1. Identification, characterization, expression profiles of OlHavcr2 in medaka (Oryzias latipes).
- Author
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Nibona, Emile, Xu, Gongyu, Wu, Kongyue, Shen, Hao, Zhang, Runshuai, Ke, Xiaomei, Al Hafiz, Abdullah, Wang, Zequn, Qi, Chao, and Zhao, Haobin
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ORYZIAS latipes , *T helper cells , *YOLK sac , *IN situ hybridization , *HEPATITIS A virus - Abstract
• OlHavcr2 of medaka is a member of Tim family with 2 Ig-like domains and without transmembrane domain. • OlHavcr2 is ubiquitously expressed in the adult tissues of medaka. • OlHavcr2 is a zygotic gene expressed from gastrula stage in medaka embryos. • OlHavcr2 in medaka immune organs can respond to immune stimulants such as LPS and polyI:C. Hepatitis A virus cellular receptor2 (Havcr2) also named T-cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain containing-3 (Tim-3) was initially described as a T helper 1-specific cell surface protein, a member of Tim family implicated in the regulating process of adaptive and innate immune responses. Here, medaka (Oryzias latipes) Havcr2 (OlHavcr2) was isolated and characterized. Unlike other Havcr2 proteins, OlHavcr2 possesses two Ig-like domains but lacks cytoplasmic and transmembrane domains. RT-PCR results revealed that OlHavcr2 mRNA was expressed strongly in the liver, moderately in the intestine, heart and ovary, and weakly in the muscle, gill, brain, eye, spleen, and testis. OlHavcr2 expression begun from gastrula stage and was maintained until hatching. The signal of OlHavcr2 was mainly identified in the blood system in the yolk sac by in situ hybridization. These results indicated that OlHavcr2 is expressed ubiquitously in adult tissues, and is a zygotic gene expressed from gastrula onwards in embryogenesis. OlHavcr2 may play a significant role in the blood system of medaka. In the immune organs, OlHavcr2 expression was affected by the immune stimulants, lipopolysaccharide and poly I:C, suggesting that OlHavcr2 was involved in innate immunity and adaptive immunity in medaka. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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