Abstract

The complement component 9 (C9) plays a significant role in the formation of membrane attack complex (MAC) on the targeted cell surface. The current study is dealt with molecular characterization of C9 gene from rohu, Labeo rohita, an important cultured carp species in India. An open reading frame (ORF) of 1998 bp was amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that encodes a polypeptide of 666 amino acids having a signal peptide of 19 amino acids and a mature peptide of 647 amino acids. The SMART domain architecture analysis revealed two thrombospondin type-1 domains (TSP1), a low-density lipoprotein receptor domain class A (LDLa), a membrane attack complex and perforin (MACPF) domain, and an epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domain. Multiple sequence alignment and evolutionary analysis revealed a primitive C9 sequence of rohu with maximum similarity and clustering with common carp, grass carp and zebrafish. C9 was highly expressed in liver and constitutively expressed in wide array of tissues except in eye of rohu juveniles. It was expressed during early developmental days of rohu including in milt. A variable level of up-regulation in C9 expression was noticed upon poly I:C induction, Aeromonas hydrophila and Argulus siamensis infections in liver, spleen and gill tissues of rohu at different time points. A constitutive expression of C9 in different stages of rohu during the ontogeny and in response to pathogen exposures along with high degree of sequence homology with other fish species proved it as an important primitive immune molecule of the complement system lytic pathway.

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