Abstract

In mammals, elongation of very long chain fatty acid protein 6 (ELOVL6), a key enzyme in long chain fatty acids elongation, has been reported to regulate other metabolism processes and immunity, including inflammation in vertebrates. However, little is currently known about the ELOVL6 homolog in invertebrates, especially its role in immune response. In this study, the ELOVL6 ortholog in Penaeus vannamei (designated PvELOVL6) was cloned and found to have an open reading frame (ORF) of 435 bp and encode a putative protein of 144 amino acids. Transcripts of PvELOVL6 are constitutively expressed in all shrimp tissues tested and induced in the hepatopancreas and hemocytes by Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Streptococcus iniae. Besides, PvELOVL6 knockdown followed by Vibrio parahaemolyticus challenge revealed that PvELOVL6 regulates the expression of several genes involved in fatty acid metabolism and immunity, including PvLGBP, PvLectin, PvMnSOD, PvProPO, PvFABP, PvLipase, PvCOX and PvGPDH. Moreover, transcript levels of PvELOVL6, fatty acids metabolism-related genes (i.e., PvGPDH, PvFABP, PvPERO and PvSPLA2), and immune-related genes (i.e., PvProPO, PvLectin, PvLGBP, PvLysozyme and PvCatalase) increased after silencing of the sterol regulatory element binding protein (PvSREBP). Thus, PvELOVL6 is involved in immune response and regulated by PvSREBP through an unknown mechanism in penaeid shrimp.

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