| Literature DB >> 31306759 |
Hao Chen1, Minxiao Wang2, Huan Zhang1, Hao Wang1, Zhao Lv3, Li Zhou1, Zhaoshan Zhong4, Chao Lian1, Lei Cao1, Chaolun Li5.
Abstract
As domain species in seep and vent ecosystem, Bathymodioline mussels has been regarded as a model organism in investigating deep sea chemosymbiosis. However, mechanisms underlying their symbiosis with chemosynthetic bacteria, especially how the host recognizes symbionts, have remained largely unsolved. In the present study, a modified pull-down assay was conducted using enriched symbiotic methane-oxidation bacteria as bait and gill proteins of Bathymodiolus platifrons as a target to isolate pattern recognition receptors involved in the immune recognition of symbionts. As a result, a total of 47 proteins including BpLRR-1 were identified from the pull-down assay. It was found that complete cDNA sequence of BpLRR-1 contained an open reading frame of 1479 bp and could encode a protein of 492 amino acid residues with no signal peptide or transmembrane region but eight LRR motif and two EFh motif. The binding patterns of BpLRR-1 against microbial associated molecular patterns were subsequently investigated by surface plasmon resonance analysis and LPS pull-down assay. Consequently, BpLRR-1 was found with high binding affinity with LPS and suggested as a key molecule in recognizing symbionts. Besides, transcripts of BpLRR-1 were found decreased significantly during symbiont depletion assay yet increased rigorously during symbionts or nonsymbiotic Vibrio alginolyticus challenge, further demonstrating its participation in the chemosynthetic symbiosis. Collectively, these results suggest that BpLRR-1 could serve as an intracellular recognition receptor for the endosymbionts, providing new hints for understanding the immune recognition in symbiosis of B. platifrons.Entities:
Keywords: Bathymodioline mussels; Chemosymbiosis; LRR protein; Pattern recognition receptors; Pull-down
Year: 2019 PMID: 31306759 DOI: 10.1016/j.fsi.2019.07.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fish Shellfish Immunol ISSN: 1050-4648 Impact factor: 4.581