AI Article Synopsis

  • Salmon gill poxvirus (SGPV) is linked to complex gill disease in Norwegian salmon farming and can lead to salmon poxvirus disease (SGPVD), with stress being a significant factor influencing disease onset.
  • An experiment involved injecting Atlantic salmon with hydrocortisone to assess its impact on SGPV levels and disease development compared to a control group receiving a sham injection.
  • Results showed that hydrocortisone-treated fish had higher cortisol and SGPV levels, developed SGPVD symptoms and increased mortality, indicating that elevated cortisol is crucial for SGPVD progression and highlighting the need to reduce stress in salmon farming practices.

Article Abstract

Salmon gill poxvirus (SGPV) infection is a common denominator in many cases of complex gill disease in the Norwegian salmon farming industry and may, as a single agent infection, result in salmon poxvirus disease (SGPVD). Experiences from the field suggest that stress may be a decisive factor for the induction of SGPVD. Here we investigated the effect of stress hormone treatment on SGPV kinetics and disease development. In our experiment, Atlantic salmon were divided into four groups. Two groups of fish received an intraperitoneal injection of hydrocortisone dissolved in a fatty vehicle, whereas fish in the other two groups received a sham injection of the vehicle. After 24 h, one group with hydrocortisone injection and one with sham injection were exposed to dead SGPV-infected fish. Plasma cortisol level, virus kinetics, virus localization, and pathological gill were monitored for 4 weeks post-exposure. Hydrocortisone injected fish displayed higher plasma cortisol and SGPV loads than non-hydrocortisone treated fish. Signs of SGPVD and ensuing mortality appeared only in fish exposed to the virus and injected with hydrocortisone around 2 weeks post-exposure. No clinical signs of disease or mortality were recorded in the other groups. Further, gill histopathology in diseased fish correlated well with SGPV load, with the infection apparently confined to gill epithelial cells. The current findings suggest elevated plasma cortisol being a prerequisite for the development of SGPVD and recommend minimization of stressful farming activities, particularly if SGPV infection has been previously identified.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7206680PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13567-020-00787-9DOI Listing

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