor(s): Tze Hann Ng, Ramya Kumar, Kantamas Apitanyasai, Shu-Ting He, Shen-Po Chiu, Han-Ching WangAbstractArthropod hypervariable Dscam (Down syndrome cell adhesion molecule) may be involved in adaptive-like immune characteristics, namely immune priming, enabling the host to “learn” and “remember” pathogens previously encountered in arthropods. However, expression of Dscam in immune-primed arthropods after a second challenge has apparently not been confirmed. Herein, working with Dscam of Australian freshwater crayfish (Cherax quadricarinatus, i.e. CqDscam), we further investigated whether immune priming is mediated by “clouds” of appropriate (or “correct”) CqDscam isoforms. In crayfish that survived a first WSSV challenge (immune priming), long-lasting CqDscam expression remained higher after a second WSSV challenge. Selective CqDscam isoforms were also induced after both challenges. Based on pathogen binding assays, these WSSV-induced CqDscam isoforms had a higher WSSV binding ability, perhaps mainly mediated by Ig3-spliced variants. We therefore hypothesized that in these crayfish survivors, an unknown selection process was generating a “correct cloud” of CqDscam against a previously encountered pathogen.
Source: Fish and Shellfish Immunology - Category: Biology Source Type: research