학술논문

Mucin O-glycosylation and pathogen binding ability differ between rainbow trout epithelial sites.
Document Type
Article
Source
Fish & Shellfish Immunology. Dec2022, Vol. 131, p349-357. 9p.
Subject
*RAINBOW trout
*MUCINS
*ARCTIC char
*BACTERIAL adhesion
*QUORUM sensing
*GLYCANS
*FISH skin
Language
ISSN
1050-4648
Abstract
Mucins are highly glycosylated proteins that make up the mucus covering internal and external surfaces of fish. Mucin O -glycans regulate pathogen quorum sensing, growth, virulence and attachment to the host. Knowledge on this mucosal defense system can enable alternative treatments to diseases posing a threat to productivity and welfare in aquaculture. Here, we characterize the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) gill, skin, pyloric ceca and distal intestinal mucin O -glycosylation and compare it to known teleost O -glycomes. We identified 54 O -glycans, consisting of up to nine monosaccharide residues. Skin glycans were most acidic, shortest on average and consisted mainly of NeuAcα2-6GalNAc. Glycans from the gills were less acidic with predominantly core 1 and 2 glycans, whereas glycans from pyloric ceca and distal intestine expressed an increased number of core 5 glycans, distinctly decorated with NeuAcα2-8NeuAc- like epitopes. When compared to Atlantic salmon and Arctic charr, trends on the core distribution, average size and overall acidity remained similar, although the epitopes varied. Rainbow trout mucins from gill and intestine bound A. salmonicida and A. hydrophila more efficiently than skin mucins. This is in line with a model where skin mucins with small glycans limit bacterial adhesion to the fish surface whereas the complex intestinal mucin glycans aid in trapping and removing pathogens from the epithelial surface. • Mucins from rainbow trout skin, gills and intestine are differentially glycosylated. • 54 identified glycans provide a platform for studying host-pathogen interactions. • Skin glycans are short whereas gill and intestinal mucins are large and complex. • The short skin glycans provide few binding sites for Aeromonas spp. • The gill and intestinal mucins carry many binding sites for Aeromonas spp. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]