Local immune depression in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) liver infected with Contracaecum osculatum

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Standard

Local immune depression in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) liver infected with Contracaecum osculatum. / Marnis, H; Kania, P W; Syahputra, K; Zuo, S; Buchmann, K.

I: Journal of Helminthology, Bind 94, e112, 2020.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Marnis, H, Kania, PW, Syahputra, K, Zuo, S & Buchmann, K 2020, 'Local immune depression in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) liver infected with Contracaecum osculatum', Journal of Helminthology, bind 94, e112. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022149X19001111

APA

Marnis, H., Kania, P. W., Syahputra, K., Zuo, S., & Buchmann, K. (2020). Local immune depression in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) liver infected with Contracaecum osculatum. Journal of Helminthology, 94, [e112]. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022149X19001111

Vancouver

Marnis H, Kania PW, Syahputra K, Zuo S, Buchmann K. Local immune depression in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) liver infected with Contracaecum osculatum. Journal of Helminthology. 2020;94. e112. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022149X19001111

Author

Marnis, H ; Kania, P W ; Syahputra, K ; Zuo, S ; Buchmann, K. / Local immune depression in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) liver infected with Contracaecum osculatum. I: Journal of Helminthology. 2020 ; Bind 94.

Bibtex

@article{18e240b99dba43d3a1254513d684e2f2,
title = "Local immune depression in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) liver infected with Contracaecum osculatum",
abstract = "Third-stage larvae of the anisakid nematode Contracaecum osculatum infecting cod (Gadus morhua) liver elicit a host immune response involving both innate and adaptive factors, but the reactions differ between liver and spleen. Inflammatory reactions occur in both liver and spleen, but a series of immune effector genes are downregulated in liver infected with nematodes whereas these genes in spleen from the same fish are upregulated. A series of novel primer and probe sets targeting cod immune responses were developed and applied in a real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction set-up to measure the expression of immune-relevant genes in liver and spleen of infected and uninfected cod. In infected liver, 12 of 23 genes were regulated. Genes encoding cytokines associated with inflammatory reactions (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8) were significantly upregulated, whereas genes encoding effector molecules, assisting the elimination of pathogens, C-reactive protein (CRP)-PII, hepcidin, lysozyme G1, lysozyme G2, C3 and IgDm, were significantly downregulated. The number of downregulated genes increased with the parasite burden. In spleen, 14 of 23 immune genes showed significant regulation and nine of these were upregulated, including genes encoding CRPI, CRPII, C3, hepcidin and transferrin. The general gene expression level was higher in spleen compared to liver, and although inflammation was induced in nematode-infected liver, the effector molecule genes were depressed, which suggests a worm-induced immune suppression locally in the liver.",
author = "H Marnis and Kania, {P W} and K Syahputra and S Zuo and K Buchmann",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1017/S0022149X19001111",
language = "English",
volume = "94",
journal = "Journal of Helminthology",
issn = "0022-149X",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Local immune depression in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) liver infected with Contracaecum osculatum

AU - Marnis, H

AU - Kania, P W

AU - Syahputra, K

AU - Zuo, S

AU - Buchmann, K

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Third-stage larvae of the anisakid nematode Contracaecum osculatum infecting cod (Gadus morhua) liver elicit a host immune response involving both innate and adaptive factors, but the reactions differ between liver and spleen. Inflammatory reactions occur in both liver and spleen, but a series of immune effector genes are downregulated in liver infected with nematodes whereas these genes in spleen from the same fish are upregulated. A series of novel primer and probe sets targeting cod immune responses were developed and applied in a real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction set-up to measure the expression of immune-relevant genes in liver and spleen of infected and uninfected cod. In infected liver, 12 of 23 genes were regulated. Genes encoding cytokines associated with inflammatory reactions (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8) were significantly upregulated, whereas genes encoding effector molecules, assisting the elimination of pathogens, C-reactive protein (CRP)-PII, hepcidin, lysozyme G1, lysozyme G2, C3 and IgDm, were significantly downregulated. The number of downregulated genes increased with the parasite burden. In spleen, 14 of 23 immune genes showed significant regulation and nine of these were upregulated, including genes encoding CRPI, CRPII, C3, hepcidin and transferrin. The general gene expression level was higher in spleen compared to liver, and although inflammation was induced in nematode-infected liver, the effector molecule genes were depressed, which suggests a worm-induced immune suppression locally in the liver.

AB - Third-stage larvae of the anisakid nematode Contracaecum osculatum infecting cod (Gadus morhua) liver elicit a host immune response involving both innate and adaptive factors, but the reactions differ between liver and spleen. Inflammatory reactions occur in both liver and spleen, but a series of immune effector genes are downregulated in liver infected with nematodes whereas these genes in spleen from the same fish are upregulated. A series of novel primer and probe sets targeting cod immune responses were developed and applied in a real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction set-up to measure the expression of immune-relevant genes in liver and spleen of infected and uninfected cod. In infected liver, 12 of 23 genes were regulated. Genes encoding cytokines associated with inflammatory reactions (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8) were significantly upregulated, whereas genes encoding effector molecules, assisting the elimination of pathogens, C-reactive protein (CRP)-PII, hepcidin, lysozyme G1, lysozyme G2, C3 and IgDm, were significantly downregulated. The number of downregulated genes increased with the parasite burden. In spleen, 14 of 23 immune genes showed significant regulation and nine of these were upregulated, including genes encoding CRPI, CRPII, C3, hepcidin and transferrin. The general gene expression level was higher in spleen compared to liver, and although inflammation was induced in nematode-infected liver, the effector molecule genes were depressed, which suggests a worm-induced immune suppression locally in the liver.

U2 - 10.1017/S0022149X19001111

DO - 10.1017/S0022149X19001111

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31907099

VL - 94

JO - Journal of Helminthology

JF - Journal of Helminthology

SN - 0022-149X

M1 - e112

ER -

ID: 234932479