Fish and Shellfish Immunology Reports (Dec 2023)

The histidine phosphatase LHPP of Penaeus vannamei is involved in shrimp hemocytes apoptosis

  • Zhongyan Wang,
  • Yueling Zhang,
  • Jude Juventus Aweya,
  • Zhongyang Lin,
  • Defu Yao,
  • Zhihong Zheng

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
p. 100109

Abstract

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LHPP (Phospholysine Phosphohistidine Inorganic Pyrophosphate Phosphatase) is a protein histidine phosphatase that modulates a hidden posttranslational modification called histidine phosphorylation. LHPP also acts as a tumor suppressor, which plays a pivotal role in various cellular processes. However, whether LHPP participates in the regulation of invertebrate's immunity is still unknown. Here we characterized a LHPP homolog in P. vannamei (designated PvLHPP), with a 807 bp length of open reading frame (ORF) encoding a putative protein of 268 amino acids. Sequence analysis revealed that PvLHPP contains a typical hydrolase 6 and hydrolase-like domain, which was conserved from invertebrate to vertebrate. PvLHPP was ubiquitously expressed in tissues and induced in hemocyte and hepatopancreas by Vibrio parahaemolyticus, Streptococcus iniae and white spot syndrome virus (WSSV) challenge, indicating that PvLHPP participated in the immune responses. Moreover, silencing of PvLHPP followed by V. parahaemolyticus inhibited hemocyte apoptosis. This study enriches our current insight on shrimp immunity, and provides novel perspective to understand immune-regulatory role of PvLHPP.

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