Table_5_Interacting Effects of Sea Louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) Infection and Formalin-Killed Aeromonas salmonicida on Atlantic Salmon Skin Transcriptome.xlsx

Lepeophtheirus salmonis (sea lice) and bacterial co-infection threatens wild and farmed Atlantic salmon performance and welfare. In the present study, pre-adult L. salmonis-infected and non-infected salmon were intraperitoneally injected with either formalin-killed Aeromonas salmonicida bacterin (AS...

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Main Authors: Albert Caballero-Solares, Navaneethaiyer Umasuthan, Xi Xue, Tomer Katan, Surendra Kumar, Jillian D. Westcott, Zhiyu Chen, Mark D. Fast, Stanko Skugor, Richard G. Taylor, Matthew L. Rise
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.804987.s008
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_5_Interacting_Effects_of_Sea_Louse_Lepeophtheirus_salmonis_Infection_and_Formalin-Killed_Aeromonas_salmonicida_on_Atlantic_Salmon_Skin_Transcriptome_xlsx/19407851
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/19407851 2023-05-15T15:31:27+02:00 Table_5_Interacting Effects of Sea Louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) Infection and Formalin-Killed Aeromonas salmonicida on Atlantic Salmon Skin Transcriptome.xlsx Albert Caballero-Solares Navaneethaiyer Umasuthan Xi Xue Tomer Katan Surendra Kumar Jillian D. Westcott Zhiyu Chen Mark D. Fast Stanko Skugor Richard G. Taylor Matthew L. Rise 2022-03-24T04:19:59Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.804987.s008 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_5_Interacting_Effects_of_Sea_Louse_Lepeophtheirus_salmonis_Infection_and_Formalin-Killed_Aeromonas_salmonicida_on_Atlantic_Salmon_Skin_Transcriptome_xlsx/19407851 unknown doi:10.3389/fimmu.2022.804987.s008 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_5_Interacting_Effects_of_Sea_Louse_Lepeophtheirus_salmonis_Infection_and_Formalin-Killed_Aeromonas_salmonicida_on_Atlantic_Salmon_Skin_Transcriptome_xlsx/19407851 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Immunology Applied Immunology (incl. Antibody Engineering Xenotransplantation and T-cell Therapies) Autoimmunity Cellular Immunology Humoural Immunology and Immunochemistry Immunogenetics (incl. Genetic Immunology) Innate Immunity Transplantation Immunology Tumour Immunology Immunology not elsewhere classified Genetic Immunology Animal Immunology Veterinary Immunology Atlantic salmon sea lice formalin-killed bacterin Aeromonas salmonicida skin transcriptome Dataset 2022 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.804987.s008 2022-03-30T23:09:34Z Lepeophtheirus salmonis (sea lice) and bacterial co-infection threatens wild and farmed Atlantic salmon performance and welfare. In the present study, pre-adult L. salmonis-infected and non-infected salmon were intraperitoneally injected with either formalin-killed Aeromonas salmonicida bacterin (ASAL) or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Dorsal skin samples from each injection/infection group (PBS/no lice, PBS/lice, ASAL/no lice, and ASAL/lice) were collected at 24 h post-injection and used for transcriptome profiling using a 44K salmonid microarray platform. Microarray results showed no clear inflammation gene expression signatures and revealed extensive gene repression effects by pre-adult lice (2,189 down and 345 up-regulated probes) in the PBS-injected salmon (PBS/lice vs. PBS/no lice), which involved basic cellular (e.g., RNA and protein metabolism) processes. Lice repressive effects were not observed within the group of ASAL-injected salmon (ASAL/lice vs. ASAL/no lice); on the contrary, the observed skin transcriptome changes –albeit of lesser magnitude (82 up and 1 down-regulated probes)– suggested the activation in key immune and wound healing processes (e.g., neutrophil degranulation, keratinocyte differentiation). The molecular skin response to ASAL was more intense in the lice-infected (ASAL/lice vs. PBS/lice; 272 up and 11 down-regulated probes) than in the non-infected fish (ASAL/no lice vs. PBS/no lice; 27 up-regulated probes). Regardless of lice infection, the skin’s response to ASAL was characterized by the putative activation of both antibacterial and wound healing pathways. The transcriptomic changes prompted by ASAL+lice co-stimulation (ASAL/lice vs. PBS/no lice; 1878 up and 3120 down-regulated probes) confirmed partial mitigation of lice repressive effects on fundamental cellular processes and the activation of pathways involved in innate (e.g., neutrophil degranulation) and adaptive immunity (e.g., antibody formation), as well as endothelial cell migration. The qPCR analyses evidenced ... Dataset Atlantic salmon Frontiers: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Immunology
Applied Immunology (incl. Antibody Engineering
Xenotransplantation and T-cell Therapies)
Autoimmunity
Cellular Immunology
Humoural Immunology and Immunochemistry
Immunogenetics (incl. Genetic Immunology)
Innate Immunity
Transplantation Immunology
Tumour Immunology
Immunology not elsewhere classified
Genetic Immunology
Animal Immunology
Veterinary Immunology
Atlantic salmon
sea lice
formalin-killed bacterin
Aeromonas salmonicida
skin transcriptome
spellingShingle Immunology
Applied Immunology (incl. Antibody Engineering
Xenotransplantation and T-cell Therapies)
Autoimmunity
Cellular Immunology
Humoural Immunology and Immunochemistry
Immunogenetics (incl. Genetic Immunology)
Innate Immunity
Transplantation Immunology
Tumour Immunology
Immunology not elsewhere classified
Genetic Immunology
Animal Immunology
Veterinary Immunology
Atlantic salmon
sea lice
formalin-killed bacterin
Aeromonas salmonicida
skin transcriptome
Albert Caballero-Solares
Navaneethaiyer Umasuthan
Xi Xue
Tomer Katan
Surendra Kumar
Jillian D. Westcott
Zhiyu Chen
Mark D. Fast
Stanko Skugor
Richard G. Taylor
Matthew L. Rise
Table_5_Interacting Effects of Sea Louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) Infection and Formalin-Killed Aeromonas salmonicida on Atlantic Salmon Skin Transcriptome.xlsx
topic_facet Immunology
Applied Immunology (incl. Antibody Engineering
Xenotransplantation and T-cell Therapies)
Autoimmunity
Cellular Immunology
Humoural Immunology and Immunochemistry
Immunogenetics (incl. Genetic Immunology)
Innate Immunity
Transplantation Immunology
Tumour Immunology
Immunology not elsewhere classified
Genetic Immunology
Animal Immunology
Veterinary Immunology
Atlantic salmon
sea lice
formalin-killed bacterin
Aeromonas salmonicida
skin transcriptome
description Lepeophtheirus salmonis (sea lice) and bacterial co-infection threatens wild and farmed Atlantic salmon performance and welfare. In the present study, pre-adult L. salmonis-infected and non-infected salmon were intraperitoneally injected with either formalin-killed Aeromonas salmonicida bacterin (ASAL) or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Dorsal skin samples from each injection/infection group (PBS/no lice, PBS/lice, ASAL/no lice, and ASAL/lice) were collected at 24 h post-injection and used for transcriptome profiling using a 44K salmonid microarray platform. Microarray results showed no clear inflammation gene expression signatures and revealed extensive gene repression effects by pre-adult lice (2,189 down and 345 up-regulated probes) in the PBS-injected salmon (PBS/lice vs. PBS/no lice), which involved basic cellular (e.g., RNA and protein metabolism) processes. Lice repressive effects were not observed within the group of ASAL-injected salmon (ASAL/lice vs. ASAL/no lice); on the contrary, the observed skin transcriptome changes –albeit of lesser magnitude (82 up and 1 down-regulated probes)– suggested the activation in key immune and wound healing processes (e.g., neutrophil degranulation, keratinocyte differentiation). The molecular skin response to ASAL was more intense in the lice-infected (ASAL/lice vs. PBS/lice; 272 up and 11 down-regulated probes) than in the non-infected fish (ASAL/no lice vs. PBS/no lice; 27 up-regulated probes). Regardless of lice infection, the skin’s response to ASAL was characterized by the putative activation of both antibacterial and wound healing pathways. The transcriptomic changes prompted by ASAL+lice co-stimulation (ASAL/lice vs. PBS/no lice; 1878 up and 3120 down-regulated probes) confirmed partial mitigation of lice repressive effects on fundamental cellular processes and the activation of pathways involved in innate (e.g., neutrophil degranulation) and adaptive immunity (e.g., antibody formation), as well as endothelial cell migration. The qPCR analyses evidenced ...
format Dataset
author Albert Caballero-Solares
Navaneethaiyer Umasuthan
Xi Xue
Tomer Katan
Surendra Kumar
Jillian D. Westcott
Zhiyu Chen
Mark D. Fast
Stanko Skugor
Richard G. Taylor
Matthew L. Rise
author_facet Albert Caballero-Solares
Navaneethaiyer Umasuthan
Xi Xue
Tomer Katan
Surendra Kumar
Jillian D. Westcott
Zhiyu Chen
Mark D. Fast
Stanko Skugor
Richard G. Taylor
Matthew L. Rise
author_sort Albert Caballero-Solares
title Table_5_Interacting Effects of Sea Louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) Infection and Formalin-Killed Aeromonas salmonicida on Atlantic Salmon Skin Transcriptome.xlsx
title_short Table_5_Interacting Effects of Sea Louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) Infection and Formalin-Killed Aeromonas salmonicida on Atlantic Salmon Skin Transcriptome.xlsx
title_full Table_5_Interacting Effects of Sea Louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) Infection and Formalin-Killed Aeromonas salmonicida on Atlantic Salmon Skin Transcriptome.xlsx
title_fullStr Table_5_Interacting Effects of Sea Louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) Infection and Formalin-Killed Aeromonas salmonicida on Atlantic Salmon Skin Transcriptome.xlsx
title_full_unstemmed Table_5_Interacting Effects of Sea Louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) Infection and Formalin-Killed Aeromonas salmonicida on Atlantic Salmon Skin Transcriptome.xlsx
title_sort table_5_interacting effects of sea louse (lepeophtheirus salmonis) infection and formalin-killed aeromonas salmonicida on atlantic salmon skin transcriptome.xlsx
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.804987.s008
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_5_Interacting_Effects_of_Sea_Louse_Lepeophtheirus_salmonis_Infection_and_Formalin-Killed_Aeromonas_salmonicida_on_Atlantic_Salmon_Skin_Transcriptome_xlsx/19407851
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
op_relation doi:10.3389/fimmu.2022.804987.s008
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_5_Interacting_Effects_of_Sea_Louse_Lepeophtheirus_salmonis_Infection_and_Formalin-Killed_Aeromonas_salmonicida_on_Atlantic_Salmon_Skin_Transcriptome_xlsx/19407851
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.804987.s008
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