Abstract

Heat shock proteins (HSPs) are a group of highly conserved molecular chaperones. Shrimp HSPs have recently been a topic of increasing interest because of their roles in shrimp immunity and homeostasis. In penaeid shrimp, HSP70s and the cognate forms, heat shock cognate (HSC) 70s, have been reported, but their responses towards various stimulations are different. We found a novel type HSP70 (MjHSP70-2) from the hyperexpansion of the large segmental duplication that is present in kuruma shrimp Marsupenaeus japonicus, which shows about 60 % identity with reported shrimp HSP70s. In a phylogenetic tree, MjHSP70-2 formed a sister clade with eukaryote HSP70 family while MjHSP70 was located close to the shrimp HSP70 and HSC70 group. MjHSP70-2 gene expression was not significantly increased by heat shock or pathogen challenge by Vibrio penaeicida, but it was significantly increased by infection with white spot syndrome virus. In contrast, MjHSP70 gene expression was increased by heat shock but decreased by infection with V. penaeicida. The kuruma shrimp genome was found to have 400-fold more copies of the MjHSP70-2 gene than the putative single-copy gene transglutaminase. In conclusion, our results reveal the presence of a novel type HSP70 gene, HSP70-2, from kuruma shrimp. There are multiple forms of HSP70 in crustaceans, and these HSP70s behave differently under various stressors.

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