Specific molecular signatures for type II crustins in penaeid shrimp uncovered by the identification of crustin-like antimicrobial peptides in litopenaeus vannamei

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Abstract

Crustins form a large family of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) in crustaceans composed of four sub-groups (Types I-IV). Type II crustins (Type IIa or “Crustins” and Type IIb or “Crustin-like”) possess a typical hydrophobic N-terminal region and are by far the most representative sub-group found in penaeid shrimp. To gain insight into the molecular diversity of Type II crustins in penaeids, we identified and characterized a Type IIb crustin in Litopenaeus vannamei (Crustin-like Lv) and compared Type II crustins at both molecular and transcriptional levels. Although L. vannamei Type II crustins (Crustin Lv and Crustin-like Lv) are encoded by separate genes, they showed a similar tissue distribution (hemocytes and gills) and transcriptional response to the shrimp pathogens Vibrio harveyi and White spot syndrome virus (WSSV). As Crustin Lv, Crustin-like Lv transcripts were found to be present early in development, suggesting a maternal contribution to shrimp progeny. Altogether, our in silico and transcriptional data allowed to conclude that (1) each sub-type displays a specific amino acid signature at the C-terminal end holding both the cysteine-rich region and the whey acidic protein (WAP) domain, and that (2) shrimp Type II crustins evolved from a common ancestral gene that conserved a similar pattern of transcriptional regulation.

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Barreto, C., Da Rosa Coelho, J., Yuan, J., Xiang, J., Perazzolo, L. M., & Rosa, R. D. (2018). Specific molecular signatures for type II crustins in penaeid shrimp uncovered by the identification of crustin-like antimicrobial peptides in litopenaeus vannamei. Marine Drugs, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/md16010031

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