Article

An enriched European eel transcriptome sheds light upon host-pathogen interactions with Vibrio vulnificus

Details

Citation

Callol A, Reyes-Lopez F, Roig FJ, Goetz G, Goetz FW, Amaro C & MacKenzie S (2015) An enriched European eel transcriptome sheds light upon host-pathogen interactions with Vibrio vulnificus. PLoS ONE, 10 (7), Art. No.: e0133328. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133328

Abstract
Infectious diseases are one of the principal bottlenecks for the European eel recovery. The aim of this study was to develop a new molecular tool to be used in host-pathogen interaction experiments in the eel. To this end, we first stimulated adult eels with different pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), extracted RNA from the immune-related tissues and sequenced the transcriptome. We obtained more than 2x106 reads that were assembled and annotated into 45,067 new descriptions with a notable representation of novel transcripts related with pathogen recognition, signal transduction and the immune response. Then, we designed a DNA-microarray that was used to analyze the early immune response against Vibrio vulnificus, a septicemic pathogen that uses the gills as the portal of entry into the blood, as well as the role of the main toxin of this species (RtxA13) on this early interaction. The gill transcriptomic profiles obtained after bath infecting eels with the wild type strain or with a mutant deficient in rtxA13 were analyzed and compared. Results demonstrate that eels react rapidly and locally against the pathogen and that this immune-response is rtxA13-dependent as transcripts related with cell destruction were highly up-regulated only in the gills from eels infected with the wild-type strain. Furthermore, significant differences in the immune response against the wild type and the mutant strain also suggest that host survival after V. vulnificus infection could depend on an efficient local phagocytic activity. Finally, we also found evidence of the presence of an interbranchial lymphoid tissue in European eel gills although further experiments will be necessary to identify such tissue.

Journal
PLoS ONE: Volume 10, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Publication date24/07/2015
Publication date online24/07/2015
Date accepted by journal24/06/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/22238
PublisherPublic Library of Science

People (1)

People

Professor Simon MacKenzie

Professor Simon MacKenzie

Professor & Head of Inst of Aquaculture, Institute of Aquaculture