Affiliation:
1. Shenzhen Key Lab of Marine Genomics, Guangdong Provincial Key Lab of Molecular Breeding in Marine Economic Animals, BGI Academy of Marine Sciences, BGI Marine, BGI, Shenzhen, China
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are a group of short peptides in vertebrates, independently
or derived from big proteins (AMP precursors), for innate immune adaptation to fight against exogenous
pathogens. Therefore, they provide attractive templates for us to develop new alternatives
to antibiotics, which will relieve the threats of microbial resistance and drug residual. Fish reside in
various environments; however, AMP research in fish have long been lagged behind. These highly
diverse peptides in fish, regardless whether they are digested from proteins or not, constitute a sophisticate
line for host defense. Exploring AMPs’ detailed composition in fish will benefit us with
a better understanding of them in vertebrates. This mini-review presents brief descriptions of
AMPs and their research advances in fish, using zebrafish as the representative and comparing this
model fish with well-studied amphibious mudskippers and tetraploid Atlantic salmon. Common
features and species-specific characteristics among various fish provide valuable genetic resources
for high-throughput development of novel antibiotic alternatives. In addition, the diversity and
heterogeneity in tissue distribution also revealed the complex synergism of AMPs/AMP precursors.
These big datasets of genomes and transcriptomes lay a solid foundation for theoretic researches
and practical applications of AMPs in fish aquaculture and drug development.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Biochemistry,General Medicine,Structural Biology
Cited by
12 articles.
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