4.6 Article

Dscam in immunity: A question of diversity in insects and crustaceans

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL AND COMPARATIVE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 105, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dci.2019.103539

Keywords

Dscam; Innate immune memory; Immune priming; Invertebrate immunity; Insects; Crustaceans

Funding

  1. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Germany [3.5-TWN-1203994-HFST-P]

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In insects and crustaceans, thousands of Down syndrome cell adhesion molecules (Dscam) can be generated by alternative splicing of variable exons from a single-locus gene, Dscam-hv. This extraordinarily versatile gene (38,016 protein isoforms produced in Drosophila) was first proposed to be involved in exon guidance and subsequently implicated in immunity as a hypervariable immune molecule. Almost 20 y after discovery of Dscam-hv, there have been many studies in insects and crustaceans regarding roles of Dscam in immunity, with many similarities and concurrently, many differences. Here, we review the current status of Dscam-hv, presented as a comparison of similarities and differences in insects and crustaceans and discuss hypotheses of Dscam functions in immunity.

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