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The immune system of sturgeons and paddlefish (Acipenseriformes): a review with new data from a chromosome-scale sturgeon genome

Journal

REVIEWS IN AQUACULTURE
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages 1709-1729

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/raq.12542

Keywords

evolution; genomics; immune genes; immune organs; immune system; sturgeon

Categories

Funding

  1. COFASP/ERANET (STURGEoNOMICS) by the German Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture through the Federal Office for Agriculture and Food [2816ERA04G]

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Sturgeon immunity plays a crucial role in evolutionary and aquaculture research, but there are still many gaps in understanding the immune functions of specific tissues and organs. Sturgeons and teleosts share significant components of the adaptive immune system, but further research is needed on the ontogeny of immune genes in different organs. The identification of key immune genes in sturgeons after genome duplication opens up avenues for future evolutionary bioinformatics studies.
Sturgeon immunity is relevant for basic evolutionary and applied research, including caviar- and meat-producing aquaculture, protection of wild sturgeons and their re-introduction through conservation aquaculture. Starting from a comprehensive overview of immune organs, we discuss pathways of innate and adaptive immune systems in a vertebrate phylogenetic and genomic context. The thymus as a key organ of adaptive immunity in sturgeons requires future molecular studies. Likewise, data on immune functions of sturgeon-specific pericardial and meningeal tissues are largely missing. Integrating immunological and endocrine functions, the sturgeon head kidney resembles that of teleosts. Recently identified pattern recognition receptors in sturgeon require research on downstream regulation. We review first acipenseriform data on Toll-like receptors (TLRs), type I transmembrane glycoproteins expressed in membranes and endosomes, initiating inflammation and host defence by molecular pattern-induced activation. Retinoic acid-inducible gene-I-like (RIG-like) receptors of sturgeons present RNA and key sensors of virus infections in most cell types. Sturgeons and teleosts share major components of the adaptive immune system, including B cells, immunoglobulins, major histocompatibility complex and the adaptive cellular response by T cells. The ontogeny of the sturgeon innate and onset of adaptive immune genes in different organs remain understudied. In a genomics perspective, our new data on 100 key immune genes exemplify a multitude of evolutionary trajectories after the sturgeon-specific genome duplication, where some single-copy genes contrast with many duplications, allowing tissue specialization, sub-functionalization or both. Our preliminary conclusion should be tested by future evolutionary bioinformatics, involving all >1000 immunity genes. This knowledge update about the acipenseriform immune system identifies several important research gaps and presents a basis for future applications.

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