Transcriptome Analysis Reveals the Tolerance Mechanism of Mantis Shrimp (Oratosquilla oratoria) under a Lipopolysaccharide Challenge

ACS Omega. 2020 Jan 30;5(5):2310-2317. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.9b03629. eCollection 2020 Feb 11.

Abstract

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a major cell wall component of Gram-negative bacteria, is considered to lead to some disease development in commercial crustaceans. However, mantis shrimps Oratosquilla oratoria (Crustacea: Stomatopoda) have a strong vitality and ability to resist disease. To study the tolerance mechanism of mantis shrimp, transcriptome analyses were conducted in hepatopancreas of O. oratoria under LPS challenge investigation. Totally, 84 547 044 clean reads were obtained from transcriptomes (43 159 230 in OP (control), 41 387 814 in OL (treatment), respectively). Unigenes, the longest transcript of each gene, with a total length of 68 318 880 bp and the total number of 100 978 were obtained. 8369 (8.28%) of unigenes were successfully annotated in all databases and 54 888 (54.35%) were annotated in at least one database. Finally, 1012 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) including 439 and 573 showed significantly upregulated and downregulated were determined between OL and OP, respectively. Moreover, those DEGs only expressed in OL or OP accounted for 8.99%. The functional classification based on GO and KEGG indicated that the common enrichment categories for the DEGs are "amino sugar metabolic" and "cellular homeostasis" and that the progress of nutrient metabolic and homeostasis in cells is important in facing variable environmental conditions. Protein-protein interaction analysis elucidated proteins, β-actin (ACTB_G1), T-complex protein subunits (TCPs), heat shock proteins (HSPs), hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase-like protein 2 (HSDL2), kinesin family member 5 (KIF5), methylglutaconyl-CoA hydratase (AUH), and myosin heavy chain (MYH) may play key roles in response to an LPS challenge. This study laid a foundation to further investigate the possible adaptation way that O. oratoria survives in a bacterial challenge.