School of Biological Sciences and Australian Seafood Cooperative Research Centre, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
Ifremer, UMR 5119 Ecology of Coastal Marine Systems, Université Montpellier 2, Place Eugène Bataillon, CC80, 30495 Montpellier cedex 05, France.
Fish Shellfish Immunol. 2014 Jan;36(1):151-7. doi: 10.1016/j.fsi.2013.10.026. Epub 2013 Nov 5.
Disease is caused by a complex interaction between the pathogen, environment, and the physiological status of the host. Determining how host ontogeny interacts with water temperature to influence the antiviral response of the Pacific oysters, Crassostrea gigas, is a major goal in understanding why juvenile Pacific oysters are dying during summer as a result of the global emergence of a new genotype of the Ostreid herpesvirus, termed OsHV-1 μvar. We measured the effect of temperature (12 vs 22 °C) on the antiviral response of adult and juvenile C. gigas injected with poly I:C. Poly I:C up-regulated the expression of numerous immune genes, including TLR, MyD88, IκB-1, Rel, IRF, MDA5, STING, SOC, PKR, Viperin and Mpeg1. At 22 °C, these immune genes showed significant up-regulation in juvenile and adult oysters, but the majority of these genes were up-regulated 12 h post-injection for juveniles compared to 26 h for adults. At 12 °C, the response of these genes was completely inhibited in juveniles and delayed in adults. Temperature and age had no effect on hemolymph antiviral activity against herpes simplex virus (HSV-1). These results suggest that oysters rely on a cellular response to minimise viral replication, involving recognition of virus-associated molecular patterns to induce host cells into an antiviral state, as opposed to producing broad-spectrum antiviral compounds. This cellular response, measured by antiviral gene expression of circulating hemocytes, was influenced by temperature and oyster age. We speculate whether the vigorous antiviral response of juveniles at 22 °C results in an immune-mediated disorder causing mortality.
疾病是病原体、环境和宿主生理状态之间复杂相互作用的结果。确定宿主个体发生如何与水温相互作用,从而影响太平洋牡蛎(Crassostrea gigas)的抗病毒反应,是理解为什么幼体太平洋牡蛎在夏季因全球出现一种新基因型的牡蛎疱疹病毒(Ostreid herpesvirus,称为 OsHV-1 μvar)而死亡的主要目标。我们测量了温度(12°C 与 22°C)对注射聚肌苷酸(poly I:C)的成体和幼体 C. gigas 抗病毒反应的影响。聚肌苷酸上调了许多免疫基因的表达,包括 TLR、MyD88、IκB-1、Rel、IRF、MDA5、STING、SOC、PKR、Viperin 和 Mpeg1。在 22°C 时,这些免疫基因在幼体和成体牡蛎中均显著上调,但与成体相比,幼体的这些基因在注射后 12 小时上调更为显著。在 12°C 时,这些基因在幼体中的反应完全受到抑制,而成体中的反应则延迟。温度和年龄对疱疹单纯病毒(HSV-1)的血淋巴抗病毒活性没有影响。这些结果表明,牡蛎依赖于细胞反应来最小化病毒复制,涉及识别病毒相关分子模式以诱导宿主细胞进入抗病毒状态,而不是产生广谱抗病毒化合物。这种细胞反应通过循环血细胞的抗病毒基因表达来衡量,受到温度和牡蛎年龄的影响。我们推测,幼体在 22°C 时强烈的抗病毒反应是否会导致免疫介导的疾病导致死亡。