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Demonstration of substances of innate immunity in the integument of the Malayan pangolin (Manis javanica)
Author(s) -
Wilfried Meyer,
Maleewan Liumsiricharoen,
Isabelle Nina Hornickel,
Apinun Suprasert,
Anke Schnapper,
L.G. Fleischer
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
european journal of wildlife research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.637
H-Index - 46
eISSN - 1612-4642
pISSN - 1439-0574
DOI - 10.1007/s10344-009-0318-8
Subject(s) - dermis , stratum corneum , biology , staining , epidermis (zoology) , stratum spinosum , innate immune system , anatomy , receptor , biochemistry , genetics
International audienceUsing immunohistochemistry, the study demonstrates substances of the innate immunity in the skin of the Malayan pangolin (), referring mainly to the epidermis. The results obtained showed clear reaction differences between the dorsolateral body region with its strong cover of hard horny scales and the abdominal body part with a thick soft stratum corneum and a dense cover of fine hairs. Regarding pathogen recognition receptors, positive reactions for Toll-like receptors were generally weak for TLR2, in contrast to TLR4, that exhibited strong reactions in the epidermis of both body regions, with increasing staining intensities towards the stratum corneum; ß-glucan receptors showed positive reactions only for -ficolin and mannose-binding lectin, but not for dectin-1, and only at the abdomen. A generally positive staining for both body regions was obtained for all cationic antimicrobial peptides tested, whereby cathelicidin exhibited strong reaction intensities in all epidermal layers, ß-defensin 2 staining was often limited to the stratum basale and the stratum spinosum, and positive reactions for ß-defensin 3 appeared distinctly only in the epidermis of the abdomen; for these peptides, positive reaction staining could also be found in the outer epithelial root sheath of hair follicles, their glandular annexes, and free cells of the dermis. Lysozyme was found in the vital epidermis of both body regions studied, with strong staining limited to the dorsum; strong reactions were also visible in the hair follicles

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