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Increased Thymic Cell Turnover under Boron Stress May Bypass TLR3/4 Pathway in African Ostrich

Previous studies revealed that thymus is a targeted immune organ in malnutrition, and high-boron stress is harmful for immune organs. African ostrich is the living fossil of ancient birds and the food animals in modern life. There is no report about the effect of boron intake on thymus of ostrich. T...

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Autores principales: Huang, Hai-bo, Xiao, Ke, Lu, Shun, Yang, Ke-li, Ansari, Abdur Rahman, Khaliq, Haseeb, Song, Hui, Zhong, Juming, Liu, Hua-zhen, Peng, Ke-mei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4460079/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26053067
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129596
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author Huang, Hai-bo
Xiao, Ke
Lu, Shun
Yang, Ke-li
Ansari, Abdur Rahman
Khaliq, Haseeb
Song, Hui
Zhong, Juming
Liu, Hua-zhen
Peng, Ke-mei
author_facet Huang, Hai-bo
Xiao, Ke
Lu, Shun
Yang, Ke-li
Ansari, Abdur Rahman
Khaliq, Haseeb
Song, Hui
Zhong, Juming
Liu, Hua-zhen
Peng, Ke-mei
author_sort Huang, Hai-bo
collection PubMed
description Previous studies revealed that thymus is a targeted immune organ in malnutrition, and high-boron stress is harmful for immune organs. African ostrich is the living fossil of ancient birds and the food animals in modern life. There is no report about the effect of boron intake on thymus of ostrich. The purpose of present study was to evaluate the effect of excessive boron stress on ostrich thymus and the potential role of TLR3/4 signals in this process. Histological analysis demonstrated that long-term boron stress (640 mg/L for 90 days) did not disrupt ostrich thymic structure during postnatal development. However, the numbers of apoptotic cells showed an increased tendency, and the expression of autophagy and proliferation markers increased significantly in ostrich thymus after boron treatment. Next, we examined the expression of TLR3 and TLR4 with their downstream molecular in thymus under boron stress. Since ostrich genome was not available when we started the research, we first cloned ostrich TLR3 TLR4 cDNA from thymus. Ostrich TLR4 was close to white-throated Tinamou. Whole avian TLR4 codons were under purify selection during evolution, whereas 80 codons were under positive selection. TLR3 and TLR4 were expressed in ostrich thymus and bursa of fabricius as was revealed by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR). TLR4 expression increased with age but significantly decreased after boron treatment, whereas TLR3 expression showed the similar tendency. Their downstream molecular factors (IRF1, JNK, ERK, p38, IL-6 and IFN) did not change significantly in thymus, except that p100 was significantly increased under boron stress when analyzed by qRT-PCR or western blot. Taken together, these results suggest that ostrich thymus developed resistance against long-term excessive boron stress, possibly by accelerating intrathymic cell death and proliferation, which may bypass the TLR3/4 pathway. In addition, attenuated TLRs activity may explain the reduced inflammatory response to pathogens under boron stress.
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spelling pubmed-44600792015-06-16 Increased Thymic Cell Turnover under Boron Stress May Bypass TLR3/4 Pathway in African Ostrich Huang, Hai-bo Xiao, Ke Lu, Shun Yang, Ke-li Ansari, Abdur Rahman Khaliq, Haseeb Song, Hui Zhong, Juming Liu, Hua-zhen Peng, Ke-mei PLoS One Research Article Previous studies revealed that thymus is a targeted immune organ in malnutrition, and high-boron stress is harmful for immune organs. African ostrich is the living fossil of ancient birds and the food animals in modern life. There is no report about the effect of boron intake on thymus of ostrich. The purpose of present study was to evaluate the effect of excessive boron stress on ostrich thymus and the potential role of TLR3/4 signals in this process. Histological analysis demonstrated that long-term boron stress (640 mg/L for 90 days) did not disrupt ostrich thymic structure during postnatal development. However, the numbers of apoptotic cells showed an increased tendency, and the expression of autophagy and proliferation markers increased significantly in ostrich thymus after boron treatment. Next, we examined the expression of TLR3 and TLR4 with their downstream molecular in thymus under boron stress. Since ostrich genome was not available when we started the research, we first cloned ostrich TLR3 TLR4 cDNA from thymus. Ostrich TLR4 was close to white-throated Tinamou. Whole avian TLR4 codons were under purify selection during evolution, whereas 80 codons were under positive selection. TLR3 and TLR4 were expressed in ostrich thymus and bursa of fabricius as was revealed by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR). TLR4 expression increased with age but significantly decreased after boron treatment, whereas TLR3 expression showed the similar tendency. Their downstream molecular factors (IRF1, JNK, ERK, p38, IL-6 and IFN) did not change significantly in thymus, except that p100 was significantly increased under boron stress when analyzed by qRT-PCR or western blot. Taken together, these results suggest that ostrich thymus developed resistance against long-term excessive boron stress, possibly by accelerating intrathymic cell death and proliferation, which may bypass the TLR3/4 pathway. In addition, attenuated TLRs activity may explain the reduced inflammatory response to pathogens under boron stress. Public Library of Science 2015-06-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4460079/ /pubmed/26053067 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129596 Text en © 2015 Huang et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Huang, Hai-bo
Xiao, Ke
Lu, Shun
Yang, Ke-li
Ansari, Abdur Rahman
Khaliq, Haseeb
Song, Hui
Zhong, Juming
Liu, Hua-zhen
Peng, Ke-mei
Increased Thymic Cell Turnover under Boron Stress May Bypass TLR3/4 Pathway in African Ostrich
title Increased Thymic Cell Turnover under Boron Stress May Bypass TLR3/4 Pathway in African Ostrich
title_full Increased Thymic Cell Turnover under Boron Stress May Bypass TLR3/4 Pathway in African Ostrich
title_fullStr Increased Thymic Cell Turnover under Boron Stress May Bypass TLR3/4 Pathway in African Ostrich
title_full_unstemmed Increased Thymic Cell Turnover under Boron Stress May Bypass TLR3/4 Pathway in African Ostrich
title_short Increased Thymic Cell Turnover under Boron Stress May Bypass TLR3/4 Pathway in African Ostrich
title_sort increased thymic cell turnover under boron stress may bypass tlr3/4 pathway in african ostrich
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4460079/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26053067
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129596
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