Infection in Opaleye ().

Vet Pathol

US Geological Survey, Marrowstone Marine Field Station, Nordland, WA, USA.

Published: March 2020

Over a 3-year-period, 17 wild-caught opaleye () housed in a public display aquarium were found dead without premonitory signs. Grossly, 4 animals had pinpoint brown or black foci on coelomic adipose tissue. Histologically, liver, spleen, heart, and posterior kidney had mesomycetozoan granulomas in all cases; other organs were less commonly infected. Four opaleye had goiter; additional substantial lesions were not identified. Granulomas surrounded melanized debris, leukocytes, and mesomycetozoa represented by folded membranes (collapsed schizont walls), intact schizonts (50- to >200 µm in diameter with a multilaminate membrane), plasmodia (budding from schizonts or free in tissue), or rarely germinal tubes (budding from schizonts). was grown from fresh tissues in tissue explant broth cultures of the heart, liver, and/or spleen. Polymerase chain reaction using 18S ribosomal DNA primers amplified a 1730-bp region, and the DNA sequence was most similar to , which is often associated with freshwater aquaculture fish.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0300985819900015DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

budding schizonts
8
infection opaleye
4
opaleye 3-year-period
4
3-year-period wild-caught
4
wild-caught opaleye
4
opaleye housed
4
housed public
4
public display
4
display aquarium
4
aquarium dead
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!