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1.
QX disease is a fatal disease in Sydney rock oysters caused by the protozoan parasite Marteilia sydneyi. The current study investigates the phagocytosis of M. sydneyi by Sydney rock oyster hemocytes. It also compares the in vitro phagocytic activities of hemocytes from oysters bred for QX disease resistance (QXR) with those of wild-type oysters. After ingestion of M. sydneyi, hemocyte granules fused with phagosome membranes and the pH of phagosomes decreased. Significantly (p = <0.05) more phagosomes in QXR hemocytes showed obvious changes in pH within 40 min of phagocytosis, when compared with wild-type hemocytes. Phenoloxidase deposition was also evident in phagosomes after in vitro phagocytosis. Most importantly, ingested and melanised M. sydneyi were detected in vivo among hemocytes from infected oysters. Overall, the data suggest that Sydney rock oyster hemocytes can recognise and phagocytose M. sydneyi, and that resistance against QX disease may be associated with enhanced phagolysosomal activity in QXR oysters.  相似文献   

2.
QX disease in Sydney rock oysters (Saccostrea glomerata) is caused by the paramyxean protozoan, Marteilia sydneyi. Disease outbreaks occur during summer (January to May) and can result in up to 95% mortality. The New South Wales Department of Primary Industries has been selectively breeding S. glomerata for resistance to QX disease since 1996. Previous work suggests that this breeding program has specifically affected the defensive phenoloxidase enzyme system of oysters. The current study more thoroughly characterises the effect of selection on the different forms of phenoloxidase found in oyster populations. Native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (native-PAGE) identified five discrete types of phenoloxidase in non-selected (wild type) and fourth generation QX disease resistant (QXR4) oysters. One electrophoretically distinct form of phenoloxidase, POb, is significantly less frequent in resistant oysters when compared to the wild type population. The frequency of POb also decreased in both the wild type and QXR4 populations over the course of a QX disease outbreak. This suggests that possession of POb makes oysters susceptible to QX disease and that breeding for resistance has resulted in negative selection against this form of phenoloxidase.  相似文献   

3.
Molecular detection of Marteilia sydneyi, pathogen of Sydney rock oysters   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The life cycle of Marteilia sydneyi, the aetiological agent of QX disease in the Sydney rock oyster Saccostrea commercialis, is not known. We have developed and optimised 2 diagnostic assays, the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and in situ hybridisation, for use in investigating the role of possible alternative hosts in the life cycle of this pathogen. PCR primers, designed within the ITS1 rDNA of M. sydneyi, amplified a 195 bp fragment. Sensitivity of the PCR assay was assessed using DNA extracted from known numbers of sporonts purified from infected oyster digestive gland. DNA equivalent to 0.01 sporonts was detectable following agarose gel electrophoresis. The potential inhibitory effect of the presence of host DNA on the PCR assay was tested by the addition of oyster genomic DNA during amplification. Concentrations of host DNA in excess of 50 ng per 20 microliters reaction reduced the sensitivity of the test. Environmental validation of the PCR assay was demonstrated by the amplification of M. sydneyi DNA from 50 ng of genomic DNA extracted from QX-infected oysters. A DNA probe was constructed using the M. sydneyi unique primers and was able to detect 10 pg of M. sydneyi PCR amplified DNA in dot-blot hybridisations. The probe hybridised with presporulating and sporulating M. sydneyi stages in paraffin sections of oyster digestive gland. No non-specific binding was observed. Hybridisation consistency and signal intensity decreased as sporonts matured. While the high sensitivity and specificity of the PCR test will allow rapid screening of large numbers of potential alternative hosts for the presence of parasite DNA, it does not actually identify infective stages. In situ hybridisation conducted on paraffin sections will determine the location of the parasite within the host for morphological characterisation.  相似文献   

4.
《Journal of Proteomics》2010,73(2):209-217
The Sydney rock oyster, Saccostrea glomerata, is susceptible to infection by the protozoan parasite, Marteilia sydneyi, the causative agent of QX disease. M. sydneyi infection peaks during summer when QX disease can cause up to 95% mortality. The current study takes a proteomic approach using 2-dimensional electrophoresis and mass spectrometry to identify markers of QX disease resistance among Sydney rock oysters. Proteome maps were developed for QX disease-resistant and -susceptible oysters. Six proteins in those maps were clearly associated with resistance and so were characterized by mass spectrometry. Two of the proteins (p9 and p11) were homologous to superoxide dismutase-like molecules from the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, and the Eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica. The remaining S. glomerata proteins had no obvious similarities to known molecules in sequence databases. p9 and p11 are currently being investigated as potential markers for the selective breeding of QX disease-resistant oysters.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Examination of European flat oysters, Ostrea edulis, from the Dutch oyster culture, but originating in France, revealed a new disease due to a protistan parasite. Light and electron microscope studies revealed that the parasite belongs to the haplosporidan genus Minchinia. Since comparison with other Minchinia spp. indicate that it is new, the name Minchinia armoricana nov. sp. is proposed. Thus far, the parasite was very rare; only two diseased oysters were observed among ca. 3700 specimens examined histologically during a 2.5-year period. The diseased oysters showed macroscopically a peculiar brown discoloration and microscopically many sporocysts with spores in the connective tissue. Beside the two diseased oysters, another one was observed with an infection of unidentified plasmodial stages in the connective tissue. These may be developmental stages of the new species M. armoricana.  相似文献   

7.
Invertebrates display effective innate immune responses for defense against microbial infection. However, the protozoan parasite Perkinsus marinus causes Dermo disease in the eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica and is responsible for catastrophic damage to shellfisheries and the estuarine environment in North America. The infection mechanisms remain unclear, but it is likely that, while filter feeding, the healthy oysters ingest P. marinus trophozoites released to the water column by the infected neighboring individuals. Inside oyster hemocytes, trophozoites resist oxidative killing, proliferate, and spread throughout the host. However, the mechanism(s) for parasite entry into the hemocyte are unknown. In this study, we show that oyster hemocytes recognize P. marinus via a novel galectin (C. virginica galectin (CvGal)) of unique structure. The biological roles of galectins have only been partly elucidated, mostly encompassing embryogenesis and indirect roles in innate and adaptive immunity mediated by the binding to endogenous ligands. CvGal recognized a variety of potential microbial pathogens and unicellular algae, and preferentially, Perkinsus spp. trophozoites. Attachment and spreading of hemocytes to foreign surfaces induced localization of CvGal to the cell periphery, its secretion and binding to the plasma membrane. Exposure of hemocytes to Perkinsus spp. trophozoites enhanced this process further, and their phagocytosis could be partially inhibited by pretreatment of the hemocytes with anti-CvGal Abs. The evidence presented indicates that CvGal facilitates recognition of selected microbes and algae, thereby promoting phagocytosis of both potential infectious challenges and phytoplankton components, and that P. marinus subverts the host's immune/feeding recognition mechanism to passively gain entry into the hemocytes.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The in vitro culture of the Eastern oyster parasite Perkinsus marinus has provided a unique opportunity to examine its susceptibility to putative recognition and effector defense mechanisms operative in refractory bivalve species. In this study, we report the effect of supplementing the culture medium with plasma from: (1) uninfected to heavily infected Eastern oysters; (2) oyster species considered to be disease-resistant; and (3) bivalve mollusk species that are naturally exposed to the parasite but show no signs of disease. We also examined in vitro the interaction between hemocytes from Crassostrea virginica and C. gigas and P. marinus trophozoites. Our results revealed a significant decrease (32%) in proliferation of P. marinus in the presence of plasma from heavily infected C. virginica oysters. The inhibitory effects were less pronounced with plasma from moderately infected and uninfected oysters. In contrast, plasma from C. rivularis and C. gigas enhanced P. marinus proliferation. Proliferation was significantly reduced in media supplemented with plasma from Mytilus edulis, Mercenaria mercenaria, and Anadara ovalis. The highest inhibitory activity was apparent in M. edulis, for which 5% plasma-supplemented medium reduced growth by 35% relative to the controls. M. edulis active component(s) was heat-stable, yet pronase-sensitive. The significantly higher uptake of live P. marinus trophozoites by hemocytes from C. virginica, relative to those from C. gigas, suggests a certain level of specificity in the recognition/endocytosis of the parasite by its natural bivalve host species.  相似文献   

10.
Infections of a population of Crassostrea gigas by the copepod Mytilicola orientalis were examined at an oyster growing site at Dungarvan, County Waterford, Ireland. Twenty-one samples, each consisting of 20 to 30 oysters have been examined over 2 yr. Condition, sex, reproductive stage, length, weight, glycogen content and other parasite burdens of the oysters were examined in relation to the degree of infection of M. orientalis; 14.38% of oysters were infested. Mean abundance was 0.6 oyster(-1) The maximum number of copepods in an oyster was 20. M. orientalis had no effect on condition, growth, sex, stage or glycogen content of the oyster but correlated with shell burrowing by Polydora sp.  相似文献   

11.
DNA probes were used in in situ hybridisation on histological sections of oysters exposed for defined intervals to Marteilia sydneyi infection to reveal the early development of the parasite in the oyster host, Saccostrea glomerata. The initial infective stages enter through the palps and gills whereupon extrasporogonic proliferation results in the liberation of cells into surrounding connective tissue and haemolymph spaces. Following systemic dissemination, the parasite infiltrates the digestive gland and becomes established as a nurse cell beneath the epithelial cells in a digestive tubule. Here, cell-within-cell proliferation results in the eventual liberation of daughter cells from the nurse cell into spaces between adjacent epithelial cells. None of these stages had previously been described. Proliferation is associated with host responses, including haemocytic infiltration of the connective tissue and diapedesis across tubule epithelia. The responses cease as sporogenesis begins.  相似文献   

12.
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14.
Enzymatic activities in the hemolymph of healthy and Bonamia-infected Ostrea edulis and Crassostrea gigas were studied with a commercial kit for the detection of 19 enzymes: 15 and 16 enzymes, respectively, were detected in the hemolymph of O. edulis and C. gigas and 10 of them showed relatively high activity levels. Most of them existed in both the cell-free fraction of the hemolymph and in the hemocytes. The cell-free hemolymph fraction of Bonamia ostreae-infected European flat oysters showed an elevated enzymatic activity level compared with that of healthy individuals. C. gigas hemocytes possessed higher enzymatic activity levels than O. edulis hemocytes. Differences in enzymatic activities existed in granulocytes and hyalinocytes in both oyster species. The enzyme release from oyster hemocytes seemed to be selective. The infection by B. ostreae induced enzymatic activity variations in European flat oysters. Higher enzyme levels within hemocytes may contribute partly to the natural resistance of C. gigas to the infection by B. ostreae.  相似文献   

15.
The oyster ovarian parasite Marteilioides chungmuensis has been reported from Korea and Japan, damaging the oyster industries. Recently, Marteilioides-like organisms have been identified in other commercially important marine bivalves. In this study, we surveyed Marteilioides infection in the Manila clam Ruditapes philippinarum, Suminoe oyster Crassostrea ariakensis, and Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas, using histology and Marteilioides-specific small subunit (SSU) rDNA PCR. The SSU rDNA sequence of M. chungmuensis (1716 bp) isolated from C. gigas in Tongyoung bay was 99.9% similar to that of M. chungmuensis reported in Japan. Inclusions of multi-nucleated bodies in the oocytes, typical of Marteilioides infection, were identified for the first time in Suminoe oysters. The SSU rDNA sequence of a Marteilioides-like organism isolated from Suminoe oysters was 99.9% similar to that of M. chungmuensis. Marteilioides sp. was also observed from 7 Manila clams of 1840 individuals examined, and the DNA sequences of which were 98.2% similar to the known sequence of M. chungmuensis. Unlike Marteilioides infection of Pacific oysters, no remarkable pathological symptoms, such as large multiple lumps on the mantle, were observed in infected Suminoe oysters or Manila clams. Distribution of the infected Manila clams, Suminoe oysters and Pacific oysters was limited to small bays on the south coast, suggesting that the southern coast is the enzootic area of Marteilioides infection.  相似文献   

16.
Marteiliosis is a disease of molluscs caused by Marteilia refringens in Europe and M. sydneyi in Australia. During routine examination of cultured mussels Mytilus galloprovinciallis in the northern Adriatic, the occurrence of Marteilia sp. was recorded with a prevalence of 5%. This parasite was not detected in flat oysters reared in the same area. The affiliation of the detected parasite in M. galloprovinciallis was confirmed by in situ hybridization using a M. refringens probe, specific at the genus level. DNA of these infected mussels originating from the same area will be used to clarify the taxonomic position of this species within the genus Marteilia using a molecular approach.  相似文献   

17.
Apoptosis, or programmed cell death, has been reported as being pivotal in infectious diseases of different organisms. The effects of apoptosis on the progression and transmission of the protistan parasites Perkinsus marinus and Haplosporidium nelsoni in the eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica were studied. Oysters were diagnosed for their respective infections by standard methods, and apoptosis was detected using in situ hybridization to detect DNA fragments by end labeling on paraffin sections. A digoxigenin nucleotide probe was used to label the 200 bp fragment produced by apoptosis and detected immunohistochemically using an antidigoxigenin peroxidase conjugate. The probe/DNA fragment complex was stained with a peroxidase substrate and tissues were counterstained with methyl green. Uninfected oysters had large numbers of apoptotic hemocytes present in the connective tissue underlying the stomach, gill, and mantle epithelia, whereas oysters infected with P. marinus had a reduced number of apoptotic hemocytes. The parasite may prevent hemocyte apoptosis in order to yield a greater number of hemocytes in which to house itself. Large numbers of P. marinus cells in some infected oysters were eliminated via apoptosis in the stomach epithelia, disabling the spread of infectious particles through seawater. The oysters infected with H. nelsoni also had reduced numbers of apoptotic hemocytes, while part of the vesicular connective tissue cells were apoptotic. H. nelsoni plasmodia were eliminated via apoptosis in some oysters. Apoptosis may enhance progression and prevent transmission of infectious oyster diseases.  相似文献   

18.
Dermo disease in the eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is caused by an intracellular protistan parasite Perkinsus marinus. The progression and outcome of this disease is determined by a complex interplay between the host's immunity and parasite's escape mechanisms, both of which can be influenced by environmental pollutants including heavy metals such as copper (Cu). The goal of the present study was to determine the effects of Cu on the levels of apoptosis (which can serve as an important host defense mechanism) in oyster immune cells (hemocytes) in?vitro and in?vivo as well as on the establishment of P.?marinus infections in?vivo. Surprisingly, Cu exerted opposing effects on apoptosis levels of hemocytes in?vitro and in?vivo, stimulating apoptosis in isolated hemocytes but suppressing it during Cu exposure of whole oysters. The mechanisms of this effect are presently unknown and may be related to the different bioavailability of the metal in?vitro and in?vivo. As expected, Cu accumulated in oyster soft tissues during in?vitro exposure. Unexpectedly, this metal also strongly accumulated in hemolymph plasma which is classically considered isoionic with the surrounding seawater, likely reflecting the presence of soluble Cu-binding proteins in oyster plasma. Cu reduced growth of P.?marinus in?vitro and greatly reduced infection levels of hemocytes in?vivo, presumably by direct toxic effects on the parasite. As a possible parasitic counterbalance, Cu accumulation in the hemocytes was reduced by P.?marinus infection, although this reduction was not sufficient to prevent the parasiticidal effects of the heavy metal in?vivo. This effect of Cu may be useful as a potential therapeutic against Dermo disease in aquaculture conditions. Overall, this study provides important new insights into the potential role of environmental metals in host-parasite relationships and disease dynamics in C.?virginica.  相似文献   

19.
The occurrence of Marteilioides chungmuensis, a protozoan paramyxean parasite in the reproductive system of the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas, was observed at Gosung Bay, Korea. Seasonal variation in gonad development was investigated in a suspended cultured oyster population. Gametogenesis began in February and first-spawning was observed between mid and late June when surface water temperature reached 22 to 25 degrees C. Spawning activity extended from mid June to late September, with 2 marked spawning peaks in June and August. Histological examination indicated that gonad development paralleled seasonal fluctuations in water temperature. Spawning in late June was partly associated with a sudden drop in salinity due to large freshwater inputs to the Bay with the summer monsoon. M. chungmuensis occurred in developing and fully mature eggs of spawning oysters in late June to January, but were not observed from February to May. Monthly mean infection intensity was high in late June when most oysters had their first spawning period. The infection level was also relatively high in late August and November, when oysters were spawning or had completed spawning. Several oysters collected in November (11.4%) and December (16.3%) carried a large quantity of ripe but M. chungmuensis-infected eggs, suggesting that infection also causes spawning failure by delaying spawning and destroying ripe oocytes.  相似文献   

20.
The protistan parasite Mikrocytos mackini, causative agent of Denman Island disease (mikrocytosis), induces mortality and reduces marketability in the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, in British Columbia, Canada. This parasite is a pathogen of international concern because it infects a range of oyster species, and because its life cycle and mode of transmission are unknown. A digoxigenin-labelled DNA probe in situ hybridisation technique (DIG-ISH) was developed, and its detection sensitivity was compared to standard histological sections stained with haematoxylin and eosin stain (H&E-histo). In H&E-histo preparations, the detection of M. mackini was certain only when the parasite occurred within the vesicular connective tissue of adult oysters. However, the DIG-ISH technique clearly demonstrated the presence of infection in all other host tissues as well as in juvenile oysters with poorly developed vesicular connective tissue. The probe hybridised strongly to M. mackini, did not hybridise to oyster tissues or with the other shellfish parasites tested, and was more sensitive for detecting infections when compared to H&E-histo.  相似文献   

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