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The CXC Chemokine Receptors in Four-Eyed Sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) and Their Involvement in Responding to Skin Injury

CXC Chemokine signaling plays an important role in wound healing. The four-eyed sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) is a commercially important marine fish, which is prone to suffer skin ulceration at high temperature seasons, leading to mass mortality of fish in aquaculture farms. The genetic background...

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Autores principales: Dong, Mengdan, Zhang, Hong, Mo, Chengyu, Li, Wenjing, Zhang, Wanwan, Jia, Kuntong, Liu, Wei, Yi, Meisheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8472726/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34576186
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms221810022
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author Dong, Mengdan
Zhang, Hong
Mo, Chengyu
Li, Wenjing
Zhang, Wanwan
Jia, Kuntong
Liu, Wei
Yi, Meisheng
author_facet Dong, Mengdan
Zhang, Hong
Mo, Chengyu
Li, Wenjing
Zhang, Wanwan
Jia, Kuntong
Liu, Wei
Yi, Meisheng
author_sort Dong, Mengdan
collection PubMed
description CXC Chemokine signaling plays an important role in wound healing. The four-eyed sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) is a commercially important marine fish, which is prone to suffer skin ulceration at high temperature seasons, leading to mass mortality of fish in aquaculture farms. The genetic background related to skin ulceration and wound healing has remained unknown in this fish. Herein, we identified 10 differentially expressed Bostrychus sinensis CXC chemokine receptors (BsCXCRs) in skin ulcerated fish by de novo transcriptome sequencing. The transcripts of these BsCXCRs were classified in seven types, including BsCXCR1a/1b, BsCXCR2, BsCXCR3a1/3a2, BsCXCR4a/4b, and BsCXCR5-7, and BsCXCR6 was the first CXCR6 homologue experimentally identified in teleost fish. These BsCXCRs were further characterized in gene and protein structures, as well as phylogenetics, and the results revealed that BsCXCRs have expanded to divergent homologues. Our results showed that, in healthy fish, the BsCXCR transcripts was mainly distributed in the muscle and immune related organs, and that BsCXCR1a/1b proteins located in the cytomembrane, BsCXCR4a/4b/5/6 in the cytomembrane and perinuclear region, and BsCXCR3a1/3a2/7 in the cytomembrane, perinuclear region, and nuclear membrane, respectively. In skin injured fish, the transcripts of all BsCXCRs were transiently increased within one hour after injury, suggesting the involvement of BsCXCRs into the early inflammatory response to skin injury in the four-eyed sleeper. These results are valuable for understanding the evolutionary events of fish CXCR genes and provide insights into the roles of CXCR family in fish skin injury.
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spelling pubmed-84727262021-09-28 The CXC Chemokine Receptors in Four-Eyed Sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) and Their Involvement in Responding to Skin Injury Dong, Mengdan Zhang, Hong Mo, Chengyu Li, Wenjing Zhang, Wanwan Jia, Kuntong Liu, Wei Yi, Meisheng Int J Mol Sci Article CXC Chemokine signaling plays an important role in wound healing. The four-eyed sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) is a commercially important marine fish, which is prone to suffer skin ulceration at high temperature seasons, leading to mass mortality of fish in aquaculture farms. The genetic background related to skin ulceration and wound healing has remained unknown in this fish. Herein, we identified 10 differentially expressed Bostrychus sinensis CXC chemokine receptors (BsCXCRs) in skin ulcerated fish by de novo transcriptome sequencing. The transcripts of these BsCXCRs were classified in seven types, including BsCXCR1a/1b, BsCXCR2, BsCXCR3a1/3a2, BsCXCR4a/4b, and BsCXCR5-7, and BsCXCR6 was the first CXCR6 homologue experimentally identified in teleost fish. These BsCXCRs were further characterized in gene and protein structures, as well as phylogenetics, and the results revealed that BsCXCRs have expanded to divergent homologues. Our results showed that, in healthy fish, the BsCXCR transcripts was mainly distributed in the muscle and immune related organs, and that BsCXCR1a/1b proteins located in the cytomembrane, BsCXCR4a/4b/5/6 in the cytomembrane and perinuclear region, and BsCXCR3a1/3a2/7 in the cytomembrane, perinuclear region, and nuclear membrane, respectively. In skin injured fish, the transcripts of all BsCXCRs were transiently increased within one hour after injury, suggesting the involvement of BsCXCRs into the early inflammatory response to skin injury in the four-eyed sleeper. These results are valuable for understanding the evolutionary events of fish CXCR genes and provide insights into the roles of CXCR family in fish skin injury. MDPI 2021-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8472726/ /pubmed/34576186 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms221810022 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dong, Mengdan
Zhang, Hong
Mo, Chengyu
Li, Wenjing
Zhang, Wanwan
Jia, Kuntong
Liu, Wei
Yi, Meisheng
The CXC Chemokine Receptors in Four-Eyed Sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) and Their Involvement in Responding to Skin Injury
title The CXC Chemokine Receptors in Four-Eyed Sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) and Their Involvement in Responding to Skin Injury
title_full The CXC Chemokine Receptors in Four-Eyed Sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) and Their Involvement in Responding to Skin Injury
title_fullStr The CXC Chemokine Receptors in Four-Eyed Sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) and Their Involvement in Responding to Skin Injury
title_full_unstemmed The CXC Chemokine Receptors in Four-Eyed Sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) and Their Involvement in Responding to Skin Injury
title_short The CXC Chemokine Receptors in Four-Eyed Sleeper (Bostrychus sinensis) and Their Involvement in Responding to Skin Injury
title_sort cxc chemokine receptors in four-eyed sleeper (bostrychus sinensis) and their involvement in responding to skin injury
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8472726/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34576186
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms221810022
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