Infections of branchial epithelium by intracellular gram-negative bacteria, termed epitheliocystis, have limited culture of Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus. To characterize a bacterium associated with epitheliocystis in cultured charr, gills were sampled for histopathologic examination, conventional and immunoelectron microscopy, in situ hybridization, 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) amplification, sequence analysis and phylogenetic inference. Sampling was conducted at the Freshwater Institute (Shepherdstown, West Virginia, USA) during outbreaks of epitheliocystis in April and May 2002. Granular, basophilic, cytoplasmic inclusions in charr gill were shown to stain with Macchiavello, Lendrum's phloxine-tartrazine and Gimenez histochemical techniques. Ultrastructurally, inclusions were membrane-bound and contained round to elongate reticulate bodies that were immunoreactive to an antibody against chlamydial lipopolysaccharide, suggesting the presence of similar epitopes. DNA extracted from gills supported amplification of the most polymorphic and phylogenetically relevant region of the 16S rRNA gene, which had 97 to 100% identity with several uncultured clinical Neochlamydia spp. (order Chlamydiales) Clones WB13 (AY225593.1) and WB258 (AY225594.1). Sequence-specific riboprobes localized to inclusions during in situ hybridization experiments. Taxonomic affiliation was inferred by distance-and parsimony-based phylogenetic analyses of the 16S sequence, which branched with Neochlamydia hartmannellae in the order Chlamydiales with high confidence. This is the first molecular characterization of a chlamydia associated with epitheliocystis in Arctic charr and the fourth Neochlamydia spp. sequence to be associated with epitheliocystis. Presence of a clinical neochlamydial sequence, first identified from a cat, in Arctic charr suggests a possible mammalian and piscine host range for some environmental chlamydiae.KEY WORDS: Arctic charr · Environmental chlamydiae · Epitheliocystis · In situ hybridization · Neochlamydia · Salvelinus · Ultrastructure · 16S ribosomal RNA gene
Resale or republication not permitted without written consent of the publisherDis Aquat Org 76: [27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38] 2007 ized ultrastructurally (Hoffman et al. 1969, Wolke et al. 1970, Nylund et al. 1998), antigenically (Groff et al. 1996 or, most recently, molecularly (Draghi et al. 2004, Meijer et al. 2006 as chlamydia or chlamydia-like bacteria. Horn & Wagner (2001) have proposed the term 'environmental chlamydia' to encompass these diverse, and sometimes medically relevant, chlamydiae isolated from environmental sources, while others suggest a more general term, 'novel chlamydia', to include those chlamydiae not members of the Chlamydiaceae (Corsaro & Greub 2006). In epitheliocystis, infection of branchial epithelium results in formation of intracytoplasmic basophilic granular inclusions that distend the cytoplasm of individual epithelial cells. Host responses to infection vary from non-proliferative, i.e. with litt...