4.6 Review

Chemokines in teleost fish species

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL AND COMPARATIVE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 12, Pages 1215-1222

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dci.2011.03.011

Keywords

Chemokines; Teleost

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (Spain) [AGL2008-03519-004-02, AGL2009-08711]

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Chemokines are chemoattractant cytokines defined by the presence of four conserved cysteine residues which in mammals can be divided into four subfamilies depending on the arrangement of the first two conserved cysteines in their sequence: CXC (alpha), CC (beta), C and CX3C classes. Evolutionarily, fish can be considered as an intermediate step between species which possess only innate immunity (invertebrates) and species with a fully developed acquired immune network such as mammals. Therefore, the functionality of their different immune cell types and molecules is sometimes also intermediate between innate and acquired responses. The first chemokine gene identified in a teleost was a rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) chemokine designated as CK1 in 1998. Since then, many different chemokine genes have been identified in several fish species, but their role in homeostasis and immune response remains largely unknown. Extensive genomic duplication events and the fact that chemokines evolve more quickly than other immune genes, make it very difficult to establish true orthologues between fish and mammalian chemokines that would help us with the ascription of immune roles. In this review, we describe the current state of knowledge of chemokine biology in teleost fish, focusing mainly on which genes have been identified so far and highlighting the most important aspects of their expression regulation, due to the great lack of functional information available for them. As the number of chemokine genes begins to close down for some teleost species, there is an important need for functional assays that may elucidate the role of each of these molecules within the fish immune response. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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