The cytokine genes of Oncorhynchus masou formosanus include a defective interleukin-4A gene.
Yen, Y.-H.; Zheng, D. Y.; Yang, S. Y.; Gwo, J.-C.; Fugmann, S. D.
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Oncorhynchus masou formosanus (Formosa land-locked salmon) is a critically endangered salmonid fish endemic to Taiwan. To begin to understand how its drastic change in lifestyle from anadromous to exclusively river-dwelling is reflected in its immune genes, we characterized the genes encoding six cytokines (IL-2A, IL-2B, IL-4A, IL-4B1, IL-4B2, and IL-17A/F2a) important for T cell responses as no genomic data is available for this fish. Interestingly, all genes appeared homozygous indicative of a genetic bottleneck. The IL2 and IL17A/F2a genes and their products are highly similar to their characterized homologs in Oncorhynchus mykiss (rainbow trout) and other salmonid fish. Two notable differences were observed in IL4 family important for type 2 immune responses. First, O. m. formosanus carries not only one but two genes encoding IL-4B1 proteins and expansions of these genes are present in other salmonid fish. Second, the OmfoIL4A gene carries a 228 bp deletion that results in a premature stop codon and hence a non-functional IL-4A cytokine. This suggests a reduced ability for T cell responses against parasitic infections in this species.
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