# A Novel Cystatin Gene from Sea Cucumber (Apostichopus japonicus): Characterization and Comparative Expression with Cathepsin L During Early Stage of Hypoxic Exposure-Induced Autolysis

**Authors:** Siyu Yao, Rui Zhang, Siyuan Ma, Ting Zhao, Qinhao Liu, Lin Zhu, Chang Liu, Liming Sun, Ming Du

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/foods14081404 · 2025-04-18

## TL;DR

This study identifies a new cystatin gene in sea cucumbers and shows it helps prevent autolysis during early hypoxia by inhibiting a protease.

## Contribution

A novel cystatin gene (SjCyt) is characterized and shown to inhibit cathepsin L during early hypoxic autolysis in sea cucumbers.

## Key findings

- SjCyt interacts more strongly with cathepsin L than with cathepsin B, as shown by molecular dynamics simulations.
- SjCyt and SjCL are co-expressed in tissues like the dorsal epidermis and tube feet during early hypoxia.
- Recombinant SjCyt inhibits autolysis, suggesting a regulatory role at both transcriptional and translational levels.

## Abstract

Autolysis in sea cucumber has long been a threat to raw material storage and product processing. The involvement of endogenous cysteine protease in sea cucumber autolysis has been proved extendedly. However, as an essential part of the mechanism of autolysis, the role of its endogenous inhibitor has seldom been reported. To investigate the role of cysteine protease inhibitors in the early stage of hypoxic exposure-induced autolysis, a novel cystatin gene (SjCyt) belonging to the subfamily of cystatin C was cloned from Apostichopus japonicus by homology cloning and rapid amplification of cDNA ends. The affinity of SjCyt to cysteine protease (cathepsin L and cathepsin B) was investigated by molecular dynamics simulations. Pertinent metrics, including the root mean square deviation, radius of gyration, Gibbs free energy, binding free energy, and bond-forming frequency, showed that the conformation of SjCyt–SjCL was more stable and confirmed a stronger interaction of SjCyt with cathepsin L than with cathepsin B. Thus, cathepsin L (SjCL) was selected to further study its co-expression with SjCyt over a period of 9 h at an early stage of hypoxic exposure. Quantitative RT-qPCR revealed a ubiquitous transcriptional profile of SjCyt and SjCL in all the tested tissues, with the highest abundance in the dorsal epidermis, tube feet, and coelomocytes. Temporal transcription of them showed an overall up-regulated co-expression in the dorsal epidermis and tube feet. However, up-regulated SjCyt and down-regulated SjCL were observed at the protein level. Further immunofluorescence double labeling also found increased staining of SjCyt and SjCyt–SjCL complexes and decreased SjCL. Additionally, recombinant SjCyt was prepared and demonstrated an evident autolysis-inhibiting effect. The results of this study indicated that the anti-autolytic regulation of SjCyt functions at the very early stage of hypoxic exposure, exerting effects at both the transcriptional and translational levels. The above finding offers new insights into the mechanisms of sea cucumber autolysis.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Apostichopus japonicus (taxon 307972)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** Cystatin [NCBI Gene 101210092], cysteine protease [NCBI Gene 101204401]
- **Diseases:** Hypoxic (MESH:D002534)
- **Species:** Apostichopus japonicus (Japanese sea cucumber, species) [taxon 307972]

## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12027202/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12027202