Thomsson Kristina A, Sveen Lene, Benktander John, Dagnachew Binyam S, Quintana-Hayashi Macarena P, Johansen Lill-Heidi, Breiland Mette W, Jacq Celeste, Ytteborg Elisabeth, Linden Sara K
Department of Medical Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Institute of Biomedicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Box 440, Medicinaregatan 9C, 405 30, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Nofima, Muninbakken 9-13, Breivika Postboks 6122 Langnes, NO-9291, Tromsø, Norway.
Fish Shellfish Immunol. 2025 Oct;165:110557. doi: 10.1016/j.fsi.2025.110557. Epub 2025 Jul 8.
Skin barrier function is paramount for fish health and is likely affected by the predicted increases in seawater temperature. Salmonid skin produces a mucus layer mainly composed of mucins. Mucin glycans regulate interactions with pathogens, including binding to host cells, quorum sensing and regulation of virulence genes. In this work, the objective was to elucidate the Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) skin mucosal responses to temperature in the presence of salmon lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) to mimic salmon louse pressure at sea. A simultaneous louse and temperature challenge trial was performed, at low (5 °C), medium (10 °C), and high (17 °C) temperatures, using a protocol resulting in lice at the same development stage and density in all groups. Temperature affected skin morphology, with a thinner outer epidermal layer with fewer mucous cells at 17 °C than at 5 °C. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry demonstrated that the skin mucin O-glycome changed with temperature: the most pronounced glycan changes were a decrease of the disaccharide Sialyl-Tn and an increase of the tetrasaccharide NeuAcα2-3Galβ1-3[NeuAcα2-6]GalNAcol and sulfated glycans at 17 °C. Principal component analysis of gene expression data clustered samples according to temperature treatments, and changes in expression of homologues of human sialyl-, core 1-, Gal, and GalNAc transferase genes were proposed to be linked to the glycan changes observed by mass spectrometry. Finally, Aeromonas salmonicida had a higher ability to bind mucins from fish kept at 17 °C than at 5 °C, demonstrating effects of temperature related glycosylation changes on host-pathogen interactions.
皮肤屏障功能对鱼类健康至关重要,并且可能受到预测的海水温度升高的影响。鲑科鱼类的皮肤会产生主要由黏蛋白组成的黏液层。黏蛋白聚糖调节与病原体的相互作用,包括与宿主细胞的结合、群体感应和毒力基因的调控。在这项研究中,目的是阐明大西洋鲑(Salmo salar)皮肤黏膜在有鲑鱼虱(Lepeophtheirus salmonis)存在的情况下对温度的反应,以模拟在海水中鲑鱼虱的压力。使用一种方案在低(5℃)、中(10℃)和高(17℃)温度下进行了同时的虱子和温度挑战试验,使得所有组中的虱子处于相同的发育阶段和密度。温度影响皮肤形态,17℃时的外表皮层比5℃时更薄,黏液细胞更少。液相色谱 - 质谱分析表明皮肤黏蛋白O - 糖组随温度变化:最明显的聚糖变化是二糖唾液酸 - Tn减少,以及在17℃时四糖NeuAcα2 - 3Galβ1 - 3[NeuAcα2 - 6]GalNAcol和硫酸化聚糖增加。基因表达数据的主成分分析根据温度处理对样本进行聚类,并且提出人类唾液酸转移酶、核心1 - 转移酶、半乳糖转移酶和N - 乙酰半乳糖胺转移酶基因同源物的表达变化与通过质谱观察到的聚糖变化有关。最后,杀鲑气单胞菌(Aeromonas salmonicida)对17℃饲养的鱼的黏蛋白的结合能力高于5℃饲养的鱼,这证明了温度相关的糖基化变化对宿主 - 病原体相互作用的影响。