Integrative omics analysis highlights the immunomodulatory effects of the parasitic dinoflagellate hhematodinium on crustacean hemocytes

Parasitic dinoflagellates in genus Hematodinium have caused substantial economic losses to multiple commercially valuable marine crustaceans around the world. Recent efforts to better understand the life cycle and biology of the parasite have improved our understanding of the disease ecology. Howeve...

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Published in:Fish & shellfish immunology Vol. 125; pp. 35 - 47
Main Authors: Li, Meng, Huang, Qian, Lv, Xiaoyang, Small, Hamish J., Li, Caiwen
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 01-06-2022
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Summary:Parasitic dinoflagellates in genus Hematodinium have caused substantial economic losses to multiple commercially valuable marine crustaceans around the world. Recent efforts to better understand the life cycle and biology of the parasite have improved our understanding of the disease ecology. However, studies on the host-parasite interaction, especially how Hematodinium parasites evade the host immune response are lacking. To address this shortfall, we used the comprehensive omics approaches (miRNA transcriptomics, iTRAQ-based proteomics) to get insights into the host-parasite interaction between hemocytes from Portunus trituberculatus and Hematodinium perezi in the present study. The parasitic dinoflagellate H. perezi remodeled the miRNome and proteome of hemocytes from challenged hosts, modulated the host immune response at both post-transcriptional and translational levels and caused post-transcriptional regulation to the host immune response. Multiple important cellular and humoral immune-related pathways (ex. Apoptosis, Endocytosis, ECM-receptor interaction, proPO activation pathway, Toll-like signaling pathway, Jak-STAT signaling pathway) were significantly affected by Hematodinium parasites. Through modulation of the host miRNome, the host immune responses of nodulation, proPO activation and antimicrobial peptides were significantly suppressed. Cellular homeostasis was imbalanced via post-transcriptional dysregulation of the phagosome and peroxisome pathways. Cellular structure and communication was seriously impacted by post-transcriptional downregulation of ECM-receptor interaction and focal adhesion pathways. In conclusion, H. perezi parasites could trigger striking changes in the miRNome and proteome of crustacean hemocytes, and this parasite exhibited multifaceted immunomodulatory effects and potential immune-suppressive mechanisms in crustacean hosts. •Hematodinium perezi triggered striking changes in miRNome and proteome of Portunus trituberculatus hemocytes.•A total of 44 miRNAs and 523 proteins were differentially expressed in P. trituberculatus after H. perezi challenge.•H. perezi exhibited multifaceted immunomodulatory effects and potential immune-suppressive mechanisms in crustacean hosts.
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ISSN:1050-4648
1095-9947
DOI:10.1016/j.fsi.2022.04.050