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Multi-Organ Transcriptome Response of Lumpfish (Cyclopterus lumpus) to Aeromonas salmonicida Subspecies salmonicida Systemic Infection

Authors :
Setu Chakraborty
Ahmed Hossain
Trung Cao
Hajarooba Gnanagobal
Cristopher Segovia
Stephen Hill
Jennifer Monk
Jillian Porter
Danny Boyce
Jennifer R. Hall
Gabriela Bindea
Surendra Kumar
Javier Santander
Source :
Microorganisms, Vol 10, Iss 11, p 2113 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

Lumpfish is utilized as a cleaner fish to biocontrol sealice infestations in Atlantic salmon farms. Aeromonas salmonicida, a Gram-negative facultative intracellular pathogen, is the causative agent of furunculosis in several fish species, including lumpfish. In this study, lumpfish were intraperitoneally injected with different doses of A. salmonicida to calculate the LD50. Samples of blood, head-kidney, spleen, and liver were collected at different time points to determine the infection kinetics. We determined that A. salmonicida LD50 is 102 CFU per dose. We found that the lumpfish head-kidney is the primary target organ of A. salmonicida. Triplicate biological samples were collected from head-kidney, spleen, and liver pre-infection and at 3- and 10-days post-infection for RNA-sequencing. The reference genome-guided transcriptome assembly resulted in 6246 differentially expressed genes. The de novo assembly resulted in 403,204 transcripts, which added 1307 novel genes not identified by the reference genome-guided transcriptome. Differential gene expression and gene ontology enrichment analyses suggested that A. salmonicida induces lethal infection in lumpfish by uncontrolled and detrimental blood coagulation, complement activation, inflammation, DNA damage, suppression of the adaptive immune system, and prevention of cytoskeleton formation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20762607
Volume :
10
Issue :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Microorganisms
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7d177bf1684074a8a61101718ff060
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10112113