AI Article Synopsis

  • - Several fish species face economic losses in aquaculture due to infection by a harmful bacteria called Aeromonas hydrophila, leading to the research and isolation of a novel bacteriophage named AhFM11 that targets this bacteria.
  • - AhFM11 was found to effectively lyse hypervirulent strains of Aeromonas and has a genome size of 168,243 bp without any antibiotic resistance genes, categorizing it under the Straboviridae family.
  • - The application of AhFM11 in treating infection in fish demonstrated high survival rates, suggesting its potential as a safe alternative to antibiotics for controlling bacterial infections in aquaculture.

Article Abstract

Several farmed fish species, including carps, tilapia, salmon, and catfish, have experienced significant economic losses in aquaculture due to motile Aeromonas septicemia caused by Aeromonas hydrophila. In the present study, a novel lytic bacteriophage infecting hypervirulent Aeromonas hydrophila (vAh) was isolated and characterized. This is the first report of a phage against vAh. Phage AhFM11 demonstrated lytic activity against both vAh strains and the A. hydrophila reference strain ATCC 35654. The AhFM11 genome was sequenced and assembled, comprising 168,243 bp with an average G + C content of 41.5%. The genome did not harbor any antibiotic resistance genes. Genomic information along with transmission electron microscopy revealed that phage AhFM11 belongs to the Straboviridae family. Therapeutic application of monophage AhFM11 in fish showed 100% survival in injection, 95% in immersion and 93% in oral feeding of phage top-coated feed. Fish and chicken meat spiked with A. hydrophila and phage showed significant reduction of A. hydrophila. These findings support that phage AhFM11 can be used as a biocontrol agent against vAh as an alternative to antibiotics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11266544PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-67768-2DOI Listing

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