首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
2.
Necrotizing hepatopancreatitis (NHP), a severe bacterial disease affecting penaeid shrimp aquaculture, is caused by a gram-negative, pleomorphic, intracellular alpha-proteobacterium referred to as the NHP-bacterium (NHPB). The time course of NHP was investigated in experimentally infected juveniles of Kona stock Litopenaeus vannamei. Susceptible animals were individually isolated in 41 of aerated artificial seawater at salinity 30 +/- 1 ppt and maintained in a water bath at 30 +/- 1 degree C for 60 d. A total of 120 individuals were exposed per os to a 0.05 g piece of NHPB-infected hepatopancreas and 100 controls were exposed to uninfected tissue. At intervals of 3, 6, 9, 16, 23, 30, 37, 44, and 53 d post-exposure, 6 shrimp exposed to NHPB-infected tissue and 4 controls were randomly removed from the experiment; hepatopancreas samples were processed for histological and molecular analysis, and feces were processed for molecular diagnosis of NHPB infection. NHPB was first detected in the hepatopancreas through histology at 6 d post-exposure. All control shrimp were diagnosed as NHPB negative. NHPB infections classified as stage I (scattering of hepatopancreatic tubules with adjacent epithelial cells containing NHPB) and stage II (numerous infected tubules with occasional hemocyte infiltration) were observed from 6 to 37 d post-exposure. All animals that experienced NHPB-induced mortality from 16 to 51 d post-exposure were at stage III (numerous necrotic tubules, dense hemocyte infiltration, and presence of granulomas). NHPB is capable of infecting all hepatopancreatic cell types including embryonic, resorptive, fibrillar and blister-like cells. The percent of hepatopancreatic tubules containing NHPB in epithelial cells increased over time, representing bacteria multiplication and spread. Real-time PCR allowed for quantification of NHPB in hepatopancreas and feces. Over the course of infection, NHPB was present at 10(3) to 10(7) copies mg(-1) of hepatopancreas and 10(1) to 10(5) copies mg(-1) of feces. Lethal infections contained 10(6) to 10(7) copies mg(-1) of hepatopancreas and 10(3) to 10(6) copies mg(-1) of feces.  相似文献   

3.
The acute and subacute toxicity of aflatoxin B1 to the marine shrimp Penaeus stylirostris and P. vannamei (Order: Decapoda, Class: Crustacea) was investigated. Experimental shrimp were exposed to a range of concentrations of the toxin directly by intramascular injection (from 2 to 160 μg aflatoxin B1/g body weight), or by multiple per os dosing with the feed (from 53 to 300 μg aflatoxin B1/g feed) for up to 25 days. The histopathogenesis of aflatoxicosis in the aflatoxin-exposed animals was followed and found to be time and dose dependent in the hepatopancreas, mandibular organ, and in the hematopoietic organs. Less significant and/or inconsistent lesions were also observed in other organs and tissues, but a time-dose dependency was not noted. The principal lesions of aflatoxicosis in penaeid shrimp occur in the hepatopancreas and the mandibular organ. In the former organ, subacute and acute aflatoxicosis is expressed as necrosis of the hepatopancreatic tubule epithelium that proceeds from the proximal (older) portion of the tubules, in the center of the organ, to the peripheral (younger) tubule tips. A marked intertubular hemocytic inflammation followed by encapsulation and fibrosis of affected tubules follows in subacute aflatoxicosis, but is not as developed as in acute aflatoxicosis. The mandibular organ in aflatoxicosis displays a necrosis of the peripheral epithelial cells of the cords within the gland that progresses proximally to the central vein. Only a slight hemocytic inflammation accompanies the degenerative changes in this latter organ.  相似文献   

4.
Nucleases are phosphodiesterases that hydrolyze DNA and/or RNA. In a search for shrimp nucleases involved in apoptosis, we discovered a nuclease from hepatopancreatic cDNA of the black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon. The full-length nuclease gene was amplified and revealed to contain 1668bp corresponding to 381 deduced amino acid residues in the mature enzyme. Sequence analysis indicated 83% nucleic acid identity and 89% amino acid identity to a nuclease from the Kuruma shrimp Penaeus japonicus (also called Marsupenaeus japonicus). Comparative analysis of sequences, conserved motifs and phylogenetic trees indicated that P. monodon nuclease (PMN) belonged to the family of DNA/RNA non-specific endonucleases (DRNSN). RT-PCR analysis using primers specific for PMN mRNA with seven different shrimp tissues revealed that expression in normal shrimp was restricted to the hepatopancreas. Semiquantitative RT-PCR analysis of PMN using hepatopancreatic mRNA from normal shrimp and from shrimp challenged with white spot syndrome virus (WSSV) indicated significant up-regulation of PMN in the hepatopancreas (P<0.05) at the early stage of viral infection but a return to baseline levels as gross signs of disease developed. At the same time, expression was always confined to the hepatopancreas and never seen in other tissues, including those reported to be prime targets for WSSV and subject to increased levels of apoptosis after infection. The results suggested that PMN is probably a digestive enzyme that is unlikely to be involved in hallmark DNA digestion associated with apoptosis.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Since July 2005, recurrent outbreaks of vibriosis have occurred in shrimp farms in northwestern Mexico. Moribund Litopenaeus vannamei associated with mass mortalities were lethargic and displayed red discoloration spots on their abdomen, and hence were called 'bright-reds' by farmers. Shrimp submitted for diagnosis were examined using wet tissue mounts, bacteriological assays and their respective minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC), and histology. A dominant yellow bacterial colony was isolated in thiosulphate citrate bile salts-sucrose (TCBS) agar and identified by molecular methods as Vibrio harveyi strain CAIM 1792. Pathogenicity of the V. harveyi strain was demonstrated in L. vannamei. The lowest MIC against Vibrio isolates from bright-red shrimp was obtained with enrofloxacine (3.01, SD = 5.96 pg ml(-1)). Histology detected severe necrosis in lymphoid organ tubules, muscle fibers, and connective tissue, as well as melanization and hemocytic nodules associate with microcolonies of Gram-negative bacilli. Bacteria from severely affected shrimp were dispersed from the haemocoel to other tissues causing a systemic vibriosis. The data indicate that V. harveyi strain CAIM 1792 is the cause of bright-red syndrome (BRS) and represents a threat to the Mexican shrimp farming industry.  相似文献   

7.
The histological and ultrastructural alterations observed in the antennal glands, hepatopancreas, and midgut of grass shrimp exposed to either a 50% potassium dimethyldithiocarbamate biocide (Busan-85; 5–60 ppb) for 14 days, or to a different biocide, composed of 15% sodium dimethyldithiocarbamate and 15% disodium ethylene bisdithiocarbamate (Aquatreat DNM-30), for 3–4 days (60–140 ppb) and 28–35 days (40–120 ppb), were compared and contrasted with the normal morphological features in control shrimp. Only those experimental shrimp that exhibited various degrees of branchial abnormality were examined. Although the alterations in Busan-exposed shrimp were generally more pronounced, the antennal glands of 32 out of 36 experimental shrimp exhibited abnormalities that were manifested primarily as increased secretory activity by the labyrinth cells. In dithiocarbamate-exposed shrimp with “black gills”, the labyrinth epithelium exhibited moderate nuclear hypertrophy, apparent cell sloughing, intense secretory activity, and occasional melanized lesions; alterations in the antennal gland coelomosac included nuclear pyknosis, a general deterioration of podocyte organization, and an unusual increase in hemolymph density adjacent to affected tissues. Although there was an apparent increase in mitotic activity in the hepatopancreatic tubules of shrimp exposed to Aquatreat for 28–35 days, degenerative changes were most frequent and extensive in the hepatopancreas and midgut of dithiocarbamate-exposed shrimp with “black gills”. These observed changes included the diminution of the basal midgut and hepatopancreatic tubular system, moderate midgut hypertrophy, pronounced activity by the hepatopancreatic fixed phagocytes, development of mitochondrial inclusions and megamitochondria, loss of cytoplasmic density, hepatopancreatic nuclear pyknosis, and irreversible degeneration of hepatopancreatic tubule apices. This study suggests that some of the observed abnormal/pathological changes are the indirect consequence of branchial degeneration. A number of possible defensive reactions to dithiocarbamate poisoning, including heterostasis, phagocytosis, encapsulation, and the possible participation of reserve inclusion cells are proposed.  相似文献   

8.
Historic emergence, impact and current status of shrimp pathogens in Asia   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
It is estimated that approximately 60% of disease losses in shrimp aquaculture have been caused by viral pathogens and 20% by bacterial pathogens. By comparison, losses to fungi and parasites have been relatively small. For bacterial pathogens, Vibrio species are the most important while for viral pathogens importance has changed since 2003 when domesticated and genetically selected stocks of the American whiteleg shrimp Penaeus (Litopenaeus) vannamei (Boone 1931) replaced the formerly dominant giant tiger or black tiger shrimp Penaeus (Penaeus) monodon (Fabricius 1798) as the dominant cultivated species. For both species, white spot syndrome virus (WSSV) and yellow head virus (YHV) are the most lethal. Next most important for P. vannamei is infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV), originally reported from Brazil, but since 2006 from Indonesia where it was probably introduced by careless importation of shrimp aquaculture stocks. So far, IMNV has not been reported from other countries in Asia. Former impacts of Taura syndrome virus (TSV) and infectious hypodermal and hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHHNV) on this species have dramatically declined due to the introduction of tolerant stocks and to implementation of good biosecurity practices. Another problem recently reported for P. vannamei in Asia is abdominal segment deformity disease (ASDD), possibly caused by a previously unknown retrovirus-like agent. Next most important after WSSV and YHV for P. monodon is monodon slow growth syndrome (MSGS) for which component causes appear to be Laem Singh virus (LSNV) and a cryptic integrase containing element (ICE). Hepatopancreatic parvovirus (HPV) and monodon baculovirus (MBV) may be problematic when captured P. monodon are used to produce larvae, but only in the absence of proper preventative measures. Since 2009 increasing losses with P. vannamei in China, Vietnam and now Thailand are associated with acute hepatopancreatic necrosis syndrome (AHPNS) of presently unknown cause. Despite these problems, total production of cultivated penaeid shrimp from Asia will probably continue to rise as transient disease problems are solved and use of post larvae originating from domesticated SPF shrimp stocks in more biosecure settings expands.  相似文献   

9.
The freshwater shrimp Neocaridina heteropoda (Crustacea, Malacostraca, Decapoda) originates from Asia and is one of the species that is widely available all over the world because it is the most popular shrimp that is bred in aquaria. The structure and the ultrastructure of the midgut have been described using X-ray microtomography, transmission electron microscopy, light and fluorescence microscopes. The endodermal region of the alimentary system in N. heteropoda consists of an intestine and a hepatopancreas. No differences were observed in the structure and ultrastructure of males and females of the shrimp that were examined. The intestine is a tube-shaped organ and the hepatopancreas is composed of two large diverticles that are divided into the blind-end tubules. Hepatopancreatic tubules have three distinct zones – proximal, medial and distal. Among the epithelial cells of the intestine, two types of cells were distinguished – D and E-cells, while three types of cells were observed in the epithelium of the hepatopancreas – F, B and E-cells. Our studies showed that the regionalization in the activity of cells occurs along the length of the hepatopancreatic tubules. The role and ultrastructure of all types of epithelial cells are discussed, with the special emphasis on the function of the E-cells, which are the midgut regenerative cells. Additionally, we present the first report on the existence of an intercellular junction that is connected with the E-cells of Crustacea.  相似文献   

10.
This paper describes a new bacterial white spot syndrome (BWSS) in cultured tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon. The affected shrimp showed white spots similar to those caused by white spot syndrome virus (WSSV), but the shrimp remained active and grew normally without significant mortalities. The study revealed no evidence of WSSV infection using electron microscopy, histopathology and nested polymerase chain reaction. Electron microscopy indicated bacteria associated with white spot formation, and with degeneration and discoloration of the cuticle as a result of erosion of the epicuticle and underlying cuticular layers. Grossly the white spots in BWSS and WSS look similar but showed different profiles under wet mount microscopy. The bacterial white spots were lichen-like, having perforated centers unlike the melanized dots in WSSV-induced white spots. Bacteriological examination showed that the dominant isolate in the lesions was Bacillus subtilis. The occurrence of BWSS may be associated with the regular use of probiotics containing B. subtilis in shrimp ponds. The externally induced white spot lesions were localized at the integumental tissues, i.e., cuticle and epidermis, and connective tissues. Damage to the deeper tissues was limited. The BWS lesions are non-fatal in the absence of other complications and are usually shed through molting.  相似文献   

11.
The global shrimp aquaculture has been consistently beset by diseases that cause severe losses in production. To fight various harmful pathogens, the enhanced shrimp immunity by immunostimulants would play key roles against the invading pathogens. In aquaculture, however, the target proteins/genes which can be used for the screening of immunostimulants are very limited. Based on our previous study, in the present study, the shrimp Ran protein, which was required in shrimp antiviral phagocytosis, was used as the target protein to screen for immunostimulants. The GTPase activity assays showed that the IL-4 and lysophosphatidylcholine molecules could enhance the activity of Ran protein, suggesting that the two molecules might function in phagocytosis. When the IL-4 and lysophosphatidylcholine were respectively injected into shrimp, the results indicated that the two molecules enhanced the hemocytic phagocytosis against white spot syndrome virus (WSSV), suggesting that they improved the activity of phagocytosis through the activation of the Ran protein. It was evidenced that the enhancement of phagocytosis activity effectively inhibited the WSSV infection in shrimp, which further led to the decrease of mortalities of WSSV-infected shrimp. Therefore, our study presented a novel strategy for the screening of immunostimulants by using the key proteins in immune responses of aquatic organisms as the target proteins, which would be very helpful for the development of efficient approaches to prevent the aquatic organisms from pathogen infections.  相似文献   

12.
Cultured populations of four penaeid shrimp species (Crustacea, Decapoda) from four separate culture facilities in Asia were found to be adversely affected by a disease of presumed viral etiology. Individual shrimp with the disease displayed nonspecific signs, including poor growth rate, anorexia, reduced preening activity, increased surface fouling, and occasional opacity of tail musculature. These signs were accompanied by mortalities during the juvenile stages, after apparently normal development through the larval and postlarval stages. Accumulative mortality rates in epizootics in Penaeus merguiensis and P. semisulcatus reached as high as 50 to 100%, respectively, of the affected populations within 4 to 8 weeks of disease onset. The principal lesion, common to all four species, was necrosis and atrophy of the hepatopancreas, accompanied by the presence of large prominent basophilic, PAS-negative, Fuelgen-positive intranuclear inclusion bodies in affected hepatopancreatic tubule epithelial cells (hepatopancreatocytes). These inclusion bodies presumably developed from small, eosinophilic, intranuclear bodies that were also present in the affected tissues. Electron microscopy of affected hepatopancreatocytes revealed aggregations of 22- to 24-nm-diameter virus particles within the electron-dense granular inclusion body ground substance. The virus particle size and morphology, the close association of the nucleolus with the developing inclusion body, and the presence of intranuclear bodies within developing inclusion bodies are similar to cytopathological features reported for parvovirus infections in insects and vertebrates. It is suggested that this presumed virus disease of cultured penaeid shrimp be called HPV for Hepatopancreatic Parvo-like Virus disease.  相似文献   

13.
This investigation combines confocal microscopy with the cation-specific fluorescent dyes Fluo-3 and BTC-5N to localize calcium and heavy metals along the length of intact lobster (Homarus americanus) hepatopancreatic tubules and isolated cells. A metallothionein-specific antibody, developed in mollusks with cross-reactivity in crustaceans, showed the tissue-specific occurrence of this metal-binding protein in several organ systems in lobster and in single cell types isolated from lobster hepatopancreas. Individual lobster hepatopancreatic epithelial cell types were separated into pure single cell type suspensions for confocal and antibody experiments. Intact hepatopancreatic tubules showed high concentrations of both calcium and heavy metals at the distal tips of tubules where mitotic stem cells (E-cells) are localized. In addition, a concentrated distribution of calcium signal within isolated single premolt E-cells in solution was disclosed that might suggest an endoplasmic reticulum compartmentation of this cation within these stem cells. Both E- and R-cells showed significantly (P < 0.05) greater intracellular calcium concentrations in premolt than intermolt, suggesting the accumulation of this cation in these cells prior to the molt. Antibody studies with lobster tissues indicated that the hepatopancreas possessed 5-10 times the metallothionein concentration as other lobster organ systems and that isolated E-cells from the hepatopancreas displayed more than twice the binding protein concentrations of other cells of this organ or those of blood cells. These results suggest that crustacean hepatopancreatic stem cells (E-cells) and R-cells play significant roles in calcium and heavy metal homeostasis in this tissue. Interactions between the four hepatopancreatic cell types in this regulatory activity remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

14.
Major viral diseases of the black tiger prawn (Penaeus monodon) in Thailand   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
There are five different viruses which are currently being studied for their impact on commercial farming of the black tiger prawn (Penaeus monodon) in Thailand. Some of these viruses cause disease in other penaeid shrimp species and even other crustacean species. Some occur not only in cultivated shrimp in other Asian countries, but also in those from Australia and the western hemisphere. In descending order from greatest to least economic impact on the Thai shrimp industry, the five viruses are: white-spot baculovirus, yellow-head virus, hepatopancreatic parvo-like virus, infectious hypodermal and hematopoeitic necrosis virus and monodon baculovirus. The purpose of this review is to summarize recent work on these viruses and to suggest future directions of research that may be useful in the effort to develop a sustainable shrimp industry.  相似文献   

15.
We isolated and characterized the profilin (FcPFN) cDNA from hemocytes ofFenneropenaeus chinensis, a unique shrimp species from the Yellow Sea. The FcPFN cDNA consists of 830 bp and encodes a polypeptide of 125 amino acids, having a predicted isoelectric point of 5.06. The deduced amino acid sequence of FcPFN shows 36% and 90% amino acid sequence identity to the profilin genes of Pacific white shrimpLitopenaeus vannamei and black tiger shrimpPenaeus monodon, respectively. The FcPFN mRNA was highly expressed in hemocytes and hepatopancreas and moderately in muscle of normal shrimp. The higher expression of FcPFN mRNA is observed in shrimp infected with the white spot syndrome virus (WSSV), which is a major concern in all shrimp-growing regions of the world. These results suggest a potential role for FcPFN in viral host defense mechanisms.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Current methods to detect hepatopancreatic parvovirus (HPV) infection of penaeid shrimp depend on invasive techniques that require dissecting the organs infected by this virus. However, sacrificing valuable stocks in order to determine their HPV status can be a drawback in the case of breeding programs. A method was developed for HPV detection by applying a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to fecal samples collected from live HPV-infected shrimp Penaeus chinensis. A pair of PCR primers, 1120F/1120R, which amplify a 592 base pair (bp) region from the virus genome, was designed from previously known HPV sequence information (HPV clone HPV8). PCR amplification with these primers generated a product of the expected size directly from the crude feces of HPV-infected shrimp but not from the feces of specific pathogen-free (SPF) shrimp. The HPV origin of the amplified product was validated by means of an in situ hybridization assay where the product of the amplification, labeled with digoxigenin (DIG)-11-dUTP, showed an intense reaction within hepatopancreatic cells displaying characteristic HPV lesions on HPV-infected shrimp. No reaction to this probe was observed when reacted in situ with sections of the hepatopancreas of SPF specimens or to sections of shrimp infected by the infectious hypodermal and hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHHNV), another parvovirus of penaeid shrimp. These primers were tested for specificity against homologous and nonhomologous viruses and no product was amplified. A fragment of the expected size was obtained only when purified HPV or purified HPV8 plasmid was used as template DNA. Under optimized conditions, these primers detected as little as 1 fg of purified HPV8 plasmid DNA, equivalent to approximately 300 HPV particles. Analysis of fecal samples by PCR may prove useful for non-lethal screening of valuable shrimp of unknown HPV status. This same strategy also might be used for detection of other enteric viruses that infect penaeid shrimp.  相似文献   

18.
19.
It was recently shown that the shrimp high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and the β-1,3-glucan binding protein (BGBP) are identical, implying dual functions for the same protein: lipid transport and involvement in the defense system. Because this protein is present in plasma, and the hepatopancreas is a major lipid storage gland, we investigated the presence of the HDL/BGBP polypeptide and its messenger RNA in this tissue using a monospecific antibody against HDL/BGBP. Hepatopancreas crude protein extracts, as well as polypeptides produced by poly(A)+ RNA in vitro translation, were recognized by the anti-HDL/BGBP. Furthermore, a specific pattern was revealed in hepatopancreas thin sections by immunodetection. Strong recognition was seen in the epithelial cells of hepatopancreatic tubules, probably related to the secretion process of this protein. Received September 24, 1999; accepted April 5, 2000.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号