Mandarin fish (Siniperca chuatsi) is an important economic fish in China. Viral and bacterial diseases seriously affect the artificial culture of S. chuatsi. As a carnivorous fish, artificial feed domestication is also an important means to improve the scale of S. chuatsi culture. Therefore, the study of immunology and digestive physiology is very important to the industrial development of S. chuatsi. In this work, we analyzed the expression and function of the S. chuatsi leukocyte cell-derived chemotaxin 2 (Sc-lect2) gene on a basis of next generation, single-molecule long-read sequencing. Sc-lect2 was mainly expressed in the liver but barely expressed in the gill, skin, muscle, kidney, head kidney, brain, stomach, and intestine. When the fish were infected with infectious spleen and kidney necrosis virus and challenged with lipopolysaccharide and polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid, Sc-lect2 expression significantly increased by about 40, 17, and 7-fold, respectively, compared with unstimulated samples. We also found that Sc-lect2 increases by approximately 8-fold after the fish are fed an artificial diet. These results show that mandarin fish liver can not only digest food but also express specific immune genes. Changes in the diet can cause the differential expression of Sc-lect2 genes. Four Sc-lect2 interaction genes were differentially expressed in the skin or blood. Interestingly, miR-145-3p could inhibit Sc-lect2 gene expression by targeting its coding sequence region. One CpG island in the promoter region showed a high level of methylation, suggesting that high methylation does not affect Sc-lect2 gene expression in the liver.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsi.2020.09.034 | DOI Listing |
Fish Shellfish Immunol
December 2020
Key Laboratory of Exploration and Utilization of Aquatic Genetic Resources, Ministry of Education, Shanghai Ocean University, Shanghai, 201306, China.
Mandarin fish (Siniperca chuatsi) is an important economic fish in China. Viral and bacterial diseases seriously affect the artificial culture of S. chuatsi.
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