Inflammatory cytokine interleukin-17 (IL-17) binds its receptors (IL-17Rs) to activate the downstream immune signals and plays an important role in host defense. In the present study, an IL-17 receptor (designated as CgIL-17R1) was identified from oyster Crassostrea gigas with an open reading frame of 3141 bp encoding 1047 amino acids. The amino acid sequence of CgIL-17R1 with two conserved FN3 domains shared higher similarity with other known IL-17Rs from mollusc species. The recombinant CgIL-17R1 protein (rCgIL-17R1) displayed high binding affinity to the recombinant CgIL-17 protein (rCgIL-17) in vitro. The mRNA transcripts of CgIL-17R1 were significantly higher expressed in haemocytes, especially in granunol... More
Inflammatory cytokine interleukin-17 (IL-17) binds its receptors (IL-17Rs) to activate the downstream immune signals and plays an important role in host defense. In the present study, an IL-17 receptor (designated as CgIL-17R1) was identified from oyster Crassostrea gigas with an open reading frame of 3141 bp encoding 1047 amino acids. The amino acid sequence of CgIL-17R1 with two conserved FN3 domains shared higher similarity with other known IL-17Rs from mollusc species. The recombinant CgIL-17R1 protein (rCgIL-17R1) displayed high binding affinity to the recombinant CgIL-17 protein (rCgIL-17) in vitro. The mRNA transcripts of CgIL-17R1 were significantly higher expressed in haemocytes, especially in granunolyctes, compared with that in other tissues. After the stimulation with Vibrio splendidus or rCgIL17-1 in vivo, the expressions of CgIL-17R1 and cell proliferation related genes (CgRunx-1, CgCDC-6, CgCDC-45, and CgCDK-2) were significantly up-regulated in haemocytes (p?0.01). When the CgIL-17R1 expression was interfered by specific CgIL-17R1-dsRNA, the expressions of these cell proliferation related genes reduced significantly, and the proliferation rate of haemocytes declined dramatically at 6?h post V. splendidus stimulation (p?0.01), compared to that of blank group. These results collectively indicated that CgIL-17R1 expressed in granulocytes mediated the CgIL-17 induced haemocytes proliferation during immune response in oyster C. gigas, which provided novel information about the regulation of haemocyte proliferation in invertebrates.