2017
DOI: 10.1128/aem.00401-17
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Chromosome-Encoded Hemolysin, Phospholipase, and Collagenase in Plasmidless Isolates of Photobacterium damselae subsp. damselae Contribute to Virulence for Fish

Abstract: Photobacterium damselae subsp. damselae is a pathogen of marine animals, including fish of importance in aquaculture. The virulence plasmid pPHDD1, characteristic of highly hemolytic isolates, encodes the hemolysins damselysin (Dly) and phobalysin (PhlyP). Strains lacking pPHDD1 constitute the vast majority of the isolates from fish outbreaks, but genetic studies to identify virulence factors in plasmidless strains are scarce. Here, we show that the chromosome I-encoded hemolysin PhlyC plays roles in virulence… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(74 citation statements)
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“…The production of exotoxins, known as haemolysins, is a characteristic of bacteria highly pathogenic for fish (Vences et al 2017). The production of exotoxins, known as haemolysins, is a characteristic of bacteria highly pathogenic for fish (Vences et al 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The production of exotoxins, known as haemolysins, is a characteristic of bacteria highly pathogenic for fish (Vences et al 2017). The production of exotoxins, known as haemolysins, is a characteristic of bacteria highly pathogenic for fish (Vences et al 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among the several virulence factors of bacteria, the ability to cause haemolysis is one of the most known. The production of exotoxins, known as haemolysins, is a characteristic of bacteria highly pathogenic for fish (Vences et al 2017). For this reason, we evaluated the capability of the phytochemicals to inhibit the haemolysis caused by the b-haemolytic strain isolated from fish.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Analysis of the sequence variants within OTU 1,622 indicates that this likely represents the species P. damselae, but does not distinguish between different strains of this species which are reported to differ in their pathogenicity (Vences et al, 2017). Detection of the plpV virulence gene in all digesta samples for which OTU 1,622 was abundant (>20% of relative abundance) indicates that this OTU is potentially a representative of pathogenic P. dameselae.…”
Section: Diet and Temperature Influence The Microbiome Of The Digestamentioning
confidence: 96%
“…A region of the plpV gene was amplified using primers described by Vences et al (2017). PCR amplification was performed on 1:50 dilutions of extracted DNA using MyFi Mix (Bioline, Eveleigh, NSW, Australia) with a primer concentration of 400 nM in a final volume of 30 µL.…”
Section: Pcr Assay To Screen For Plpv and Sequencing Of Pcr Productsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, bioinformatic analysis of this strain re vealed that it does not possess the highly virulent pPHDD1 plasmid, or the plasmid-coded phobalysin P (PhylP) and damselysin (Dly) toxins (Rivas et al 2011(Rivas et al , 2013. The alternative chromosome-encoded toxins, phobalysin C (PhylC) and novel phospholipase of Vibronaceae (PlpV), have been recently described as virulence factors, responsible for pathogenic potential in non-pPHDD1 harbouring strains, causing haemolysis and virulence in sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax (Vences et al 2017). Both of these chromosomally encoded toxins were present in this strain, as shown by the presence of genes hlyA ch and plpV.…”
Section: Ibmentioning
confidence: 99%