The diseased cage‐cultured cobia (Rachycentron canadum) displayed clinical signs, haemorrhagic eyes, dorsal darkness and gross pathological lesions, enlargement of spleen and liver. Haemorrhages were found in brain, heart and liver with cumulative mortality rates ranging from 20% to 50%. Extensive congestion in the heart, liver, spleen, kidney and brain was observed histopathologically. Epicarditis and meningitis were also revealed in diseased cobia. All isolates recovered from the organs (liver, spleen, head kidney, posterior kidney, brain and muscle) of cobia were found to be gram‐positive, non‐motile, ovoid cocci, short‐chain–forming (diplococci) and α‐haemolytic. The API 32 strep system together with the polymerase chain reaction assay for species‐specific primers (pLG1 and pLG2) and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region (G1 and L1 primers) confirmed all four selected isolates as Lactococcus garvieae. Partial 16S rDNA nucleotide sequence (~1,100 bp) of one representative L. garvieae isolate AOD109191 (GenBank accession number, MW328528.1) shared 99.9% identities with the 16S rDNA nucleotide sequence of L. garvieae (GenBank accession numbers: MT604790.1). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) evaluation of one representative L. garvieae isolate (AOD109191) and the results of multiplex PCR did not reveal the presence of the capsular gene cluster (CGC), thus categorizing the isolate as the KG+ phenotype. Capsule staining and TEM observations confirmed the presence of a hyaluronic acid‐like capsule, a possible virulence factor in KG+ phenotype L. garvieae isolates. The pathogenic potential of the representative isolate (AOD109191) was assessed through intraperitoneal injection challenges in cobia. The gross lesions and histopathological changes found in experimentally infected cobia were similar to those seen in naturally infected fish. This is the first report that confirms L. garvieae‐induced ‘warm water lactococcsis’ can cause outbreaks of diseases in cage‐cultured cobia.
Chinese softshell turtles (Pelodiscus sinensis) (CST) are susceptible to infections by bacteria belonging to the Bacillus cereus group (Bcg). Bcg includes several closely related species, two of which, B. cereus and B. thuringiensis, are pathogens of aquatic animals or insects. In the present study, we collected 57 Bcg isolates obtained from diseased CST from 2016 to 2019 in Kaohsiung and Pingtung, the areas with the most CST farms in Taiwan. All isolates were divided into four genotypes with two restriction enzymes, SmaI and NotI, by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus-polymerase chain reaction (ERIC-PCR).Representative isolates from each genotype were subjected to phylogenetic tree analysis using 16S rDNA and pyruvate carboxylase genes as phylogenetic markers, and these CST isolates appeared in different clades. PCR was performed targeting six selected virulence genes, four of which were detected in CST isolates, including cytotoxin K (1/57), hblC of the haemolysin BL complex (46/57), nheA of the nonhaemolytic enterotoxin complex (52/57) and enterotoxin FM (57/57), whereas cereulide synthetase and cereulide peptide synthase-like genes were not detected in any isolates.
Lactococcus garvieae is the etiological agent of Lactococcosis, an evolving disease affecting many fish species and causing significant economic losses worldwide.Assessing pathogen relatedness and bacterial population structure is critical for determining the epidemiology of L. garvieae infections and in establishing effective
Nocardiosis is a granulomatic disease that is observed across various mammalian and fish species, which is caused by members of the genus Nocardia belonging to the class Actinobacteria, suborder Corynebacteriaceae (Fatahi-Bafghi, 2018). This group of microbes are aerobic, acid-fast, Gram-positive, catalase positive, pleomorphic, branching filamentous bacteria that are resistant to lysozyme (Beaman & Beaman, 1994). Nocardiosis caused by Nocardia seriolae (formerly N. kampachi) was first reported in cultured Japanese Yellowtail in 1968(Kusuda & Nakagawa, 1978, and in the past two decades, infections of N. seriolae have spread to Taiwan, Korea,
For the first time, Longicollum pagrosomi Yamaguti, 1935, an acanthocephalan parasite, has been characterized with morphological, histopathological and molecular detail in farmed red snapper (Lutjanus erythropterus) in Taiwan. The diseased fish showed clinical signs of anorexia, emaciation and were gasping for air at the water's surface. Gross examination revealed extensive necrosis in the intestine and even penetration at the site of parasitic attachment, resulting in a large number of parasites being lodged in the peritoneal cavity, surrounded by black hyperplastic connective tissue. The parasites collected from the intestine were studied using optical microscopy, histopathology, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and molecular phylogenetic analysis. They were creamy white in colour, and were separated into their proboscis, neck and metasoma (trunk) under optical microscopy. Histopathological examination revealed ovarian balls (floating ovaries) inside the ligament sac and eggs within the egg sorting apparatus. The SEM images revealed that the proboscis had 11–14 longitudinal rows with 9–12 recurrent, backward‐facing, organized hooks. In the 18S and 28S phylogenetic tree, sequences of the specimens were identical to those of other Longicollum pagrosomi, in addition to the morphological features. Thus, we confirmed that the parasites belonged to Longicollum pagrosomi in this study.
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