Gill disease of farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in the marine environment has emerged as a significant problem for the salmon aquaculture industry. Different types of marine salmon gill disease reported include amoebic gill disease (AGD), parasitic gill disease, viral gill disease, bacterial gill disease, zooplankton (cnidarian nematocyst)‐associated gill disease, harmful algal gill disease and chemical/toxin‐associated gill disease. The term ‘multifactorial gill disease’ is used when multiple distinguishable types of disease (as opposed to an obvious single primary type) are present. When gill disease is non‐specific, it is referred to as ‘complex gill disease’ (CGD) or ‘complex gill disorder’. These two terms are often used interchangeably and are overlapping. The significance of many infectious and non‐infectious agents that may be associated with CGD is often unclear. In this review, we summarise aspects of the different types of gill disease that are relevant to the epidemiology of gill disease and of CGD in particular. We also tabulate simultaneously occurring putative pathogens to explore the multifactorial nature of gill disease.
Eel virus European X (EVEX) is one of the most common pathogenic viruses in farmed and wild European eel (Anguilla anguilla) in the Netherlands. The virus causes a hemorrhagic disease resulting in increased mortality rates. Cell culture and antibody-based detection of EVEX are laborious and time consuming. Therefore, a two-step real-time reverse transcriptase (RT-)PCR assay was developed for rapid detection of EVEX. Primers and probe for the assay were designed based on a sequence of the RNA polymerase or L gene of EVEX. The real-time RT-PCR assay was validated both for use with SYBR Green chemistry and for use with a TaqMan probe. The assay is sensitive, specific, repeatable, efficient and has a high r²-value. The real-time RT-PCR assay was further evaluated by testing field samples of European eels from the Netherlands, which were positive or negative for EVEX by virus isolation followed by an indirect fluorescent antibody test. The real-time RT-PCR assay allows rapid, sensitive and specific laboratory detection of EVEX in RNA extracts from 10% eel organ suspensions and cell cultures with cytopathic effects, and is a valuable contribution to the diagnosis of viral diseases of eel.
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