| Literature DB >> 28462930 |
Anna Toffan1, Francesco Pascoli1, Tobia Pretto2,3, Valentina Panzarin1, Miriam Abbadi1, Alessandra Buratin1, Rosita Quartesan1, Daniel Gijón4, Francesc Padrós5.
Abstract
Viral nervous necrosis (VNN) certainly represents the biggest challenge for the sustainability and the development of aquaculture. A large number of economically relevant fish species have proven to be susceptible to the disease. Conversely, gilthead sea bream has generally been considered resistant to VNN, although it has been possible to isolate the virus from apparently healthy sea bream and sporadically from affected larvae and postlarvae. Unexpectedly, in 2014-2016 an increasing number of hatcheries in Europe have experienced mass mortalities in sea bream larvae. Two clinical outbreaks were monitored over this time span and findings are reported in this paper. Despite showing no specific clinical signs, the affected fish displayed high mortality and histological lesions typical of VNN. Fish tested positive for betanodavirus by different laboratory techniques. The isolates were all genetically characterized as being reassortant strains RGNNV/SJNNV. A genetic characterization of all sea bream betanodaviruses which had been isolated in the past had revealed that the majority of the strains infecting sea bream are actually RGNNV/SJNNV. Taken together, this information strongly suggests that RGNNV/SJNNV betanodavirus possesses a particular tropism to sea bream, which can pose a new and unexpected threat to the Mediterranean aquaculture.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28462930 PMCID: PMC5411978 DOI: 10.1038/srep46755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Acute lesions.
(a) IHC Sea bream larvae of 16 days of age from farm 1 (2014–15). Bright red immunoprecipitates are visible in the telencephalon, mesencephalon, diencephalon (hypothalamus) and cerebellum. IHC labeling is generally higher in larvae and post larvae than in juveniles. 40 magnification. (b) IHC of 16 day-old larvae from farm 1 (2014–15). Massive immunoprecipitates in the telencephalon, mesencephalon, diencephalon (hypothalamus). Remarkably, no vacuolization is noticeable. 250 magnification. (c) Sea bream postlarvae of 45 days of age from farm 1 (2014–15). Vacuolation in the inner nuclear layer of the retina (arrow). H&E 100 magnification. (d) IHC of a 55 day-old seabream eye collected in farm 1 (2014–15). Immunoprecipitates are evident in the inner nuclear layer and the ganglion cell layer (arrow) of the retina. 250 magnification.
Figure 2Chronic lesions.
(a) Sea bream postlarvae, 47 days of age from farm 2 (2015–16). Development of apparently inflammatory response (gliosis) and neuronal necrosis but with little accompanying vacuolization. Methacrylate section. Toluidine Blue stain (TB). 400 magnification. (b) IHC of 6-month old juvenile sea bream juvenile from farm 1 (2014–15). Mesencephalon (optic tectum) IHC signal is reduced to some small foci surrounding vacuoles. 100 magnification. (c) Eye of a 47 day-old postlarvae from farm 2 (2015–16). Alteration of the inner nuclear layer of the retina. Some cells display necrotic changes but only few of them present cytoplasmic vacuolation. Methacrylate section. Toluidine Blue stain (TB). 400 magnification. (d) IHC of 6-month old juvenile sea bream from farm 1 (2014–15). Cluster of immunoprecipitates is visible in the inner nuclear layer next to the emergence of the optic nerve. 100 magnification.
Figure 3Lesions in past VER outbreaks in sea bream.
(a) VNN-associated damage in the encephalon and in the retina (arrows) of a 45 day-old seabream from samples collected during the Cyprus outbreak in 2010. H&E. 40 magnification. (b) IHC of a 45 day-old seabream brain from another specimen collected during the Cyprus outbreak (2010). Immunoprecipitates are visible in the telencephalon (olfactory lobes, preoptic nucleus) in mesencephalon (tectum opticum and tegmentum) and retina (arrows). 40 magnification. (c) 43 day-old Sea bream postlarvae collected during the 2005 outbreak in Portugal. Acute, severe and extensive lesions. Extensive vacuolation is noticeable in the telencephalon, mesencephalon, diencephalon (hypothalamus) and medulla oblongata. Methacrylate section. Toluidine Blue stain (TB). 40 magnification. (d) 43 day-old Sea bream postlarvae collected during the 2005 outbreak in Portugal. Higher magnification of the lesions observed in (c). Notice the presence of a large number of cells with large vacuoles within the cytoplasm in the metencephalon and also in the mesencephalon. Methacrylate section. Toluidine Blue stain (TB). 400 magnification.
Serological results.
| Origin | Fish age | ID serum | SN titre | IF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive reference serum SJNNV | Adult | 24/ITT12 n. 14 | 1:320 | 1:100 |
| Farm 1 | Broodstock | 14ITT/464.3 | 1:80 | Negative |
| Farm 1 | Broodstock | 14ITT/464.5 | 1:40 | Negative |
| Farm 1 | Broodstock | 14ITT/464.8 | 1:80 | Negative |
| Farm 1 | Broodstock | 14ITT/492.8 | 1:40 | Negative |
| Farm 1 | Broodstock | 15ITT/42.18 | 1:80 | Negative |
| Farm 1 | Broodstock | 15ITT/46.19 | 1:40 | Negative |
| Farm 1 | Broodstock | 15ITT/46.45 | 1:40 | Negative |
Titers (expressed as limit dilution) of broodstock sea bream sera samples from farm 1were evaluated with serum neutralization (SN) and Immunofluorescence (IF).
Figure 4RNA1 Phylogenetic tree.
ML phylogenetic tree based on partial RNA1 sequences. Sea bream betanodaviruses are highlighted in bold and the country of origin is reported. The farms of provenance of the strains herein described are labeled as follows: farm 1; farm 2. Betanodavirus genotype subdivision is displayed by labeling the branches with different colors (blue: RGNNV; green: BFNNV; yellow: TPNNV; red: SJNNV). The numbers at the nodes represent bootstrap values (only values >70% are reported), while branch lengths are scaled according to the number of nucleotide substitutions per site. The scale bar is reported.
Figure 5RNA2 Phylogenetic tree.
ML phylogenetic tree based on partial RNA2 sequences. Sea bream betanodaviruses are highlighted in bold and the country of origin is reported. The farms of provenance of the strains herein described are labeled as follows: farm 1; farm 2. Betanodavirus genotype subdivision is displayed by labeling the branches with different colors (blue: RGNNV; green: BFNNV; yellow: TPNNV; red: SJNNV). The numbers at the nodes represent bootstrap values (only values >70% are reported), while branch lengths are scaled according to the number of nucleotide substitutions per site. The scale bar is reported.
List of sea bream betanodavirus isolates included in the phylogenetic analysis.
| ID isolate | Year | Age | Fish status | Origin | Clinical signs | GenBank Acc. No. | Genotype | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RNA1 | RNA2 | ||||||||
| VNNV/S.aurata/Farm1/461-1/Nov2014a | 2014 | Larvae | Farmed | Farm 1 | Present | KY354688 | KY354702 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/Farm1/461-10/Nov2014a | 2014 | Larvae | Farmed | Farm 1 | Present | KY354690 | KY354703 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/Farm1/461-3/Nov2014a | 2014 | Larvae | Farmed | Farm 1 | Present | KY354689 | KY354701 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/Farm1/127-1/Mar2015a | 2015 | Larvae | Farmed | Farm 1 | Present | KY354691 | KY354704 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/Farm2/575/Nov2015a | 2015 | Larvae | Farmed | Farm 2 | Present | KY354692 | KY354705 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/Farm2/165-6/Mar2016a | 2016 | Larvae | Farmed | Farm 2 | Present | KY354693 | KY354706 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/I/586/Nov2005b | 2005 | n.a. | EFS | Italy | Absent | KY354682 | KY354698 | RGNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/I/425-10/Sep2008b | 2008 | Juvenile | Farmed | Italy | Absent | KY354681 | KY354694 | RGNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/I/69-4/Mar2009b | 2009 | Larvae | Farmed | Italy | Present | KY354683 | KY354695 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/I/179-3/May2009b | 2009 | Larvae | Farmed | Italy | n.a. | KY354684 | KY354696 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/CY/203-3/May2010b | 2010 | Larvae | Farmed | Cyprus | Present | KY354685 | KY354697 | RGNNV/SJNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/ES/332-1/Aug2010b | 2010 | Larvae | Farmed | Spain | Absent | KY354686 | KY354699 | RGNNV | This work |
| VNNV/S.aurata/ES/339/Aug2010b | 2010 | Larvae | Farmed | Spain | Absent | KY354687 | KY354700 | RGNNV | This work |
| Sa-I-97c | 1997 | n.a. | Farmed | Italy | Absent | AM085312 | AM085337 | SJNNV/RGNNV | Toffolo |
| Sa-I-00c | 2000 | n.a. | Farmed | Italy | Absent | AM085314 | AM085338 | RGNNV | Toffolo |
| SpSa-IAusc156.03c | 2003 | Larvae | Farmed | Spain | Present | FJ803916 | FJ803921 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Olveira |
| PtSa-IAusc61.05c | 2005 | Larvae | Farmed | Portugal | Present | FJ803912 | FJ803918 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Olveira |
| PtSa-IAusc74.05c | 2005 | Larvae | Farmed | Portugal | Present | FJ803913 | FJ803919 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Olveira |
| 24.1.2005c | 2005 | Larvae | Farmed | Portugal | Present | JN189844 | JN189916 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Panzarin |
| 37.2.2005c | 2005 | Larvae | Farmed | Portugal | Present | JN189851 | JN189918 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Panzarin |
| 58.1.2005c | 2005 | Larvae | Farmed | Portugal | Present | JN189855 | JN189917 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Panzarin |
| 324.1.2006c | 2006 | n.a. | Farmed | Spain | Present | JN189848 | JN189944 | RGNNV | Panzarin |
| 324.2.2006c | 2006 | n.a. | Farmed | Spain | Present | JN189820 | JN189972 | RGNNV | Panzarin |
| 82.4.2007c | 2007 | Larvae | Farmed | Italy | Present | JX290516 | JX290518 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Vendramin |
| 570.16.2008c | 2008 | n.a. | Wild | Italy | Absent | JN189811 | JN189965 | RGNNV | Panzarin |
| 250.1.2009c | 2009 | Larvae | Farmed | Cyprus | Present | JN189815 | JN189920 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Panzarin |
| 250.2.2009c | 2009 | Larvae | Farmed | Cyprus | Present | JN189845 | JN189925 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Panzarin |
| 292.1.2.2009c | 2009 | Larvae | Farmed | Greece | Present | JN189831 | JN189922 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Panzarin |
| 292.3.4.2009c | 2009 | Larvae | Farmed | Greece | Present | JN189832 | JN189923 | RGNNV/SJNNV | Panzarin |
The following information is reported: years of isolation, age of the specimen, fish status, country or farm of origin, presence of clinical signs, GenBank accession numbers for RNA1 and RNA2 sequences and reference.
n.a.: not available.
EFS: extensive farming system.
aSea bream betanodavirus sequences obtained from diseased specimens from Farm 1 and Farm 2.
bSea bream betanodavirus sequences obtained from viral isolates stored at IZSVe repository.
cSea bream betanodavirus sequences retrieved from GenBank.