1. Chitin binding protein from the kuruma shrimp Marsupenaeus japonicus facilitates the clearance of Vibrio anguillarum.
- Author
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Xu S, Jing M, Kong DM, Wang YR, Zhou Q, Liu WY, Jiao F, Li YJ, and Xie SY
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Arthropod Proteins genetics, Arthropod Proteins metabolism, Carrier Proteins classification, Carrier Proteins genetics, Gene Expression Profiling methods, Hemocytes immunology, Hemocytes metabolism, Hemocytes microbiology, Host-Pathogen Interactions immunology, Immunity, Innate genetics, Penaeidae genetics, Penaeidae microbiology, Protein Binding, RNA Interference, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Vibrio metabolism, Vibrio physiology, Arthropod Proteins immunology, Carrier Proteins immunology, Chitin metabolism, Immunity, Innate immunology, Penaeidae immunology, Vibrio immunology
- Abstract
Peritrophic membrane (PM) refers to a vital physical barrier enabling shrimp to resist pathogen invasion. It primarily consists of chitin and proteins, mostly chitin-binding protein (CBP). CBPs have been identified from microorganisms to higher organisms. In the present study, a CBP, designated MjCBP, was reported from Marsupenaeus japonicus. The open reading frame of MjCBP was 1854 bp, encoding a protein with 618 amino acids (MH544098). To be specific, the theoretical pI and molecular mass of mature MjCBP reached 5.43 and 66064.00 Da, respectively. MjCBP consisted of seven type Ⅱ chitin-binding domains (ChtB D2), which was up-regulated after being challenged with Vibrio anguillarum and then agglutinating several bacteria. In addition, MjCBP and the first chitin-binding domain (CBD1) could bind to several Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria via the binding process to lipopolysaccharides and peptidoglycans, whereas CBD1 was not capable of agglutinating bacteria. Moreover, the anterior and posterior segments of CBD1 were synthesized in vitro, and the posterior segment could bind to lipopolysaccharides. However, both segments fail to agglutinate bacteria. Furthermore, MjCBP and CBD1 facilitated the clearance of V. anguillarum in vivo, and the silencing of MjCBP via RNA interference reduced the ability of bacterial clearance. As revealed from the mentioned results, MjCBP acts as an opsonin or pattern recognition receptor to achieve antibacterial immune response in shrimp., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
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