Figures
Abstract
The eggs of the freshwater Pomacea apple snails develop above the water level, exposed to varied physical and biological stressors. Their high hatching success seems to be linked to their proteins or perivitellins, which surround the developing embryo providing nutrients, sunscreens and varied defenses. The defensive mechanism has been unveiled in P. canaliculata and P. maculata eggs, where their major perivitellins are pigmented, non-digestible and provide a warning coloration while another perivitellin acts as a toxin. In P. scalaris, a species sympatric to the former, the defense strategy seems different, since no toxin was found and the major perivitellin, PsSC, while also colored and non-digestible, is a carbohydrate-binding protein. In this study we examine the structure and function of PsSC by sequencing its subunits, characterizing its carbohydrate binding profile and evaluating its effect on gut cells. Whereas cDNA sequencing and database search showed no lectin domain, glycan array carbohydrate binding profile revealed a strong specificity for glycosphingolipids and ABO group antigens. Moreover, PsSC agglutinated bacteria in a dose-dependent manner. Inspired on the defensive properties of seed lectins we evaluated the effects of PsSC on intestinal cells both in vitro (Caco-2 and IEC-6 cells) and in the gastrointestinal tract of rats. PsSC binds to Caco-2 cell membranes without reducing its viability, while a PsSC-containing diet temporarily induces large epithelium alterations and an increased absorptive surface. Based on these results, we propose that PsSC is involved in embryo defenses by altering the gut morphophysiology of potential predators, a convergent role to plant defensive lectins.
Citation: Ituarte S, Brola TR, Fernández PE, Mu H, Qiu J-W, Heras H, et al. (2018) A lectin of a non-invasive apple snail as an egg defense against predation alters the rat gut morphophysiology. PLoS ONE 13(6): e0198361. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198361
Editor: Daniel Rittschof, Duke University Marine Laboratory, UNITED STATES
Received: November 24, 2017; Accepted: May 17, 2018; Published: June 1, 2018
Copyright: © 2018 Ituarte et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Data Availability: Nucleotide sequences of PsSC subunits were deposited in GenBank database (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/) with accession numbers: MG243358, MG243359, MG243360, MG243361, MG243362 and MG243363.
Funding: Financial support for this work is as follows: HH: Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica, PICT 2014-0850, http://www.agencia.mincyt.gob.ar/upload/Res.270-15-PICT-2014-Temas-abiertos-Tipo-A.pdf; MSD: Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica, PICT 2015-0661, http://www.agencia.mincyt.gob.ar/upload/PICT%202015%20TEMAS%20ABIERTOS%20TIPO%20D.pdf; MSD: Subsidio Institucional para Investigadores CIC (Resolución N° 48/16), http://www.cic.gba.gob.ar/. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Introduction
The reproductive strategy of the freshwater Pomacea snails involves laying colored egg clutches above the water line, exposing them to a set of environmental stressors including direct sunlight, high temperatures, and diverse predators such as insects, birds and rodents [1,2]. These cleidoic eggs have a high hatching rate [3] which in some species of the genus, such as P. canaliculata and P. maculata, enhances its biological potential as invasives [4,5]. Notably, both species were introduced to Southeast Asia in the 1980’s, and rapidly became a serious socio-economic problem as a rice crop pest, a voracious herbivore for aquatic vegetation and a vector of a human parasite [5–7].
The eggs of these snails are small (2.5 mm), rounded, covered with a calcareous capsule and glued to each other in masses of 200–1500 eggs. A disctinctive characteristic of these eggs is coloration, which varies from bright pink in P. canaliculata and P. maculata to pale orange in P. scalaris [2]. The oocytes are surrounded by a perivitelline fluid (PVF) mainly composed by proteins and polysaccharides [8,9]. Biochemical and physiological evidence indicates that Pomacea egg proteins, hereafter perivitellins, in addition to their role as energetic and structural sources, are involved in embryo adaptation to the adverse environmental conditions of development [10–12]. Remarkably, P. canaliculata eggs have no reported predators in the native area of this species; recent studies showed that they are well defended by multifunctional perivitellins, including the neurotoxin PcPV2, which is lethal to mice [13] and the antinutritive carotenoprotein PcOvo, which can reduce rat growth rate and provide a warning signal (aposematic coloration) [14]. These proteins showed high structural stability in a wide range of temperature and pH values. Moreover, both perivitellins are resistant to simulated gastrointestinal digestion, thus being able to reach the intestinal tract of a potential egg predator in a biologically active conformation [14,15]. Comparable findings were reported in P. maculata eggs, where their major perivitellins, PmPV1 and PmPV2, showed similar structural and functional properties as PcOvo and PcPV2, respectively [12,16,17].
In contrast, Pomacea scalaris, a species sympatric to P. canaliculata and P. maculata, showed different properties in its major egg protein: PsSC. This perivitellin is an oligomeric carotenoprotein of 380 kDa which, despite sharing structural and functional properties with PcOvo and PmPV1 [11,18], has a distinctive feature: a strong lectin activity, agglutinating rabbit and, to a lesser extent, human erythrocytes [19].
The presence of highly stable carotenoproteins as the most abundant proteins in the egg PVF appears as a common characteristic in Pomacea snails, possibly a key biochemical adaptation to aerial egg development [10]. The presence of a carotenoprotein with lectin activity in a Pomacea egg was an unexpected finding, showing that within the genus carotenoproteins exhibit structural and/or functional divergence. Lectins are carbohydrate binding proteins, found in animals and plants, able to specifically recognize oligosaccharide structures. They are known to play essential roles in the innate immune system of invertebrates recognizing microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs) of invading microorganisms. Therefore, a protective role against microbial invasions is generally assumed for egg lectins [20], though this assumption has not been tested for the eggs of many animals. Finally, considering PsSC resistance to digestive proteases [19], it is possible that this perivitellin is also involved in egg defense against predation through a mechanism similar to the one thoroughly studied for plant lectins [21].
The aim of this work was to shed light on the role of PsSC in egg defenses. We determined its primary structure and characterized its glycan binding specificity. We also tested its antimicrobial activity and explored the effect of oral administration of a PsSC–containing diet on the digestive tract of rats as a model of potential egg predator. Finally, we investigated in vitro, the specific interaction of PsSC with digestive epithelium surfaces and its cytotoxic effect on enterocyte cell lines.
Materials and methods
Ethics statement
Animal studies were carried out in accordance with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals [22] and were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of the School of Medicine, UNLP (Permit No. P01-01-2016). Our research adheres to the legislation of the Argentinean provincial Wildlife Hunting Law (Ley 5786, Art. 2).
Isolation and purification of PsSC
Purification of PsSC was carried out as previously described [11] from newly-laid egg clutches collected from the Regatas pond (Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires, Argentina). Briefly, egg homogenates were centrifuged sequentially at 10,000 g for 30 min, and 100,000 g for 60 min. The obtained supernatant was fractionated by ultracentrifugation on a NaBr density gradient. Finally, fractions containing PsSC were purified by size exclusion chromatography. The purity of the protein obtained from a single chromatographic peak was checked by native PAGE performed in a Mini-Protean III System (Bio Rad Laboratories, Inc.), and protein content was determined by the method of Bradford [23].
Primary structure and subunit sequences analysis
Mass spectrometry analysis of purified PsSC was conducted to obtain amino acid sequences of the tryptic peptides. The obtained sequences, together with one N-terminal sequence previously reported [19], were used to search the cDNA sequences of the different PsSC subunits in the P. scalaris albumen gland transcriptome [24]. The signal peptide cleavage sites in the translated amino acid sequences of PsSC were predicted using the SignalP 4.1 server [25]. The theoretical molecular weight and isoelectric point of each mature subunit were estimated using the ProtParam tool-Expasy server [26]. Finally, potential phosphorylation and glycosylation sites were predicted with DISPHOS 1.3 [27,28] and NetNGlyc 1.0 server, respectively.
Putative PsSC subunits were determined by search using the BLAST program (National Library of Medicine). Sequences were aligned using MAFFT 7 [29] and phylogenetic trees were constructed by the maximum likelihood method with bootstrapping analysis using MEGA version 6 [30].
Glycan array
Glycan binding specificity of PsSC was determined at the Core H of the Consortium for Functional Glycomics (http://www.functionalglycomics.org, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA). In order to detect primary binding of PsSC to glycans, the protein was fluorescently labeled using the Alexa Fluor 488 Protein Labeling kit (Invitrogen, Life Technologies-Molecular Probes) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Protein concentration and the degree of labeling were determined spectrophotometrically. Fluorescently labeled PsSC was assayed on a glycan array which comprised 610 glycan targets (version 5.1) and the data analyzed as previously described by Smith et al. [31]. In order to eliminate false hits containing a single very high point, the highest and lowest points from a set of six replicates were removed and the four remaining values were averaged. Oligosaccharides with high %CV were excluded.
Antimicrobial activity assays
We tested the antimicrobial activity of PsSC on Escherichia coli (BL-21) and Staphylococcus pseudointermedius cultures in solid and liquid media. In each plate, 50 μL of culture was spread onto LB/agar in triplicates, and 20 min later 10 μL drops containing 20, 10 and 2 μg of PsSC were dispensed. Sterile buffer was used as negative control. The plates were incubated for 18 h at 37°C and the formation of inhibition rings was observed. In the liquid media assays, 500 μL of culture was diluted with LB in triplicates and PsSC was added to a final concentration of 0.2 g/L, with sterile PBS being used as control. Growth was measured as optical density at 600 nm.
We also tested the microbial agglutinating activity of PsSC. In the assays we incubated 40 μL of E. coli in PBS (OD600 = 1.2) on 96-well plates with 10 μL of serial dilutions of PsSC overnight at room temperature. Lectin activity was confirmed by competition with 20 mM GalNAc and 20 mM GlcNH2 (final concentrations), which were preincubated with PsSC prior to its addition to the well. After incubation, the plates were tilted for 30 min and observed by naked eye, additionally, the content of the well was observed under a microscope to confirm microbe agglutination.
Binding assay to cell surface
Human colorectal adenocarcinoma (Caco-2) and rat small intestine crypt cells (IEC-6) obtained from the ATCC (Cerdalane Inc, Burlington, ON) were cultured as previously described [15]. Briefly, cells were cultured at 37°C, 5% CO2 and subcultured by trypsinization at 95% confluency. Passages 60 through 65 and 16 through 20, for Caco-2 and IEC-6 cells respectively, were used for the experiments. Prior to each experiment, cell viability was checked to exceed 90% by the Trypan Blue dye exclusion test.
For the PsSC binding assay, harvested cells were seeded on 24-well plates (Orange Scientific, Braine-l’Alleud, Belgium) at densities that ensured approximately 80% confluence in controls at the end of a 2-day experiment. Culture medium was replaced daily and, after 48h incubation, cells were washed twice with PBS and incubated with a PsSC as well as with an Alexa488 labeled PsSC preparation in PBS (400 μg/ml) for 1 h at 37°C. Cells were observed in an inverted fluorescence microscope (Olympus IX-71). Negative control wells were incubated with BSA as well as with an Alexa488 labeled BSA in PBS. All protein preparations used in cell culture assays were sterilized by filtration (0.22 μm). Protein labeling was done using Alexa Fluor 488 protein labeling kit (Invitrogen) following manufacturer’s directions.
Cytotoxicity
Cytotoxicity of PsSC on Caco-2 and IEC-6 cells was evaluated using the MTT cell proliferation assay as previously described [32]. Briefly, cells were seeded on 48-well plates at densities that ensured approximately 90% confluency after 24 h. After that, 50 μL/well of a serial dilution of PsSC (3.4 mg/mL) in PBS were added and incubated at 37°C for 24 h. Control wells were prepared with 50 μL/well of PBS. After treatments, culture medium was removed and cells were incubated with fresh medium containing 0.5 g/L of MTT at 37°C for 1 h. Cells were washed three times with PBS and cell monolayers extracted with 200 μL/well of DMSO. Absorbance was recorded at 540 nm in a DTX-880 Multimode Detector (Beckman Coulter) and cell viability expressed as control percentage.
Effect of PsSC-containing diet on rat gut epithelium
The effect of a PsSC containing diet on small intestine epithelium was evaluated using male Wistar rats from the Animal Facility Colony of the School of Medicine, UNLP (strain WKAHlHok, Hokkaido University, Japan). Based on previous results with PcOvo, a PsSC orthologue, on the Wistar rat growth [14] nine young animals (5 to 7 weeks-old) weighing 150 ± 5 g were randomly assigned to control, 48h treated group or 72 h treated group (N = 3 per group) and placed in a conditioned room with a 12:12 l:d cycle at 22 ± 1°C and 45–60% relative humidity. Treated groups were gavaged, using an animal feeding needle (Popper and Sons, Inc), with 1 mL of egg soluble fraction containing 8 mg total protein (~5 mg of PsSC) in 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) on a daily basis for 48 h and 72 h. The control group was administered with the same amount of buffer without the PVF. After treatments, animals were euthanized by CO2 inhalation in a closed chamber. The first segment of the small intestine was cut, rinsed 6 times with PBS to remove food and unbound protein, and fixed in 4% phosphate buffered formalin (pH 7.0) for histological examination.
Histology and morphological measurements
Small intestine samples were embedded in paraffin wax as previously reported [32]. Four tissue sections of each animal were stained with haematoxylin and eosin for examination of general morphology and with periodic acid Schiff (PAS) to highlight carbohydrate distribution on goblet cells.
Mucosal absorptive surface area of fifty random villi and crypts from duodenum from each animal was calculated following the method of Kisielinski [33]. In brief, the mucosa is assumed to be an iteration of a geometric mucosal unit: a cylindrical villous with rounded tip surrounded by cylindrical crypts. Surface area can be calculated with mean values of structures that define this mucosal unit: villous length, villous width, and crypt width. Finally, the mucosal-to-serosal amplification ratio (M) is calculated considering these three variables:
Lectin histochemisty
To reveal changes of the glycosylation pattern, four small intestine sections of each animal were assayed employing a kit of seven biotinylated lectins (Table 1) (Lectin Biotinylated BK 1000 Kit, Vector Laboratories Inc., Carpinteria, CA, USA). Deparaffinized sections were incubated with the biotinylated lectins overnight as described elsewhere [32], incubated with Streptavidin-HRP (Vector Laboratories Inc., USA) and bound lectins visualized by 3, 3’-diaminobenzidine (Dako, Carpinteria, USA). Positively-stained cells were revealed by a dark golden brown coloration. The sections were counterstained with Mayer’s haematoxylin.
Results
PsSC aminoacid sequences
The internal amino acid sequences of purified PsSC determined by mass spectrometry analysis allowed us to obtain 6 full length cDNA sequences of its subunits from the albumen gland transcriptome of P. scalaris (unpublished). The nucleotide sequences were deposited in GenBank database (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/) with accession numbers: MG243358, MG243359, MG243360, MG243361, MG243362 and MG243363. Translated amino acid sequences of the subunits (PsSC-1 to 6) are shown in Fig 1A. They all contain a signal peptide sequence and their theoretical molecular masses are around 21 kDa, except for PsSC-2 (28 kDa), which is in agreement with the MW values reported for the chemically deglycosylated PsSC subunits [1]. N-glycosylation sites (NXS/T) were predicted in the 6 subunits, being PsSC-5 the most N-glycosylated subunit with three putative sites. Regarding the presence of phosphorylation sites, in PsSC-1 subunit three Tyr associated sites were predicted; four Tyr, one Ser and two Thr associated sites were predicted for PsSC-2; one Tyr and three Ser for PsSC-3; one Tyr and one Ser for PsSC-4; one Ser and one Thr for PsSC-5, and one Tyr and three Thr for PsSC-6. Multiple sequence alignment showed a short, conserved sequence, G/N-G-P_G/K, at the C-terminal region of the 6 subunits.
A, Deduced amino acid sequences of PsSC subunits. The putative signal sequences are in italics. Potential phosphorylation sites are underlined in bold green (Tyr), bold red (Ser) and bold blue (Thr). Potential N-glycosylation sites (NXS/T) are underlined and in bold. Conserved sequence in bold red. AA: number of residues, MW: molecular weight and pI: isoelectric point of the subunit mature forms. B, Phylogenetic analysis of the major perivitelins of P. scalaris, P. canaliculata and P. maculata. Tree was constructed by the Maximum Likelihood method and drawn to scale, with branch lengths measured in the number of substitutions per site. All positions containing gaps and missing data were eliminated. There were a total of 165 positions in the final dataset.
Phylogenetic analysis
The translated amino acid sequences obtained for the six PsSC subunits showed high similarity with their PcOvo orthologous subunits (40.56 to 68.78%) and with PmPV1 orthologous subunits (42.78 to 70.86%). Interestingly, sequence similarity among the 6 PsSC subunits was moderate (16.96 to 41.67%), as was previously observed in PcOvo [35] and PmPV1 [17].
Sequence alignment of PsSC subunits and their homologs showed a few conserved sites for all 18 sequences, particularly, the GGPG site previously reported on the C-terminal region of PcOvo and PmPV1 subunits.
Phylogenetic analysis of PcOvo, PmPV1 and PsSC sequences defined six different clades (Fig 1B). Notably, no sequence similarity to any known lectin could be found in any of the PsSC subunits.
Glycan array
The assay was performed using three different protein concentrations (2, 20 and 200μg/mL) which gave similar results. Table 2 shows the 10 best ranked oligosaccharide structures recognized by PsSC. Among these, two major non-related oligosaccharide groups can be recognized: glycosphingolipids and ABO group antigens. Ganglioside-related structures showed the highest scores (GD1b>GT1b>GD1a) while the highest scores for ABO group antigens were for types 2B and 2A. The full list of oligosaccharide structures recognized by PsSC is shown in S1 Table.
Antimicrobial activity
The antimicrobial activity of PsSC was explored on Gram negative (E. coli) and Gram positive (S. pseudointermedius) bacteria. Results showed no antibacterial activity of the protein in liquid and solid media, at least under the experimental conditions employed. Nevertheless, PsSC showed agglutinating activity against E. coli in a dose-dependent manner up to 0.14 g/L of protein (Fig 2A). Lectin activity was inhibited by the presence of the monosaccharides already reported as targets of PsSC, GlcNH2 and GalNAc (Fig 2B).
A) Rounded well plate containing aliquots of E. coli culture incubated with different PsSC concentrations. B) Inhibitory effect of GalNAc and GlcNH2 on PsSC microbe agglutinating activity.
Cell surface interaction and cytotoxicity of PsSC
Protein localization studies employing Alexa488-labeled PsSC showed weak but measurable fluorescence signal on Caco-2 cells plasma membrane (Fig 3A and 3B). To rule out the possibility of nonspecific protein-cell interactions, Caco-2 cells were incubated with Alexa488-labeled BSA (Fig 3C and 3D), which showed negligible binding. Assuming that BSA binding represents the maximum nonspecific interaction between Caco-2 and proteins [36], this assay indicates specific binding of PsSC to Caco-2 cell surfaces. The experiments were also performed using the IEC-6 cell line but no interaction was detected (Fig 3E and 3F). Although protein localization experiments indicate a specific interaction of PsSC with Caco-2 cell surfaces, no cytotoxic effect could be detected either on Caco-2 or IEC-6 cells (not shown).
Caco-2 cell culture incubated for 1 h with Alexa-488 labeled PsSC observed by phase contrast (A) and fluorescence microscopy (B), bars: 50 μm. C and D same as A and B employing Alexa-488 labeled BSA, bars: 100 μm. E and F same as A and B employing IEC-6 cell line, bars: 100 μm.
Effect of PsSC-containing diet on digestive epithelium
Small intestine of the 48 h-treated animals showed higher, narrower, more tortuous and sinuous villi with respect to the controls, with some proliferation and the appearance of immature enterocytes in the crypts. The 72 h-treated animals showed normal crypt dimensions and general morphology of intestine (Fig 4A, 4B and 4C). PAS staining on the glycocalyx of villi and crypts in 48 h-treated animals was stronger than the controls, being less strong to moderate in 72 h-treated animals. The mucin of goblet cells showed a strong PAS stain in all groups, although treated animals showed an increased number of these cells (Fig 4D, 4E and 4F). Among the seven lectins assayed, DBA and SBA produced the most remarkable differences (Fig 4G–4L). DBA was strongly positive on the supranuclear region of enterocytes and some corion cells of control animals, while in 48 h-treated animals no binding was observed in those regions. In 72 h-treated animals the pattern was similar to control though with less intensity of staining (Fig 4G, 4H and 4I arrows). The binding of SBA lectin to enterocytes in control animals was moderate to strong on the supranuclear region and moderate at the glycocalyx (Fig 4J), while in the 48 h-treated animals stronger lectin binding was limited to the glycocalyx (Fig 4K, arrow); the 72 h-treated animals displayed a less marked lectin staining pattern. These results indicate that both DBA and SBA-binding glycans were differentially expressed on enterocytes exposed to a PsSC-containing diet for 48 h.
Rats were fed with a diet without (control) or supplemented with PVF containing 8 mg protein (~ 5 mg PsSC). The duodenal portion of the small intestine was sampled after 48 and 72 h. A,D,G,J, Control; B,E,H,K 48 h treatment; C,F,I,L 72 h treatment. A,B,C: HE stain. Most villi for 48 h-treated animals were higher, narrower, more tortuous and sinuous, with some proliferation in the basal zone of the epithelia. D,E,F: PAS stain highlighting the glycocalix (arrow) and goblet cells (arrowheads) which increased after 48 h treatment. G,H,I: DBA lectin histochemistry. Arrows: supranuclear zone of the enterocyte, arrowhead corion cells of the villi. J,K,L: SBA lectin histochemistry. Arrows indicate supranuclear zone and arrowheads glycocalyx. A,B,C,J,K,L, Bar: 50 μm; D,E,F Bar: 100 μm; G,H,I: Bar: 10 μm.
Finally, a significant increase in the absorptive surface of the small intestine was observed in the 48 h treated animals as compared to the control ones, while in the 72 h group, the absorptive surface reverted to normal (Table 3).
Discussion
The presence of multifunctional, highly stable and colored carotenoproteins as the major egg proteins emerges as a general characteristic in Pomacea species. In this work we determined the primary structure of PsSC subunits, the most abundant soluble protein (64% total protein) in P. scalaris eggs [11]. As in PcOvo and PmPV1 oligomeric carotenoproteins [12,37], we show that PsSC oligomer is also composed of six polypeptides, with moderate sequence similarity among them, reinforcing the hypothesis that gene duplication took place early in the history of the Pomacea genus [35]. Interestingly, phylogenetic analysis clustered PcOvo, PmPV1 and PsSC subunit sequences in six different clades, each composed of only one subunit of each carotenoprotein. The low divergence between orthologous sequences could indicate either that after the duplication event each paralogue acquired a specific function that prevented additional variations, or that there was a benefit in having multiple copies of the same gene such that carotenoprotein synthesis can be enhanced [38]. In the case of Pomacea perivitellins the second scenario seems more plausible, as carotenoproteins are highly expressed during egg production [39]. The phylogenetic clustering of each one of PsSC subunit sequences with their PcOvo and PmPV1 orthologues agrees with the current species grouping, since P. scalaris was recovered as an independent (although sister) clade–the bridgesii clade–from that of P. canaliculata and P. maculata -the so-called canaliculata clade in recent phylogenetic studies [2].
Although the biological function of a protein may be predicted based on its primary structure, in the case of PsSC the six deduced amino acid sequence subunits showed no similarity with any known lectin motif. This may be due not only to the poor representation of invertebrate lectins in databases, but also to the high number and diversity of invertebrate species that comprise over 90% of all animal species. This lack of sequence identity with known lectins has also been observed for other mollusk lectins, such as the agglutinin from Octopus maya hemolymph [40]. Moreover, more recently, Chickalovets et al. [41] described a Gal/GalNAc-specific lectin from the mussel Mytilus trossulus with no sequence similarity with any known lectin, except two proteins with agglutinating activity MytiLec [42] and CGL [43] allowing the authors to describe a new lectin family.
In this work we further characterized the lectin activity of PsSC. It is noteworthy that the five oligosaccharide structures with the highest affinity contain Galβ1-3GalNAc which are present in the major core structures of vertebrate glycosphingolipids (subfamilies Lacto, Ganglio and Globo). The lectin recognized two non-related oligosaccharide structures, ABO human blood group antigens and gangliosides. This rather broad specificity suggests the presence of more than one high affinity recognition site in PsSC. This oligosaccharide recognition specificity was validated in vitro by PsSC binding to Caco-2 cell surfaces, since such sugar structures are well represented in this cell line [44]. Although Caco-2 viability was not affected by PsSC, oral administration of a PsSC containing diet to rats alters the gut epithelium, reversibly affecting enterocyte morphology and inducing glycocalix remodeling. The PsSC-containing diet markedly influenced enterocyte turnover inducing the appearance of immature enterocytes in the crypts of treated animals, this proliferation indicates an increase of intestine length explaining the increase in absorptive surface. This is a common mechanism to revert the loss of absorptive surface, as increasing length increases the transit time and allows digestion of food [32]. Associated with proliferation changes where also observed in the glycosylation pattern with a differential binding of DBA and SBA plant lectins. These lectins, as PsSC, have also specificity for GalNAc-containing oligosaccharides. Interestingly, these remarkable morphological and glycosylation changes tend to return to normal after 72 h treatment together with the absorptive surface, indicating an adaptation of rats overcoming the adverse effect of PsSC. Similar adaptive responses to overcome a lectin-mediated brush border disruption were also reported for plant lectins [45], suggesting that both plant and snail defensive lectins induce large but reversible changes in intestinal morphology, at least in rats. Though PmPV1, an orthologous protein of PsSC, was able to resist the mice gastrointestinal tract without structural perturbations [17], the effect of different potential egg predator microbiotas could play an important role in the anti-nutritive effects of PsSC.
It is well established that mollusk lectins are part of the innate immune system recognizing microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMP) [46]. Moreover, mollusk lectins, such as the sea mussel Crenomytilus grayanus lectin (CGL), are involved not only in the recognition, but also in the clearance of the invading microbes [43,47]. Although the physiological implications of the presence of a lectin inside an egg may have different interpretations, the ability of PsSC to agglutinate microorganisms without antimicrobial activity as well as the specific interaction with Caco-2 cell surfaces, suggests molecular recognition as the primary role of this protein, targeting the invading agents and foreign substances as part of the immune response. Given the morphophysiological alterations observed in the small gut epithelium of rats fed with a PsSC-containing diet, we propose PsSC as an egg defense against predation through an anti-nutritive effect: the consumption of eggs would alter digestive mechanisms thus deterring predators. Similar effects were described in P. canaliculata eggs, which have a toxin in addition to lectins; in this species the eggs are brightly colored which would also act as a warning (aposematic) defense. In P. scalaris coloration is less bright, but, as both species overlap in geographical distribution, mimetic defense, through Müllerian mimicry, cannot be ruled out. The antinutritive mechanism present in the eggs of these snails seems a convergent evolution between plants and animals, as it is similar to the effects previously described for plant seed lectins [21,48,49].
Conclusions
We provide evidence of a potentially new embryo defense mechanism in the genus Pomacea involving the lectin activity of the most abundant egg protein of P. scalaris, the carotenoprotein PsSC. Noteworthy, the primary structure of PsSC does not allow its inclusion to any known lectin family. The presence of a novel biological activity in PsSC amongst a group of carotenoproteins with conserved structure-function relationships expands our knowledge regarding the reproductive biology of these freshwater snails opening new avenues of research. For instance, it is not clear whether aposematism and/or mimicry are important defense mechanisms. More work is needed to shed light on the structure-function relationship of this snail lectin as well as on the role microbiota of a final egg predator could play on its anti-nutritive effect.
Supporting information
S1 Table. Full list of oligosaccharide structures recognized by PsSC.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198361.s001
(XLS)
Acknowledgments
MSD is member of Carrera del Investigador CICBA, Argentina. HH, and SI are members of Carrera del Investigador CONICET, Argentina. TRB is a scholarship holder of CONICET, Argentina. We thank Germán Vigo (LADIB, FCV, UNLP) for kindly providing the S. pseudintermedius culture and thank Jack Ip and Xu Ting for help on bioinformatics tools. We wish to acknowledge the participation of the Protein-glycan Interaction Resource of Core H of the Consortium for Functional Glycomics (CFG).
References
- 1. Przeslawski R. A review of the effects of environmental stress on embryonic development within intertidal gastropod egg masses. MollRes. 2004;24: 43–63.
- 2. Hayes KA, Burks RL, Castro-Vazquez A, Darby PC, Heras H, Martín PR, et al. Insights from an integrated view of the biology of apple snails (caenogastropoda: Ampullariidae). Malacologia. 2015.
- 3. Martin Pablo R. and Estebenet A. Interpopulation variation in life history of Pomacea canaliculata (gastropoda: Ampullariidae) in southwestern Buenos Aires Province. Argentina. 2002;4: 153–163.
- 4. Hayes KA, Cowie RH, Thiengo SC, Strong EE. Comparing apples with apples: Clarifying the identities of two highly invasive Neotropical Ampullariidae (Caenogastropoda). Zool J Linn Soc. 2012;166: 723–753. Available: http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84870175922&partnerID=40&md5=ca6310ad8b48f26dce7633073930885e
- 5.
Lowe S, Browne M, Boudjelas S, De Poorter M. 100 of the World’s Worst Invasive Alien Species A selection from the Global Invasive Species Database. Auckland, New Zeland: World Conservation Union (IUCN); 2000.
- 6. Hayes KA, Joshi RC, Thiengo SC, Cowie RH. Out of South America: Multiple origins of non-native apple snails in Asia. Divers Distrib. 2008;14: 701–712.
- 7. Lv S, Zhang Y, Chen SR, Wang LB, Fang W, Chen F, et al. Human angiostrongyliasis outbreak in dali, china. PLoSNeglTropDis. 2009;3: e520. pmid:19771154
- 8.
Raven CP. Chemical embriology of Mollusca. In: Florkin M, Scheer BT, editors. Chemical Zoology. Academic P. New York: Academic Press; 1972. pp. 155–185.
- 9. Heras H, Garin CF, Pollero RJ. Biochemical composition and energy sources during embryo development and in early juveniles of the snail Pomacea canaliculata (Mollusca: Gastropoda). J Exp Zool. 1998;280: 375–383.
- 10. Dreon MS, Schinella G, Heras H, Pollero RJ. Antioxidant defense system in the apple snail eggs, the role of ovorubin. Arch Biochem Biophys. 2004;422.
- 11. Ituarte S, Dreon MS, Pollero RJ, Heras H. Isolation and partial characterization of a new lipo-glyco-carotenoprotein from Pomacea scalaris (Gastropoda: Ampullariidae). MolReprodDev. 2008;75: 1441–1448. Available: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18213678
- 12. Pasquevich MY, Dreon MS, Heras H. The major egg reserve protein from the invasive apple snail Pomacea maculata is a complex carotenoprotein related to those of Pomacea canaliculata and Pomacea scalaris. Comp Biochem Physiol—B Biochem Mol Biol. 2014;169. pmid:24291422
- 13. Heras H, Frassa MV, Fernández PE, Galosi CM, Gimeno EJ, Dreon MS. First egg protein with a neurotoxic effect on mice. Toxicon. 2008;52. pmid:18640143
- 14. Dreon MS, Ituarte S, Heras H. The role of the proteinase inhibitor ovorubin in apple snail eggs resembles plant embryo defense against predation. PLoS One. 2010;5. pmid:21151935
- 15. Dreon MS, Frassa MV, Ceolín M, Ituarte S, Qiu J-W, Sun J, et al. Novel Animal Defenses against Predation: A Snail Egg Neurotoxin Combining Lectin and Pore-Forming Chains That Resembles Plant Defense and Bacteria Attack Toxins. PLoS One. 2013;8. pmid:23737950
- 16. Giglio ML, Ituarte S, Pasquevich MY, Heras H. The eggs of the apple snail Pomacea maculata are defended by indigestible polysaccharides and toxic proteins. 2016;785: 777–785.
- 17. Pasquevich MY, Dreon MS, Qiu J-W, Mu H, Heras H. Convergent evolution of plant and animal embryo defences by hyperstable non-digestible storage proteins. Sci Rep. 2017;7. pmid:29158565
- 18. Ituarte S, Dreon MS, Pasquevich MY, Fernández PE, Heras H. Carbohydrates and glycoforms of the major egg perivitellins from Pomacea apple snails (Architaenioglossa: Ampullariidae). Comp Biochem Physiol—B Biochem Mol Biol. 2010;157. pmid:20471490
- 19. Ituarte S, Dreon MS, Ceolin M, Heras H. Agglutinating Activity and Structural Characterization of Scalarin, the Major Egg Protein of the Snail Pomacea scalaris (d’Orbigny, 1832). PLoS One. 2012;7. pmid:23185551
- 20. Vasta GR, Ahmed H, Tasumi S, Odom EW, Saito K. Biological roles of lectins in innate immunity: molecular and structural basis for diversity in self/non-self recognition. AdvExp Med Biol. 2007;598: 389–406. pmid:17892226
- 21. Peumans WJ, Van Damme EJ. Lectins as plant defense proteins. Plant Physiol. 1995;109: 347–352. pmid:7480335
- 22.
Guide for the care and use of laboratory animals. Eighth Edi. Washington, D.C.: The National Academy Press; 1996.
- 23. Bradford MM. A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. AnalBiochem. 1976;72: 248–274.
- 24. Ip JC, Mu H, Chen Q, Sun J, Heras H, Ituarte S, et al. AmpuBase: A transcriptomic database of eight species of apple snails (Gastropoda: Ampullariidae). Gigascience. 2017; submitted.
- 25. Petersen TN, Brunak S, von Heijne G, Nielsen H. SignalP 4.0: discriminating signal peptides from transmembrane regions. Nat Methods. 2011;8: 785–786. pmid:21959131
- 26.
Gasteiger E, Hoogland C, Gattiker A, Duvaud S, Wilkins MR, Appel RD, et al. Protein Identification and Analysis Tools on the ExPASy Server. In: Walker JM, editor. The Proteomics Protocols Handbook. Humana Press; 2005. pp. 571–607.
- 27. Diella F, Cameron S, Gemund C, Linding R, Via A, Kuster B, et al. Phospho.ELM: a database of experimentally verified phosphorylation sites in eukaryotic proteins. BMC Bioinformatics. 2004;5: 79. pmid:15212693
- 28. Iakoucheva LM, Radivojac P, Brown CJ, O’Connor TR, Sikes JG, Obradovic Z, et al. The importance of intrinsic disorder for protein phosphorylation. Nucleic Acids Res. 2004;32: 1037–1049. pmid:14960716
- 29. Katoh K, Standley DM. MAFFT multiple sequence alignment software version 7: Improvements in performance and usability. Mol Biol Evol. 2013;30: 772–780. pmid:23329690
- 30. Tamura K, Stecher G, Peterson D, Filipski A, Kumar S. MEGA6: Molecular evolutionary genetics analysis version 6.0. Mol Biol Evol. 2013;30: 2725–2729. pmid:24132122
- 31. Smith DF, Song X, Cummings RD. Use of glycan microarrays to explore specificity of glycan-binding proteins [Internet]. Methods in Enzymology. 2010. pp. 417–444. pmid:20816220
- 32. Dreon MS, Fernández PE, Gimeno EJ, Heras H. Insights into Embryo Defenses of the Invasive Apple Snail Pomacea canaliculata: Egg Mass Ingestion Affects Rat Intestine Morphology and Growth. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2014;8. pmid:24945629
- 33. Kisielinski K, Willis S, Prescher A, Klosterhalfen B, Schumpelick V. A simple new method to calculate small intestine absorptive surface in the rat. ClinExpMed. 2002;2: 131–135. pmid:12447610
- 34. Goldstein I, Hayes C. The lectins: Carbohydrate binding proteins of plants and animals. Adv Carbohydr Chem Biochem. 1978;35: 127–340. pmid:356549
- 35. Sun J, Zhang H, Wang H, Heras H, Dreon MS, Ituarte S, et al. First proteome of the egg perivitelline fluid of a freshwater gastropod with aerial oviposition. J Proteome Res. 2012;11: 4240–4248. pmid:22738194
- 36. Gabor F, Stangl M, Wirth M. Lectin-mediated bioadhesion: binding characteristics of plant lectins on the enterocyte-like cell lines Caco-2, HT-29 and HCT-8. J Control Release. 1998;55: 131–142. Available: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9795030 pmid:9795030
- 37. Garin CF, Heras H, Pollero RJ. Lipoproteines of the egg perivitelline fluid of Pomacea canaliculata snails (mollusca: gastropoda). J Exp Zool. 1996;276: 307–314. Available: http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-0030444237&partnerID=40&md5=dd9bfaf37263a6dbed1e5d2cab6f8401 pmid:8972583
- 38. Zhang J. Evolution by gene duplication: An update. Trends Ecol Evol. 2003;18: 292–298.
- 39. Cadierno MP, Dreon MS, Heras H. Validation by qPCR of reference genes for reproductive studies in the invasive apple snail Pomacea canaliculata. Malacologia. 2017; in press.
- 40. Alpuche J, Pereyra A, Mendoza-Hernandez G, Agundis C, Rosas C, Zenteno E. Purification and partial characterization of an agglutinin from Octopus maya serum. Comp Biochem B Biochem. 2010;156: 1–5. doi:S1096-4959(10)00018-7 [pii]; pmid:20105460
- 41. Chikalovets I V, Kovalchuk SN, Litovchenko AP, Molchanova VI, Pivkin M V, Chernikov O V. A new Gal/GalNAc-specific lectin from the mussel Mytilus trossulus: Structure, tissue specificity, antimicrobial and antifungal activity. Fish Shellfish Immunol. 2016;50: 27–33. pmid:26802895
- 42. Fujii Y, Dohmae N, Takio K, Kawsar SMA, Matsumoto R, Hasan I, et al. A Lectin from the Mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis Has a Highly Novel Primary Structure and Induces Glycan-mediated Cytotoxicity of Globotriaosylceramide-expressing LymphomaCells. J Biol Chem. 44783rd ed. 2012;287.
- 43. Kovalchuk SN, Chikalovets I V, Chernikov O V, Molchanova VI, Li W, Rasskazov VA, et al. cDNA cloning and structural characterization of a lectin from the mussel Crenomytilus grayanus with a unique amino acid sequence and antibacterial activity. Fish Shellfish Immunol. 2013;35: 1320–1324. pmid:23886951
- 44. Arndt NX, Tiralongo J, Madge PD, von IM, Day CJ. Differential carbohydrate binding and cell surface glycosylation of human cancer cell lines. J Cell Biochem. 2011;112: 2230–2240. pmid:21480363
- 45. Bardocz S, Grant G, Ewen SW, Duguid TJ, Brown DS, Englyst K, et al. Reversible effect of phytohaemagglutinin on the growth and metabolism of rat gastrointestinal tract. Gut. 1995;37: 353–360. pmid:7590430
- 46. Malham SK, Lacoste A, Gelebart F, Cueff A, Poulet SA. A first insight intocstress-induced neuroendocrine and immune changes in the octopus Eledone cirrhosa. Aquat Living Resour. 2002;15: 187–192.
- 47. Belogortseva NI Molchanova V, Kurika A, Skobun A, Glazkova V. Isolation and characterization of new GalNAc/Gal-specific lectin from the sea mussel Crenomytilus grayanus. Comp Biochem Physiol C Pharmacol Toxicol Endocrinol. 1998;119: 45–50. pmid:9568372
- 48. Oliveira JT, Rios FJ, Vasconcelos IM, Ferreira F V, Nojosa GB, Medeiros DA. Cratylia argentea seed lectin, a possible defensive protein against plant-eating organisms: effects on rat metabolism and gut histology. Food Chem Toxicol. 2004;42: 1737–1747. pmid:15350671
- 49. Ripoll C, Favery B, Lecomte P, Van Damme E, Peumans W, Abad P, et al. Evaluation of the ability of lectin from snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis) to protect plants against root-knot nematodes. Plant Sci. 2003;164: 517–523.