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Protocol for isolating nuclei from frozen fish heart tissue for single-cell gen...

Wei, Chaoguang; Jia, Ruonan; Canario, Adelino; Chen, Liangbiao; Xu, Qianghua; Hu, Peng

Unbiased isolation of intact single nuclei from complex tissues, such as cryopreserved hearts, for massively parallel single-cell genomic assays is particularly challenging. Here, we present a protocol for isolating high-quality nuclei from the heart tissue of Trematomus bernacchii, an Antarctic fish species with notoriously challenging tissue for nuclear extraction. We describe steps for pulverizing frozen hea...


Differential tissue immune stimulation through immersion in bacterial and viral...

Sousa, Carmen; Peng, Maoxiao; Guerreiro, Pedro; Cardoso, João; Chen, Liangbiao; Canario, Adelino; Power, Deborah

The genome evolution of Antarctic notothenioids has been modulated by their extreme environment over millennia and more recently by human -caused constraints such as overfishing and climate change. Here we investigated the characteristics of the immune system in Notothenia rossii and how it responds to 8 h immersion in viral (Poly I:C, polyinosinic: polycytidylic acid) and bacterial (LPS, lipopolysaccharide) pr...


Transcriptome analysis of Immune Response against Streptococcus agalactiae infe...

Zhou, Tao; Fang, Zhihua; Duarte, Daniel F. C.; Fernandes, Stefan A.; Lu, Ying; Guo, Jing; Gui, Lang; Chen, Liangbiao

Streptococcus agalactiae (group B streptococcus, GBS), a broad-spectrum pathogen, causes great economic losses in fish aquaculture, especially the industry of tilapia. Until now, the knowledge of the immune response mechanism against S. agalactiae infection in tilapia has been limited. In the present study, the gill transcriptome of the tilapia from the GBS and the phosphate buffered saline (PBS) groups were se...


Population genomics of an icefish reveals mechanisms of glacier-driven adaptive...

Lu, Ying; Li, Wenhao; Li, Yalin; Zhai, Wanying; Zhou, Xuming; Wu, Zhichao; Jiang, Shouwen; Liu, Taigang; Wang, Huamin; Hu, Ruiqin; Zhou, Yan; Zou, Jun

Background Antarctica harbors the bulk of the species diversity of the dominant teleost fish suborder—Notothenioidei. However, the forces that shape their evolution are still under debate. Results We sequenced the genome of an icefish, Chionodraco hamatus, and used population genomics and demographic modelling of sequenced genomes of 52 C. hamatus individuals collected mainly from two East Antarctic regions to ...


Transcriptomic down-regulation of immune system components in barrier and hemat...

Sousa, Carmen; Power, Deborah; Guerreiro, Pedro M; Louro, Bruno; Chen, Liangbiao; Canario, Adelino

The environmental conditions and isolation in the Antarctic have driven the evolution of a unique biodiversity at a macro to microorganism scale. Here, we investigated the possible adaptation of the teleost Notothenia coriiceps immune system to the cold environment and unique microbial community of the Southern Ocean. The fish immune system was stimulated through an intraperitoneal injection of lipopolysacchari...


Toll-like receptor evolution: does temperature matter?

Sousa, Carmen; Fernandes, Stefan A.; Cardoso, João; Wang, Ying; Zhai, Wanying; Guerreiro, Pedro; Chen, Liangbiao; Canario, A.V.M.; Power, Deborah

Toll-like receptors (TLRs) recognize conserved pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) and are an ancient and well-conserved group of pattern recognition receptors (PRRs). The isolation of the Antarctic continent and its unique teleost fish and microbiota prompted the present investigation into Tlr evolution. Gene homologues of tlr members in teleosts from temperate regions were present in the genome of ...


Transcriptomic responses to low temperature stress in the Nile tilapia, Oreochr...

Zhou, Tao; Gui, Lang; Liu, Mingli; Li, Wenhao; Hu, Peng; Duarte, Daniel F. C.; Niu, Hongbo; Chen, Liangbiao

The Nile tilapia, Oreochrornis niloticus, is a species of high economic value and extensively cultured. The limited stress tolerance of this species to a low temperature usually leads to mass mortality and great loss. Nevertheless, there is limited information on the molecular mechanisms underlying the susceptibility to low temperature in the tilapia. In this study, tilapia was treated at 28 degrees C to a leth...


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