Hemocyanin modulates hemolymph Vibrio homeostasis through intracellular ROS levels via p38 MAPK

Published: 22 January 2025| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/rt43rdk66w.1
Contributor:
Zhihong ZHENG

Description

Redox reactions are essential for various biological processes, hence, maintaining redox homeostasis is critical for cellular health and host-microbe interactions, particularly in marine invertebrates, where these processes remain poorly understood. This study investigates the role of the respiratory protein hemocyanin in regulating redox-related genes, reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels in shrimp hemocytes, and its influence on immune function and hemolymph Vibrio abundance. Our results show that hemocyanin is crucial in the regulation of the redox system, as hemocyanin knockdown disrupts the expression of antioxidant (PvPOD and PvGPX) and pro-oxidant (PvXOX) genes, leading to elevated ROS levels in hemocytes. Additionally, we found that hemocyanin controls redox homeostasis in hemocytes through the p38-MAPK-c-Jun signaling pathway. Moreover, ROS levels regulated by hemocyanin via the MAPK pathway impacted on hemolymph Vibrio abundance. These findings highlight a crucial role of hemocyanin as an antioxidant that modulates redox balance in shrimp hemocytes, with significant implications for immune defense and microbial homeostasis, offering new insights into antioxidative mechanisms in marine invertebrates.

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Institutions

Shantou University

Categories

Shrimp, Redox Signalling

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