Abstract

β-Defensins are a group of cysteine-rich, cationic antimicrobial peptides that play important roles in innate immune system against pathogenic microbes invading. In this study, the part-length cDNA sequences of two β-defensin genes (maΒD-1, maΒD-2) in blunt snout bream (Megalobrama amblycephala) were identified. Homology analysis showed that the cDNA sequences of maΒD-1 and maΒD-2 had high similarities to those in common carp and zebrafish. Real-time quantitative PCR results exhibited that expression level of maΒD-1 in juvenile tissues was the highest in skin, followed by blood and liver, whereas maΒD-2 was lowly expressed in liver, kidney, brain and foregut. In the early development period, fertilized eggs to 31-day post-hatching (dph) larvae, the expression levels of maΒD-1 were higher at the stage from heart beat stage to 3 dph with the highest value at 1 dph, whereas maΒD-2 was expressed higher at fertilized eggs and late cleavage stages. Following bacterial stimulation in vivo by Aeromonas sobria, maΒD-2 expressions were significantly up-regulated in liver, skin, gill, and foregut of juveniles, and maΒD-1 expressions were significantly up-regulated in liver and skin. The results suggest that maΒD-1 and maΒD-2 may play important roles in protecting blunt snout bream embryos, fry and juveniles from pathogenic microbe invading.

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