Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8497704 Developmental & Comparative Immunology 2018 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
Scavenger receptors are crucial for innate immunity owing to their prominent role in clearance of harmful endogenous factors, immune recognition, and more importantly, as co-receptors of Toll-like receptors (TLRs) to initiate downstream responses. At present, invertebrate scavenger receptors, especially their role in immune mechanisms, are largely unknown. We report here that scavenger receptors form a diverse superfamily in Octopus ocellatus, including at least five different members with distinct tissue expression patterns. Two members, OoSR-B and OoSR-I, are grouped into class B and I scavenger receptors, respectively. OoSR-B and OoSR-I are located on the hemocyte membrane, and both recombinant scavenger receptors could serve as pattern recognition receptors to bind a broad range of pathogen-associated molecular patterns. Although OoSR-B and OoSR-I expression was induced by bacterial stimulation, only OoSR-B promoted hemocyte phagocytosis. Moreover, OoSR-B, but not OoSR-I, could act as a co-receptor of TLR to activate TLR-NF-κB signaling and initiate TNF-α production during anti-bacterial response. As the first report on an invertebrate scavenger receptor acting as a co-receptor of TLR, our study reveals the immune mechanism mediated by scavenger receptors in O. ocellatus, and provides new insight into the evolution of this important receptor family.
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