“…Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part B 180 (2015) [68][69][70][71][72][73][74][75][76][77][78] A common profile in most of these species-specific studies indicated the c-type is the basal house-keeping lysozyme, while the g-type lysozyme has a more acute role and is thus inducible in the defense against bacterial infections. But, the c-type lysozyme gene is also found expressed in multiple tissues of species and its gene expression can be induced in many cases, but at a much lower level or in other tissues than the g-types, such as in Japanese flounder (Hikima et al, 1997), brill (Jimenez-Cantizano et al, 2008), Senegalese sole (Fernández-Trujilloa et al, 2008), turbot (Zhao et al, 2011), penaeid shrimp (Kaizu et al, 2011), kelp grouper (Harikrishnan et al, 2011), channel catfish (Bilodeau et al, 2006), Atlantic salmon (Myrnes et al, 2013), turbot (Yu et al, 2013), disk abalone (Bathige et al, 2013) and red-spotted grouper (Mai et al, 2014). C-type, g-type and i-type lysozymes are similar in three-dimensional structures but share little homology at primary structure and differ in catalytic mechanism, enzymatic property, and genetic organization (Irwin and Gong, 2003;Callewaert and Michiels, 2010).…”