| Literature DB >> 21801407 |
Davinia Morera1, Simon A MacKenzie.
Abstract
Erythrocytes are highly abundant circulating cells in the vertebrates, which, with the notable exception of mammals, remain nucleated throughout the entire life cycle. The major function associated with these cells is respiratory gas exchange however other functions including interaction with the immune system have been attributed to these cells. Many viral, prokaryotic and eukaryotic pathogens directly target this cell type and across the vertebrate group a significant number of related pathologies have been reported. Across the primary literature mechanisms of interaction, invasion and replication between viruses and erythrocytes have been well described however the functional response of the erythrocyte has been poorly studied. A fragmented series of reports spanning the vertebrates suggests that these cells are capable of functional responses to viral infection. In contrast, in-depth proteomic studies using human erythrocytes have strongly progressed throughout the past decade providing a rich source of information related to protein expression and potential function. Furthermore information at the gene expression level is becoming available. Here we provide a review of erythrocyte-pathogen interactions, erythrocyte functions in immunity and propose in light of recent -omics research that the nucleated erythrocytes may have a direct role in the immune response.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21801407 PMCID: PMC3199785 DOI: 10.1186/1297-9716-42-89
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Erythrocyte functions in vertebrates.
| Proposed functions | Mammals | Fish | Amphibian | Reptils | Birds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gas exchange function | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Sugar transport | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Calcium homeostasis | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Redox homeostasis | [ | [ | - | [ | [ |
| Cell proliferation | [ | - | - | - | [ |
| Antiviral response | [ | - | - | - | |
| Immune complex | [ | [ | - | - | - |
| ROS production | [ | [ | - | - | - |
| Hemoglobin | [ | [ | - | [ | - |
| Other related functions | [ | [ | - | - | [ |
Table reports functions associated to erythrocytes in mammals, fish, amphibian, reptiles and birds. References are numbered according to appearance.
Parasites of vertebrate erythrocytes.
| Family | Genera | Mammals | Fish | Amphibia | Reptils | Birds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dactylosomatidae | Babesiosoma | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Dactylosomatidae | Dactylosoma | - | [ | [ | [ | - |
| Garniidae | Garnia | - | - | - | [ | [ |
| Garniidae | Progarnia | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Garniidae | Saurocytozoon | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Haemogregarinidae | Cyrilia | - | [ | - | - | - |
| Haemogregarinidae | Desseria | - | [ | - | - | - |
| Haemogregarinidae | Haemogregarina | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Haemogregarinidae | Hemolivia | - | - | [ | [ | - |
| Haemogregarinidae | Hepatozoon | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Haemogregarinidae | Karyolysus | - | - | [ | [ | - |
| Haemoproteidae | Haemoproteus | [ | - | [ | [ | [ |
| Haemoproteidae | Haemocystidium | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Haemoproteidae | Simondia | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Lankesterellidae | Lainsonia | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Lankesterellidae | Lankesterella | - | - | [ | [ | [ |
| Lankesterellidae | Schellackia | - | - | [ | [ | - |
| Plasmodiidae | Billbraya | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Plasmodiidae | Mesnilium | - | [ | - | - | - |
| Plasmodiidae | Plasmodium | [ | - | - | [ | [ |
| Trypanosomatida | Sauroleishmania | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Uncertain | Chelonoplasma | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Uncertain | Cingula | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Uncertain | Erythrocytonucleophaga | - | - | [ | - | - |
| Uncertain | Globidiellum | - | [ | - | - | - |
| Uncertain | Haematractidium | - | [ | - | [ | - |
| Uncertain | Haemohormidium | - | [ | - | [ | - |
| Uncertain | Sauromella | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Unceratin | Tunetella | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Anaplasmataceae | Aegyptianella | - | - | [ | [ | - |
| Anaplasmataceae | Bertarellia | - | - | [ | [ | - |
| Anaplasmataceae | Cytamoeba | - | - | [ | [ | - |
| Anaplasmataceae | Eperythrozoon | [ | [ | - | - | - |
| Anaplasmataceae | Haemobartonella | [ | [ | [ | [ | - |
| Bartonellaceae | Grahamella | - | - | - | [ | - |
| Viral | Orthomyxoviridae Influenza A | [ | - | - | - | [ |
| Viral | Retroviridae Lentivirus (HIV-1) | [ | - | - | - | - |
| Viral | Orthomyxoviridae Isavirus (ISAV) | - | [ | - | - | - |
| Viral | unknown Immanoplasma* | - | [ | - | - | - |
| Viral | unknown Pirhemocyton* | - | - | [ | [ | - |
| Viral | unknown Toddia* | - | [ | [ | [ | - |
Table reports parasitic genera infecting both nucleated and non-nucleated vertebrate erythrocytes. References are numbers according to bibliography listing.
*These genus names are not accepted viral genera, but were designated in the early 1900s based on erythrocyte inclusions thought to be caused by protozoan parasites. The inclusions were subsequently found to be associated with icosahedral virus particles considered most likely to be large DNA viruses, possibly in the family Iridoviridae, but the taxonomy has not been conclusively defined.
Figure 1Microarray analysis (SFA2.0 cDNA salmonid-specific array. Accession number; GPL6154) in rainbow trout erythrocytes stimulated for 24 h with LPS or poly (I:C). (a) Total number of differential expressed genes (DEG) identified using a p-value of < 0.01. The total number of DEG with a fold change greater than 2 (FC > 2) (t-student, p < 0.01) are shown and selected DEG with relevance to immunity (p < 0.01) are shown. Results obtained from three independent experiments for each PAMP (five animals for each experiment). (b) Over representation of Gene Ontology functional categories. Categories were selected with Yates corrected Chi squared (p < 0.05). The number of DEG for each overrepresented category is shown.