Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2432274 Fish & Shellfish Immunology 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

A great loss has been suffered by microbial infectious diseases under intensive shrimp farming in recent years. In this background, the understanding of shrimp innate immunity becomes an importantly scientific issue, but little is known about the heterogeneous protein–protein interaction between pathogenic cells and hosts, which is a key step for the invading microbes to infect internet organs through bloodstream. In the present study, bacterial outer membrane (OM) protein array and pull-down approaches are used to isolate both Vibrio parahaemolyticus OM proteins that bind to shrimp serum proteins and the shrimp serum proteins that interact with bacterial cells, respectively. Three interacting shrimp serum proteins, hemocyanin, β-1,3-glucan binding protein and LV_HP_RA36F08r and thirty interacting OM proteins were determined. They form 63 heterogeneous protein–protein interactions. Nine out of the 30 OM proteins were randomly demonstrated to be up-regulated or down-regulated when bacterial cells were cultured with shrimp sera, indicating the biological significance of the network. The interesting findings uncover the complexity of struggle between host immunity and bacterial infection. Compared with our previous report on heterogeneous interactome between fish grill and bacterial OM proteins, the present study further extends the investigation from lower vertebrates to invertebrates and develops a bacterial OM protein array to identify the OM proteins bound with shrimp serum proteins, which elevates the frequencies of the bound OM proteins. Our results highlight the way to determine and understand the heterogeneous interaction between hosts and microbes.

Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slideHighlights► Bacterial pull-down to isolate the shrimp serum proteins that interact with bacterial cells. ► Shrimp serum proteins recognized bacterial outer membrane (OM) protein in OM array. ► Shrimp proteins and OM proteins form sixty-three heterogeneous protein–protein interactions. ► Nine out of the thirty OM proteins were randomly demonstrated to be up-regulated or down-regulated. ► Our results uncover the complexity of struggle between host immunity and bacterial infection.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Aquatic Science
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