Abstract

Despite the central role of hemocytes in crustacean immunity, the process of hemocyte differentiation and maturation remains unclear. In some decapods, it has been proposed that the two main types of hemocytes, granular cells (GCs) and semigranular cells (SGCs), differentiate along separate lineages. However, our current findings challenge this model. By tracking newly produced hemocytes and transplanted cells, we demonstrate that almost all the circulating hemocytes of crayfish belong to the GC lineage. SGCs and GCs may represent hemocytes of different developmental stages rather than two types of fully differentiated cells. Hemocyte precursors produced by progenitor cells differentiate in the hematopoietic tissue (HPT) for 3 ~ 4 days. Immature hemocytes are released from HPT in the form of SGCs and take 1 ~ 3 months to mature in the circulation. GCs represent the terminal stage of development. They can survive for as long as 2 months. The changes in the expression pattern of marker genes during GC differentiation support our conclusions. Further analysis of hemocyte phagocytosis indicates the existence of functionally different subpopulations. These findings may reshape our understanding of crustacean hematopoiesis and may lead to reconsideration of the roles and relationship of circulating hemocytes.

Highlights

  • Despite the central role of hemocytes in crustacean immunity, the process of hemocyte differentiation and maturation remains unclear

  • The percentage of EdU-incorporated cells dramatically declined after a month, and the highest number of EdU-incorporated granular cells (GCs) represented only ~ 0.9% of the total circulating hemocytes (43.9% of the EdU-incorporated hemocytes) at 56 dpi. These results suggested that new hemocytes were released from hematopoietic tissue (HPT) in the form of semigranular cells (SGCs), and those belonging to the GC lineage took approximately a month to mature

  • We demonstrate that most circulating hemocytes differentiate into GCs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Despite the central role of hemocytes in crustacean immunity, the process of hemocyte differentiation and maturation remains unclear. It has been proposed that the two main types of hemocytes, granular cells (GCs) and semigranular cells (SGCs), differentiate along separate lineages. SGCs and GCs may represent hemocytes of different developmental stages rather than two types of fully differentiated cells. Further analysis of hemocyte phagocytosis indicates the existence of functionally different subpopulations. These findings may reshape our understanding of crustacean hematopoiesis and may lead to reconsideration of the roles and relationship of circulating hemocytes. The production of new blood cells by hematopoiesis is critical to the functioning of the immune system and the body as a whole. Crustacean hemocytes are classified into three morphological types: granular cells/large granular cells (GCs), semigranular cells/small granular cells (SGCs), and hyaline cells (HCs)/agranular c­ ells[21], the cell type

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call