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Infection and Immunity, August 2005, p. 5053-5064, Vol. 73, No. 8
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.8.5053-5064.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Olga Pleguezuelos,1,
Yong-An Zhang,1,3
Jun Zou,1 and
Christopher J. Secombes1*
Scottish Fish Immunology Research Centre, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB24 2TZ, United Kingdom,1 Fisheries Research Institute, Keelung, Taiwan,2 Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430072, People's Republic of China3
Received 24 September 2004/ Returned for modification 15 December 2004/ Accepted 10 March 2005
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The cathelicidin family was first recognized in the early 1990s (46). They are a numerous group of proteins that share a highly conserved preproregion that contains the cathelin-like domain, a 12-kDa protein from porcine leukocytes (36), at the N terminus and carry diverse antimicrobial peptides at the C terminus. In most species, cathelicidins are expressed in myeloid precursor cells (34) and stored in neutrophil granules as propeptides without antimicrobial activities. After neutrophil activation leading to elastase-mediated endoproteolytic cleavage, the highly variable C-terminal antimicrobial peptide is released (19). The mature cathelicidin peptides are relatively small, most <100 amino acids, with an amphipathic molecular structure and a net positive charge. These two characteristics are related to the interaction of such peptides with bacterial membranes as part of their bactericidal mechanism. Cathelicidins are typically found in neutrophils and at mucosal surfaces, suggesting they contribute to systemic and local defense (13). Thus far, the cathelicidins have been described only in mammals, including human, monkey, horse, cattle, sheep, goat, pig, rabbit, mouse, and guinea pig (34), except for two sequences from hagfish published recently and cited as representing an "ancient ancestor of the cathelicidin gene family" (43).
Relatively few studies of antimicrobial peptides from fish have been performed, despite the problem of infectious diseases and the limitation of using antibiotics in aquaculture worldwide. Attempts to find antimicrobial peptides have had a number of successes in fish but have so far focused mainly on the epithelial surfaces. For example, paradaxin, a 33-amino-acid toxic polypeptide with bactericidal activity, was discovered in the mucous glands of Moses sole fish (30); pleurocidin, a 25-residue linear peptide active against a broad spectrum of microorganisms, was found in skin mucous secretions of winter flounder (7) and immunolocalized to mucin granules of goblet cells in the intestine; misgurin, a 21-amino-acid pore-forming antimicrobial peptide without significant hemolytic activity, was isolated from the loach (31); piscidin, a 22-amino-acid peptide rich in histidine and phenylalanine, was first isolated from skin of hybrid striped bass and immunolocalized to eosinophilic granular cells in gill, skin, and gut and those lining blood vessels in the viscera (40); and moronecidin, an
-helical antimicrobial peptide with 22 residues, was found in the skin and gills of hybrid striped bass (23). Neither systemic antimicrobial peptides produced by myeloid cells nor members belonging to the cathelicidin family have yet been found in jawed fish.
Through routine screening of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss clones for immunologically important genes, a partial sequence was obtained with apparent homology to the mammalian cathelicidin gene family. This allowed the design of gene-specific primers to confirm and extend the sequence. In this paper, we report the cloning of this novel antimicrobial peptide gene, termed the rtCATH_1 gene (from rainbow trout cathelicidin_1). The gene organization and expression were studied, and a peptide based on the mature peptide sequence of the rtCATH_1 gene was synthesized chemically and found to have potent antimicrobial activities against fish-pathogenic bacteria.
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The reference strain Escherichia coli NCIMB12210 (ATCC 25922) was obtained from NCIMB Ltd., Aberdeen, United Kingdom. Nine field isolates of fish pathogens were provided by FRS Marine Laboratory, Aberdeen, United Kingdom. Aeromonas salmonicida A-layer-negative avirulent strain MT004 and the A-layer-positive virulent strain MT423 (17) were isolated from rainbow trout. Photobacterium damselae subsp. piscicida MT1415 was a virulent capsulated strain isolated from sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax, and EPOY8803II was an avirulent noncapsulated strain isolated from red grouper Epinephelly akaara (26). Vibrio anguillarum serogroup O1 MT1741 (3) and serogroup O2 MT1742 (4) and Yersinia ruckeri MT252 were isolated from rainbow trout. Lactoccus garvieae noncapsulated strain MT2055 and capsulated strain MT2291 were originally isolated from yellowtail and rainbow trout, respectively (2). E. coli was maintained in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium at 37°C. The aquatic strains were maintained in tryptic soy broth medium at 22°C. All the strains were transferred to Mueller-Hinton broth (Sigma) and cultured to optimal concentrations before the antimicrobial assays.
Isolation of the full-length cDNA.
Wax-mediated hot-start PCR was performed using 0.5 µl of an enzyme mixture of Taq (5 U/µl; Bioline, United Kingdom) DNA polymerase and Pfu (3 U/µl; Promega, United Kingdom) DNA polymerase (50:1) in a 50-µl reaction volume containing the following components: 5 µl of 10x NH4 buffer, 2 µl of 10 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphate mixture, 10 µl of 10 mM MgCl2, 2 µl of 10 µM forward primer, 2 µl of 10 µM reverse primer, 2 µl of DNA template, and 26.5 µl of sterile H2O. The cycling protocol was 1 cycle of 94°C for 5 min and 28 to 32 cycles of 94°C for 45 s, 58 to 62°C for 45 s, and 72°C for 1 min, followed by 1 cycle of 72°C for 10 min. Initial PCR using rtCATH_1-F1 forward (Table 1) and rtCATH_1-R1 reverse primers was performed on a rainbow trout phytohemagglutinin-stimulated leukocyte cDNA library (inserted into the
ZAP express vector using the ZAP Express cDNA synthesis kit [Stratagene]) (9) and gave a product of 613 bp, confirming the presence of the gene (Fig. 1). Anchored PCR using the gene-specific primer rtCATH_1-F1 with the vector-specific primer M13F, followed by a nested PCR using rtCATH_1-F2 with the vector-specific primer T7, was used to obtain the 3' end of the gene and gave a product of 541 bp. However, attempts to obtain the 5' end of the gene by a similar procedure failed. Therefore, the cloning strategy to obtain the 5' end was switched to random amplification of cDNA ends PCR.
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TABLE 1. Primers used for cloning and sequencing of rainbow trout rtCATH_1
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FIG. 1. Nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of rainbow trout rtCATH_1. Numbering is on the left for nucleotides and on the right for amino acids. Exons are shown in uppercase; introns and 5' flanking region are shown in lowercase. The predicted translation of exon-coding regions is given. The putative cleavage sites for the signal peptidase and elastase are indicated by arrows. Features in boldface represent the start/stop codons. Consensus binding motifs for transcription factors, the TATA box, and the polyadenylation site are underlined.
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Isolation of genomic DNA. Genomic DNA was isolated from rainbow trout liver using a genomic DNA isolation kit (QIAGEN, United Kingdom). The resultant DNA was dissolved in distilled H2O to a final concentration of 0.25 mg/ml. The genomic sequence was obtained by PCR using the primers rtCATH_1-F3 and rtCATH_1-R1 and gave a product of 1,266 bp. The 5' flanking region was obtained using a gene-walking approach. Gene-walking libraries were constructed with a Universal GenomeWalker kit (Clontech) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Amplification of the 5' end of the gene was performed using primers AP1 (supplied with the kit) and rtCATH_1-R2, which gave a product of 1,118 bp. Nested PCRs were carried out on the DraI-restricted DNA using primers AP2 (supplied with the kit) and rtCATH_1-R3. The cycling protocol for the PCR was 1 cycle of 94°C for 5 min, 5 cycles of 94°C for 45 s and 72°C for 2 min, 5 cycles of 94°C for 45 s and 70°C for 2 min, and 25 cycles of 94°C for 45 s, 64°C for 45 s, and 70°C for 2 min, followed by 1 cycle of 72°C for 10 min.
Cloning and sequencing. All products obtained by PCR were directly cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega, United Kingdom). Plasmid DNA was isolated from bacterial colonies that had an appropriately sized insert using a Qiaprep spin miniprep kit (QIAGEN, United Kingdom). Three randomly selected clones representing each product were sequenced on an ABI 377 Automated Sequencer (Applied Biosystems) using vector- or gene-specific primers. Comparisons of nucleotide and amino acid sequences with GenBank/EMBL databases were performed using the FASTA program (32). Direct comparisons between two sequences were performed using the GAP alignment program (29) within the Wisconsin Genetics Computer Group Sequence Analysis Software Package (version 9.1; 1997), and multiple sequence alignments were generated using CLUSTAL W (version 1.74) (42). Putative transcription factor binding sites were predicted by MatInspector version 2.2/TRANSFAC 4.0, GBF (http://www.genomatix.de/) (33).
Expression studies. Northern blot analysis was used to study the sites of expression of the rtCATH_1 gene in normal and infection situations. For the in vivo studies, fish were injected intraperitoneally with A. salmonicida MT423 at 2 x 106 bacteria (suspended in 100 µl phosphate-buffered saline [PBS]) per fish, a dose and route shown in other studies to lead to mortalities in this species (18). Fish were killed separately at 8 and 24 h postinjection. Tissues were sampled from gill, head kidney, liver, intestine, skin, and spleen. Total RNA was extracted from all tissues using Trizol (Invitrogen, United Kingdom). Twenty micrograms of RNA was loaded per lane of a 1.1% agarose gel. Following electrophoresis at 100 V for 3 h in 1x MOPS (morpholinepropanesulfonic acid) buffer (Amersham, United Kingdom) and transfer to an N+ nylon filter (Amersham, United Kingdom), the membrane was baked at 80°C for 1 h. The 18S rRNA was visualized and photographed to assess the quality of the RNA and to ensure equal loading of RNA for each sample before transfer. The region of rtCATH_1 cDNA between the rtCATH_1 F3 and rtCATH_1 R3 primers was amplified by wax-mediated hot-start PCR, labeled with [32P] dCTP using the Megaprime radiolabeling kit (Amersham, United Kingdom), and hybridized to RNA. After stringent washing, the membrane was exposed to X-ray film (Kodak) at 70°C for 72 h. The relative levels of mRNA were quantified by densitometric scanning of the exposed film using a UVP gel-imaging system and UVP Gelworks ID advanced software.
Reverse transcription-PCR was used to perform the in vitro studies. The head kidney was collected under sterile conditions from freshly killed trout and gently pushed through a 100-µm nylon mesh (John Staniar, United Kingdom) with ice-cold Leibovitz medium (L15; Gibco). After being washed with L15 medium, the cells were resuspended in L15 and cultured at 18°C in the absence or presence of 0.1, 1, 10, and 100 µg/ml of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (E. coli O127:B8; Sigma) or poly(I · C) (Pharmacia Biotech), respectively. Four hours after stimulation, cells were harvested and total RNA was extracted using Trizol (Invitrogen). cDNA was synthesized using Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (RNase H low; Bioline, United Kingdom) from 5 µg total RNA at 42°C for 50 min with the oligo(dT) primer (Invitrogen, United Kingdom). PCR was performed on the resulting cDNAs using the specific primers rtCATH_1-F4 and R1, which span intron 3 of the trout genomic sequence. ß-Actin was amplified as a positive control for RT-PCR, using the RT-BT-F and RT-BT-R primers listed in Table 1. PCR reagents were as described above, and the cycling protocol was 1 cycle of 94°C for 4 min and 33 cycles of 94°C for 45 s, 62°C for 45 s, and 70°C for 1 min, with a final extension step of 10 min at 72°C. Selections of PCR products were sequenced to confirm correct amplification of the rtCATH_1 gene in each tissue/cell type with primers F4 and R1.
Construction of prtCATH_1 expression vector. The cDNA of rtCATH_1 was amplified by PCR, sequenced, and cloned into pGEM-T easy vector (Promega). Using the sequenced plasmid DNA as a template, the cDNA fragment encoding the proregion of rtCATH_1 (prtCATH_1), from Q23 to the C terminus, was amplified again by PCR, and a translation start codon ATG was added. Two expression vectors named pQE30 and pQE70 (QIAGEN) containing a six-His tag at the N terminus and C terminus, respectively, were used to produce the recombinant proteins. To ligate into the pQE30 vector, restriction enzyme sites for BamHI and for HindIII were added by PCR at the 5' and 3' ends, respectively. To ligate into the pQE70 vector, restriction enzyme sites for SphI and BglII were added by PCR at the 5' and 3' ends, respectively. The resultant expression plasmids were named pQE30-rtCATH_1 and pQE70-rtCATH_1 (Fig. 2).
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FIG. 2. Diagram showing the prtCATH_1 expression vectors: pQE30-rtCATH_1 (A) and pQE70-rtCATH_1 (B). Col E1, Col E1 origin of replication; Amp, ampicillin resistance gene; PT5, T5 promoter; lac O, lac operator; RBS, ribosome-binding site; six-His, six-His tag sequence; MCS, multiple cloning site. The shaded areas represent the amino acid sequences translated from the vector.
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Enzymatic cleavage of prtCATH_1 and Western blot analysis. Human neutrophil elastase (ELAStin Products Company, Inc., Owensville, Mo.) was applied to analyze the cleavage site of the prtCATH_1 protein. Fifty nanograms of elastase in Tris buffer (2 M Tris, 0.1 M NaOAc, 0.01% bovine serum albumin, pH 7.4) was incubated with 6His-prtCATH_1 or prtCATH_1-6His protein (5 µg) at 20°C for different times (see the legend to Fig. 4). The reaction was stopped by adding an equal volume of 5% acetic acid.
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FIG. 4. Time-dependent cleavage of prtCATH_1 by elastase. Shown is a Western blot of a 4 to 12% polyacrylamide gel after reaction with an anti-six-His tag antibody. Five micrograms of 6His-prtCATH_1 (A) and prtCATH_1-6His (B) was incubated with elastase (50 ng) separately for the times indicated, and the reactions were stopped by acidification with equal volumes of 5% acetic acid. Note the appearance of the N-terminal and C-terminal fragments of 15 kDa and 8 kDa, respectively, with time.
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Peptide synthesis. Since the yield of recombinant protein cleaved by elastase was low and could be detected only by Western blotting, it was decided to test the antimicrobial activity using synthesized peptides. However, the full length of the predicted mature peptide (66 amino acids) was difficult to make chemically, and thus, a 36-amino-acid peptide, rtCATH_1(R151-V186), with a net charge of +6 and containing key features of the known cathelicidins, was synthesized commercially by the Proteome Facility at the University of Aberdeen (United Kingdom) using solid-phase 9-fluorenylmethoxy carbonyl chemistry and purified by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The peptide mass of 3,464.49 Da was verified by mass spectroscopy using an ABI Voyager DE-STR matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-COF (AME Bioscience, United Kingdom) and was not C-terminally amidated. To compare the rtCATH_1 peptide activity directly against that of a mammalian cathelicidin, the bovine cyclic dodecapeptide (35) was also synthesized, since it is similar to the N-terminal region of the rtCATH_1 mature peptide in molecular structure and charge.
Antimicrobial assays. The antimicrobial activities were determined as MICs using the modified twofold microtiter broth dilution method (45). Briefly, serial twofold dilutions of peptides were prepared in 0.2% bovine serum albumin-0.01% acetic acid buffer in tubes. Eighty microliters of each concentration was added to each corresponding well of a 96-well microtiter plate. Bacteria were incubated to mid-logarithmic phase and diluted in Mueller-Hinton broth to give a final inoculum concentration of 105 CFU/ml. A suspension of 20 µl of bacteria was added to each well of a 96-well plate and incubated for 24 to 48 h at 22°C. The growth was determined by the optical density at 600 nm. Inhibition was defined as growth less than or equal to one-half of the growth observed in control wells, to which no peptide was added.
Kinetic analysis. A total of 103 A. salmonicida CFU were incubated at 22°C for increasing times (1 min to 8 h) with one of three concentrations (0.5x, 1x, and 2x MIC) of rtCATH_1(R151-V186). The reactions were terminated by plating on Mueller-Hinton agar (Sigma), and plates were incubated at 22°C for 48 h. Viable colonies were counted and shown as percentage of control rtCATH_1(R151-V186), plated at time zero.
Hemolytic assay. The hemolytic activity was assayed as described by Skerlavaj et al. (41) with a slight modification described by Park et al. (31). Freshly bled rainbow trout erythrocytes (3 ml), from blood collected in lithium-heparin-coated vacutainers, were washed with PBS, pH 7.4, until the supernatant was colorless. The washed erythrocytes were resuspended in 30 ml PBS supplemented with glucose (0.2% [wt/vol]). To 190 µl of the cell suspension in microcentrifuge tubes, peptide samples (10 µl, serially diluted in PBS) or mellitin (a hemolytic peptide) were added. Following gentle mixing, the samples were incubated for 1 h at 22°C and centrifuged for 10 min at 1,100 x g at room temperature. One hundred microliters of supernatants was transferred to a microtiter plate, and the optical density was determined at 405 nm. The percentage of hemolysis was defined relative to the hemolysis obtained with the erythrocyte suspension treated with 0.2% Triton X-100 (100% hemolysis).
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The genomic and cDNA sequences reported in this paper have been submitted to the GenBank/EMBL Data Bank with accession numbers AY594646 and AY382478, respectively.
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Primers designed from the rtCATH_1 cDNA sequence were used to isolate the full genomic sequence from rainbow trout. PCR with primers F3 and R1 gave a 1,266-bp product that was composed of four exonsthe same as the gene structures of all mammalian cathelicidinsthat were 180, 123, 117, and 231 bp, respectively. The three introns, 239, 117, and 270 bp, respectively, all possessed a classical "GT-AG" intron splicing motif (Fig. 1). By gene walking with primers AP1 and R2, followed by primers AP2 and R3, a 1,118-bp PCR product was obtained. An overlapping region of 700 bp allowed the assembly of a contiguous sequence. The genomic sequence contained 1,464 nucleotides from the start to the end of the transcript described above.
Scanning of the 5' flanking region of the rtCATH_1 sequence for eukaryotic promoter elements indicated the presence of a typical TATA box (TATAAA) at 31 to 26 (Fig. 1). Two putative CCAAT boxes were found in a sense orientation at 209 and 180. Clusters of potential recognition sites for nuclear factors involved in the transcription of immune-related molecules were found in the region. Within 331 bp upstream of the transcriptional start site there was one nuclear factor kappa B (NF-
B) recognition site, one alpha interferon recognition site, one binding site for CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein ß (C/EBPß), one nuclear factor 1, and two nuclear factor interleukin 6 motifs, two gamma interferon response elements, and five GAAA motifs.
The coding region of trout rtCATH_1 was compared with the sequences of four different mammalian cathelicidins (LL-37 of human, BCT1 of cow, SC52 of sheep, and PR39 of pig), using the GAP program in the Genetics Computer Group package. Comparing the full cDNA sequence, rtCATH_1 was found to share 41 to 44% nucleotide identity with mammalian cathelicidins. The highest homology (44 to 48%) was seen in exon 2, which encoded the cathelin-like domain. The lowest homology (31 to 36%) was seen in exon 4, which encoded the last few residues of the proregion and all of the predicted mature antimicrobial peptide.
The full-length cDNA sequence of the novel cathelicidin had an open reading frame of 216 amino acid residues, corresponding to a 23.6-kDa polypeptide with a calculated pI of 9.4. The peptide showed the characteristic features of cathelicidins, including a conserved N-terminal preproregion and a unique C-terminal sequence. Multiple alignment using the CLUSTAL program indicated conservation of both the mammalian cathelicidin family signature I, Y-X-[ED]-X-V-X-[RQ]-A-[LIVMA]-[DQG]-X-[LIVMFY]-N-[EQ], and signature II, F-X-[LIVM]-K-E-T-X-C-X10-C-X-F-[KR]-[KE], in the rainbow trout sequence (12), with a few exceptions, e.g., V to I and N to L in signature I and K to Q and F to L in signature II (Fig. 3). Analysis of the N-terminal region predicted a cleavage site for signal peptidase at residues S22-Q23. The putative signal peptide is followed by a proregion that conserves the four cysteine residues present in all the congeners characterized thus far. This proregion is predicted to end at residues V150-R151, which is a common elastase cleavage site for many mammalian cathelicidins (13). Thus, the predicted mature peptide would be 66 residues in size, of which 14 are positively charged. The peptide as a whole is basic (calculated pI, 11.71), with four residues being acidic.
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FIG. 3. Multiple alignment of the predicted translation of rtCATH_1 propreprotein with cathelin and other known cathelicidins from human, bovine, sheep, pig, rabbit, and hagfish. Identical (*) and similar (. or :) residues identified by the CLUSTAL program are indicated. The cathelicidin family signature is boxed, and the critical residues conforming to the signature are in boldface. Cysteines involved in disulfide bond formation are in boldface text and indicated with a %. The mature peptides are in italics.
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Antimicrobial and hemolytic assays. The effects of synthesized peptides against a panel of bacteria were evaluated as the minimal concentration capable of inhibiting visible microbial growth. The rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide displayed various antibacterial activities against all 10 different microorganisms studied, including gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, with MICs of 2 to 40 µM (Table 2). The mammalian cathelicidin, bovine cyclic dodecapeptide, also demonstrated antimicrobial activities against a broad spectrum of the fish bacterial pathogens tested but was noticeably less effective than the rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide against A. salmonicida MT423,P. damsela MT1415, and V. anguillarum MT1741.
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TABLE 2. Antimicrobial activities of rtCATH_1(R151-V186) and bovine cyclic dodecapeptide (Bovdode)
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FIG. 5. Kinetics of rtCATH_1(R151-V186) bactericidal activity against A. salmonicida MT004. The results represent viable colonies (CFU) shown as percent of control (without rtCATH_1, plated at time zero). (A) 16.0 µM (2x MIC); (B) 8.0 µM (1x MIC); (C) 4.0 µM (0.5x MIC). The dotted horizontal lines indicate the overall mean bactericidal activity for each concentration. The error bars indicate standard deviations.
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TABLE 3. Effects of increasing concentrations of common cations on MICs of rtCATH_1(R151-V186) against A. salmonicida MT004
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FIG. 6. Hemolysis assays of rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide (open bars), bovine cyclic dodecapeptide (solid bars), and melittin (hatched bars) on rainbow trout erythrocytes. The values are expressed relative to total hemolysis, obtained by adding 0.2% Triton X-100 to the cell suspension. The results are the mean of three independent experiments with standard error values ranging from ±0.1 to ±1.2.
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FIG. 7. Northern blot analysis of rtCATH_1 mRNA expression. Exposed film (A) and densitometric readings of the film (B) are shown. The mRNA levels were normalized to the 18S RNA level and expressed as percentages of the mRNA level in the gills of 24-h-challenged fish (100%). Con, control fish; 8 h, fish injected intraperitoneally (i.p.) with 2 x 106 CFU of Aeromonas salmonicida MT423 for 8 h; 24 h, fish injected i.p. with A. salmonicida for 24 h; G, gill; HK, head kidney; I, intestine, L, liver; SK, skin; SP, spleen.
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FIG. 8. RT-PCR analysis of rtCATH_1 and ß-actin expression in head kidney cells after stimulation without (Con) or with various concentrations of LPS (top) and poly(I · C) (bottom) for 5 h.
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Phylogenetic analysis (Fig. 9) shows rainbow trout cathelicidin has branched away from the mammalian cathelicidins, especially the molecules belonging to species of the grandorder Ungulata. The hagfish cathelicidin family (MgCATH29 and MgCATH37) branches with rtCATH_1 but has a very distant evolutionary relationship.
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FIG. 9. Unrooted phylogenetic tree showing the relationship between rtCATH_1 amino acid sequence of the precursor molecule and other known cathelicidin precursor sequences. The tree was constructed by the neighbor-joining method using the CLUSTAL W and PHYLIP packages and was bootstrapped 1,000 times.
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The rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide, tested for antimicrobial activity in this study, represented the first 36 amino acids of the predicted mature peptide. It is highly basic (net charge, +6), due to the presence of multiple arginine residues and a lysine residue, and had potent antimicrobial activity. Bovine cyclic dodecapeptide was also tested in these studies, and in some cases it was more active than the rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide, as seen with P. damsela EPOY 8803 II and the noncapsulated strain of L. garvieae. However, with A. salmonicida, which causes the well-known salmonid bacterial disease furunculosis, the rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide had more killing activity than bovine cyclic dodecapeptide. Our kinetic study (Fig. 5) indicates a direct relationship between the concentration of peptide, incubation time, and bactericidal activity.
Bacteria can evolve different strategies to resist bactericidal agents. For example, producing ß-lactamase to destroy some antibiotics (6), secreting an outer capsule to prevent phagocytosis by host leukocytes (27), or producing an A layer to aggregate bacteria and decrease susceptibility to antimicrobial peptides (17). The results in this study showed that production of a capsule did not affect susceptibility to the rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide, since the MICs for the two capsulated strains of P. damsela MT1415 and L. garvieae MT2055 were lower than those for the noncapsulated strains. In the case of A-layer production, A. salmonicida strains with an A layer were shown previously to be less susceptible to cecropins B and P1 (17), and a similar conclusion was made regarding resistance to the rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide, where the MIC against the A-layer-positive strain MT423 was higher than that to the A-layer-negative strain MT004.
Divalent cations can increase bacterial membrane stabilization (8), thus affecting the microbicidal activities of some antimicrobial peptides. Calcium and magnesium have been reported to inhibit the activities of mammalian cathelicidins (34) and some fish antimicrobial peptides (7, 23), where increasing calcium or magnesium concentration resulted in decreased antimicrobial activity against the strains tested. A similar trend was seen with the rainbow trout antimicrobial peptide rtCATH_1(R151-V186) against A. salmonicida MT004. The divalent calcium and magnesium, but not monovalent sodium, affected the interaction between the antimicrobial peptide and the bacterial membrane. The functional relevance of such findings relates to the aquatic habitat in which fish reside. Although normally found in freshwater, rainbow trout can live in seawater, in which both the calcium and magnesium concentrations (52.3 and 10.0 mM, respectively) are much higher than the levels tested here and would thus presumably decrease the activity of rtCATH_1 at external surfaces. The reported concentrations of calcium and magnesium in trout body fluids, though, are on the order of 1 mM (22), which is within the active range, and thus, rtCATH_1 would be expected to be active within physiologic fluids under all environmental circumstances.
Expression studies revealed an inducible expression of rtCATH_1 in rainbow trout. The levels of rtCATH_1 expression in rainbow trout were markedly increased after bacterial challenge, when the rtCATH_1 mRNA was appreciable in gill, head kidney, and spleen. Induction at the systemic sites was correlated with the detection of bacteria internally, suggesting that pathways to upregulate rtCATH_1 expression exist, possibly within myeloid cells at these sites. In mammals, cathelicidins are also expressed at various mucosal and systemic sites. The human cathelicidin, FALL-39/LL-37, is present in testis, airway epithelia, thymus, and liver (34). The porcine cathelicidin, PR-39, appears in bone marrow and lymphoid organs, including the thymus, spleen, and mesenteric lymph nodes (44). A murine cathelicidin, CRAMP, was found in the testis, spleen, stomach, and intestine (11). In the present study, it is possible that the challenge route (injection), which was chosen because rainbow trout do not typically succumb to an immersion challenge with A. salmonicida, affected the sites of expression detected. Studies with other routes of exposure and other pathogens, which are now possible, will confirm if other mucosal tissues express rtCATH_1 in trout. Mammalian cathelicidins were originally isolated in neutrophils, as seen in humans, cattle, pigs, rabbits, horses, and mice (34). While this still remains to be determined for fish, the reverse transcription-PCR studies showed that rtCATH_1 can be expressed in head kidney cells after stimulation with LPS or poly(I · C) (Fig. 7) and is thus present in one or more of the cell types present, which are predominantly leukocytes. Additional experiments are needed to investigate further the cellular source(s) of trout cathelicidin.
Analysis of the 5' flanking region of the rtCATH_1 gene revealed a number of consensus binding sequences present in the promoter regions of other immune-relevant genes, including those for C/EBPß, nuclear factor 1, nuclear factor interleukin 6, and NF-
B. Such transcription factors are frequently present adjacent to others, and the factors interact to effect transcription of antimicrobial peptide genes in different species, including the inducible antimicrobial peptides in invertebrates (20), the bovine ß-defensin produced by respiratory tract epithelial cells (10), and other mammalian cathelicidin gene family members (14, 37, 47). In fish, such regulatory elements are known to be present in the promoters of the antimicrobial peptide gene in flounder (7), as well as the promoters of the transferrin gene in salmon (21), the interferon-inducible Mx genes (24) and the insulin-like growth factor gene in trout (39), and the antifreeze protein gene in flounder (28). Thus, in agreement with expression results from the bacterially challenged fish presented above, rtCATH_1 gene expression is likely to be affected by transcription factors released in response to infection and inflammation, in a manner similar to the modulation of other immune-relevant genes in insects, fish, amphibians, and mammals.
Binding sites for various transcription factors known to be involved in viral defense were also found in the 5' flanking region of the rtCATH_1 gene, including multiple GAAA motifs commonly found upstream of interferon-induced genes, two gamma interferon response elements, and one alpha interferon recognition site. Indeed, poly(I · C), a synthetic double-stranded RNA that is used as a viral mimic, enhanced the mRNA expression level of rtCATH_1 in head kidney cells (Fig. 8). Thus, it is possible that the rtCATH_1 gene has some role in host clearance of viral infections, and this requires further study.
Overall, the above-mentioned results confirmed that cathelicidin genes evolved at an early stage of vertebrate evolution and are present in bony fish. The rtCATH_1 molecule was shown to be novel, in terms of possessing combined features of known mammalian subgroups, and the rtCATH_1(R151-V186) peptide was shown to have potent antimicrobial activity against a broad spectrum of fish bacterial pathogens while showing low hemolysis to host red blood cells. Thus, it appears that cathelicidins represent an important first line of defense at mucosal sites in fish as in mammals and that rtCATH_1, as the first bony-fish cathelicidin discovered, may be a good candidate antibiotic for preventing disease outbreaks in aquaculture and a starting point for the development of novel synthetic antimicrobial agents for fish.
We thank Tony Ellis (FRS Marine Laboratory, United Kingdom) for kindly providing the field isolates of fish pathogens and Ian Davidson (Proteome Facility, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom) for synthesizing the rtCATH_1 peptide.
Chin-I Chang and Olga Pleguezuelos contributed equally to the work. ![]()
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