A new emerging disease in shrimp, first reported in 2009, was initially named early mortality syndrome (EMS). In 2011, a more descriptive name for the acute phase of the disease was proposed as acute hepatopancreatic necrosis syndrome (AHPNS). Affecting both Pacific white shrimp Penaeus vannamei and black tiger shrimp P. monodon, the disease has caused significant losses in Southeast Asian shrimp farms. AHPNS was first classified as idiopathic because no specific causative agent had been identified. However, in early 2013, the Aquaculture Pathology Laboratory at the University of Arizona was able to isolate the causative agent of AHPNS in pure culture. Immersion challenge tests were employed for infectivity studies, which induced 100% mortality with typical AHPNS pathology to experimental shrimp exposed to the pathogenic agent. Subsequent histological analyses showed that AHPNS lesions were experimentally induced in the laboratory and were identical to those found in AHPNS-infected shrimp samples collected from the endemic areas. Bacterial isolation from the experimentally infected shrimp enabled recovery of the same bacterial colony type found in field samples. In 3 separate immersion tests, using the recovered isolate from the AHPNS-positive shrimp, the same AHPNS pathology was reproduced in experimental shrimp with consistent results. Hence, AHPNS has a bacterial etiology and Koch's Postulates have been satisfied in laboratory challenge studies with the isolate, which has been identified as a member of the Vibrio harveyi clade, most closely related to V. parahemolyticus.
The causative agent of myonecrosis affecting cultured Penaeus vannamei in Brazil was demonstrated to be a virus after purification of the agent from infected shrimp tissues. Purified viral particles were injected into specific pathogen-free P. vannamei, resulting in a disease that displayed the same characteristics as those found in the original shrimp used for purification. The virus was named infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV). The viral particles were icosahedral in shape and 40 nm in diameter, with a buoyant density of 1?366 g ml "1 in caesium chloride. The genome consisted of a single, double-stranded (dsRNA) molecule of 7560 bp. Sequencing of the viral genome revealed two non-overlapping open reading frames (ORFs). The 59 ORF (ORF 1, nt 136-4953) encoded a putative RNA-binding protein and a capsid protein. The coding region of the RNA-binding protein was located in the first half of ORF 1 and contained a dsRNA-binding motif in the first 60 aa. The second half of ORF 1 encoded a capsid protein, as determined by amino acid sequencing, with a molecular mass of 106 kDa. The 39 ORF (ORF 2, nt 5241-7451) encoded a putative RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) with motifs characteristic of totiviruses. Phylogenetic analysis based on the RdRp clustered IMNV with Giardia lamblia virus, a member of the family Totiviridae. Based on these findings, IMNV may be a unique member of the Totiviridae or may represent a new dsRNA virus family that infects invertebrate hosts.
Acute hepatopancreatic necrosis disease (AHPND), which has also been referred to as early mortality syndrome (EMS), initially emerged as a destructive disease of cultured shrimp species in Asia in 2009. The pathogen associated with the disease, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, subsequently spread to the Western Hemisphere and emerged in Mexico in early 2013. The spread to the Western Hemisphere is a major concern to shrimp producers in the region. To date, the only peer-reviewed published method for determining whether mortalities are due to AHPND is through histological examination. A novel PCR detection method was employed to assess samples from Mexico in order to confirm the presence of the pathogen in this country. This manuscript details the detection methods used to confirm the presence of AHPND in Mexico. Both immersion and per os challenge studies were used to expose the Penaeus vannamei to the bacteria in order to induce the disease. Histological analysis confirmed AHPND status following the challenge studies. Also provided are the details of the molecular test by PCR that was used for screening candidate V. parahaemolyticus isolates. A rapid PCR assay for detection of AHPND may help with early detection and help prevent the spread of AHPND to other countries.
NOTE In situ hybridization demonstrates thatABSTRACT: Infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV) was recently found to be the cause of necrosis in the skeletal muscle of farm-reared Litopenaeus vannamei from northeastern Brazil. Nucleic acid extracted from semi-purified IMN virions showed that this virus contains a 7.5 kb RNA genome. A cDNA library was constructed, and a clone, designated as IMNV-317, was labeled with digoxigenin-11-dUTP and used as a gene probe for in situ hybridization (ISH). This probe specifically detected IMNV in infected tissues. To determine the susceptibility of 3 species of penaeid shrimp (L. vannamei, L. stylirostris, Penaeus monodon) to IMNV infection, juveniles were injected with purified virions and observed for clinical signs of infection and mortality over a 4 wk period. All L. vannamei exhibited typical lesions after 6 d, and lesions were visible in all L. stylirostris by Day 13. The clinical signs of opaque muscle were not seen in P. monodon, due to their highly pigmented exoskeleton precluding visual detection of lesions. Moderate mortality (20%) occurred in infected L. vannamei. No mortalities were observed in either L. stylirostris or P. monodon. Histological examination and ISH indicated that all 3 species are susceptible to IMNV infection. Using ISH, IMNV was detected in tissues including the skeletal muscle, lymphoid organ, hindgut, and phagocytic cells within the hepatopancreas and heart. In all 3 species, skeletal muscle cells produced the strongest ISH reactions. Based on the onset of clinical signs of infection and mortality, L. vannamei appears to be the most susceptible of these 3 species to IMNV infection. KEY WORDS: Infectious myonecrosis virus · IMNV · In situ hybridization · Penaeid shrimpResale or republication not permitted without written consent of the publisher
A nodavirus (tentatively named PvNV, Penaeus vannamei nodavirus) that causes muscle necrosis in P. vannamei was found in Belize in . From 2004, shrimp samples collected from Belize exhibited clinical signs, white, opaque lesions in the tails and histopathology similar to those of shrimps infected by infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV). Histological examination revealed multifocal necrosis and hemocytic fibrosis in the skeletal muscle. In addition, basophilic, cytoplasmic inclusions were found in striated muscle, lymphoid organ and connective tissues. However, IMNV was not detected in these shrimps by either RT-PCR or in situ hybridization, suggesting that these lesions may be caused by another RNA virus. Thus, a cDNA library was constructed from total RNA extracted from hemolymph collected from infected shrimp. One clone (designated PvNV-4) with a 928 bp insert was sequenced and found to be similar (69% similarity when comparing the translated amino acid sequences) to the capsid protein gene of MrNV (Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus). The insert of PvNV-4 was labeled with digoxigenin-11-deoxyuridine triphosphate (dUTP) and hybridized to tissue sections of P. vannamei with muscle necrosis collected in Belize and from laboratory bioassays. The samples were positive for PvNV infection. Positively reacting tissues included skeletal muscle, connective tissues, the lymphoid organ, and hemocytes in the heart and gills. In addition, we experimentally infected both P. vannamei and P. monodon with PvNV prepared from Belize samples. A nested RT-PCR assay developed from the PvNV-4 cloned sequence showed that both species are susceptible to PvNV infection. 75: 183-190, 2007 MrNV. To provide diagnostic tools, we have developed an in situ hybridization method and a nested RT-PCR assay which are specific for P. vannamei nodavirus (PvNV). MATERIALS AND METHODSShrimp, PvNV isolate, generation of inoculum and infected tissues. Shrimp taxonomy was according to Holthius (1980). The PvNV-infected tissues used in this study was obtained in 2005 in Belize from farmraised Penaeus vannamei that were exhibiting signs of muscle necrosis. The inoculum was made from the heads of these shrimp, which were stored frozen at -70°C at the University of Arizona. Soft tissues were minced, homogenized in TN buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, 400 mM NaCl, pH 7.4), and clarified by centrifugation at 3000 × g for 30 min. The tissue homogenate was aliquoted and stored at -70°C. Prior to injection, the tissue homogenate was diluted (v/v 1:20) with 2% saline, filtered through a 0.45 µm membrane, and injected into the muscle of specific-pathogen-free (SPF) P. vannamei Kona stock, Oceanic Institute, Hawaii, Wyban et al. 1992). To generate the infected tissues for feeding experiments, the inoculated shrimp were maintained in seawater at 26 to 28°C for 4 wk. At termination, shrimp were collected and stored at -70°C. Samples of the cephalothoraces were fixed in Davidson's alcohol formalin acetic acid (AFA) fixative for 24 h, then changed to 70% ethanol ...
Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were produced against white spot syndrome virus (WSSV) of penaeid shrimp. The virus isolate used for immunization was obtained from China in 1994 and was passaged in Penaeus vannamei. The 4 hybridomas selected for characterization all produced MAbs that reacted with the 28 kD structural protein by Western blot analysis. The MAbs tested in dot-immunoblot assays were capable of detecting the virus in hemolymph samples collected from moribund shrimp during an experimentally induced WSSV infection. Two of the MAbs were chosen for development of serological detection methods for WSSV. The 2 MAbs detected WSSV infections in fresh tissue impression smears using a fluorescent antibody for final detection. A rapid immunohistochemical method using the MAbs on Davidson's fixed tissue sections identified WSSV-infected cells and tissues in a pattern similar to that seen with digoxigenin-labeled WSSV-specific gene probes. A whole mount assay of pieces of fixed tissue without paraffin embedding and sectioning was also successfully used for detecting the virus. None of the MAbs reacted with hemolymph from specific pathogen-free shrimp or from shrimp infected with infectious hypodermal and hematopoietic necrosis virus, yellow head virus or Taura syndrome virus. In Western blot analysis, the 2 MAbs did not detect any serological differences among WSSV isolates from China, Thailand, India, Texas, South Carolina or Panama. Additionally, the MAbs did not detect a serological difference between WSSV isolated from penaeid shrimp and WSSV isolated from freshwater crayfish. KEY WORDS: White spot syndrome virus · Monoclonal antibodies · ImmunodetectionResale or republication not permitted without written consent of the publisher
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