| Literature DB >> 26633533 |
Yulema Valero1, Francisco J Martínez-Morcillo2, M Ángeles Esteban3, Elena Chaves-Pozo4, Alberto Cuesta5.
Abstract
Peroxiredoxins (Prxs) are a family of antioxidant enzymes that protect cells from oxidative damage. In addition, Prxs may act as modulators of inflammation, protect against cell death and tumour progression, and facilitate tissue repair after damage. The most studied roles of Prx1 and Prx2 are immunological. Here we present a review on the effects of some immunostimulant treatments and bacterial, viral, or parasitic infections on the expression of fish Prxs at the gene and/or protein level, and point to their important role in immunity. The Prxs show antioxidant activity as well as a protective effect against infection. Some preliminary data are presented about the role of fish Prx1 and Prx2 in virus resistance although further studies are needed before the role of fish Prx in immunity can be definitively defined.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant enzymes; fish; immunity; natural killer enhancement factor; peroxiredoxins; virus
Year: 2015 PMID: 26633533 PMCID: PMC4690020 DOI: 10.3390/biology4040860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Figure 1Aspects related with peroxiredoxins and the metabolism of reactive oxygen species (ROS). (A) Major sources of H2O2 are mitochondria, the NADPH oxidase (NOX) complex of phagocytic cells, and 5-lipoxygenase (reviewed by [2]). In the mitochondria, electrons from the electron transport chain are used to form O2− at the level of complex I and III, before being converted by mitochondrial superoxide dismutase (SOD) into H2O2, which can cross mitochondrial membranes to reach the cytoplasm. Regarding the NOX complexes, they are present in both professional phagocytic cells (macrophages, neutrophils, and eosinophils) and non-phagocytic cells and play a crucial role in different diseases. The NOX of non-phagocytic cells is constitutively active, producing a very low level of ROS and increasing both its activity and ROS generation in response to a number of factors and conditions. Finally, 5-lipoxygenase (5-LOX) is a mixed function oxidase involved in the synthesis of leukotrienes from arachidonic acid in response to essentially the same stimuli that are able to stimulate NOX, particularly growth factors and cytokines. The last mediators lead to membrane ruffling and the generation of superoxide, and then H2O2, through the intervention of the small GTPase Rac1 and a SOD isoform. (B) Mechanism of action of the thioredoxin (Trx) redox system (reviewed by [3]). Reduced Trx catalyses the reduction of disulfides (S-S) within oxidized cellular proteins, such as peroxiredoxin (Prx). In this process Trx becomes oxidized, is then reduced by thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) at the expense of NADPH. (C) Regarding their localization, Prx proteins can be nuclear (Prx1 and Prx2), mitochondrial (Prx3 and Prx5), peroxisomic (Prx1 and Prx5), located in the endoplasmic reticulum (Prx4), cytosolic (Prx1, Prx2, Prx4–6), or extracellular (Prx1, Prx2 and Prx4). Cyt C, cytochrome C; UQ, coenzyme Q or ubiquinone; mtSOD, mitochondrial superoxide dismutase; NADP+, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate; NADPH, reduced NADP+; phox, phagocyte oxidase; Rac, Ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate; AA, arachidonic acid; HPETE, hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid; Prx, Peroxiredoxin; Trx, Thioredoxin; TrxR, Thioxiredoxin reductase. Modified from [2,3,4].
Summary of the studies showing the regulation of peroxiredoxin genes (prx) or protein (Prx) expression after common immune stimuli in fish.
| Fish Species | Stimulant | Effect | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gilthead seabream ( | Mitogens | ConA, PHA | ≈ | [ |
| PAMPs | LPS | ≈ | ||
| CpG ODNs | ↑ | |||
| Poly I:C | ↑ | |||
| Bacteria | ↑ | |||
| ≈ | ||||
| Virus | NNV | ≈ | ||
| ↑ | ||||
| Parasite | ↑ | [ | ||
| ↓ | ||||
| ≈ | ||||
| European sea bass ( | Mitogens | ConA, PHA | ≈ | [ |
| PAMPs | LPS | ≈ | ||
| CpG ODNs | ↑ | |||
| Poly I:C | ↑ | |||
| Bacteria | ≈ | |||
| ≈ | ||||
| Virus | NNV | ≈ | ||
| ↑ | ||||
| Japanese flounder ( | Bacteria | ↑ | [ | |
| ↑ | [ | |||
| Channel catfish ( | PAMPs | LPS | ↑ | [ |
| Spotted green pufferfish ( | PAMPs | LPS | ↑ | [ |
| Common carp ( | Virus | SVCV | ↑ | [ |
| ↓ | ||||
| ↓ | ||||
| ↑ Prx2 | ||||
| Lamprey ( | PAMPs | LPS | ↑ | [ |
| Rainbow trout ( | PAMPs | LPS | ≈ Prx1 in MØ | [ |
| ↑ Prx1 in RTS11 | ||||
| Zymosan | ≈ Prx1 in MØ | |||
| Bacteria | ↑ Prx1 in MØ | |||
| Virus | VHSV | ↑ | [ | |
| ↑ | [ | |||
| ↑ | [ | |||
| ISAV | ≈ Prx1 in RTS11 | [ | ||
| Parasite | ↑ Prx1 in spleen, HK | |||
| Vaccine | VHSV DNA vaccine + infection | ↑ | [ | |
| Atlantic salmon ( | Virus | IHNV | ↓ Prx2 | [ |
| Parasite | ↓ | [ | ||
| Large yellow croaker ( | Vaccine | ↑ Prx1, Prx2,Prx4 in spleen | [ | |
| Rock bream ( | PAMPs | Poly I:C | ↑ | [ |
| Virus | Iridovirus | ↑ | ||
| Miiuy croaker ( | Bacteria | ↑ | [ | |
| Ayu ( | Bacteria | ↑ | [ | |
| ↑ | ||||
| ↑ Prx2 in liver | ||||
| Zebrafish ( | Bacteria | ↑ | [ | |
| ↑ Prx3 and Prx5 in gill | ||||
| Turbot ( | PAMPs | Poly I:C | ↑ | [ |
| Bacteria | ↑ | |||
| ↑ | [ | |||
| ↑ | [ | |||
Abbreviations used: PAMPs, pathogen-associated molecular patterns; ConA, concanavalin A; PHA, phytohemagglutinin; CpG ODN, unmethylated CpG oligodeoxynucleotides; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; PBL, peripheral blood leucocytes; HK, Head-kidney; HKL, head-kidney leucocytes; MØ, macrophages; ISAV, infectious salmon anemia virus; SVCV, spring viremia of carp virus; VHSV, viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus; NNV, nodavirus; IHNV, infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus.
Summary of the functional studies evaluating the role of fish peroxiredoxins.
| Fish Species | Prx | Approximation | Effects Observed | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| European sea bass ( | Prx1 | Expression plasmids | ↓ NNV expression in brain | This study |
| Prx2 | ||||
| Atlantic salmon ( | Prx1 | Recombinant | Antioxidant defence | [ |
| Japanese flounder ( | Prx1 | Expression plasmids | ↓ bacterial infection | [ |
| knockdown | ↓ bacterial resistance | |||
| Lamprey ( | Prx2 | Recombinant | Antioxidant defence | [ |
| Protected DNA from | ||||
| Large yellow croaker ( | Prx4 | Recombinant | Antioxidant defence | [ |
| Prx4 injection | ↓ NF-κB activity | |||
| ↓ | ||||
| ↑ | ||||
| ↑ bacterial resistance | ||||
| Knockdown by siRNA | ↑ NF-κB activity | |||
| ↑ | ||||
| ↓ | ||||
| ↓ bacterial resistance | ||||
| Prx4 without the N-terminal motif | ↓ NF-κB activity | [ | ||
| ↓ bacterial resistance | ||||
| No antioxidant function | ||||
| Rock bream ( | Prx6 | Recombinant | Protected DNA from | [ |
| Turbot ( | Prx6 | Recombinant | Protected hepatocytes from peroxide treatment | [ |
Figure 2Expression levels of the antiviral mx and the nodavirus capsid protein (cp) genes in the brain of European sea bass specimens injected with expression plasmids (pcDNA alone or containing the gilthead seabream prx1 or prx2 genes) and infected with NNV. Bars represent the mean ± SEM (n = 4) referenced to the values found in control fish. Statistical differences (p < 0.1, +; p < 0.05, *) were analysed by ANOVA.