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Histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed Atlantic salmon

Various agents including Ca. Piscichlamydia salmonis, Ca. Branchiomonas cysticola, Desmozoon lepeophtherii, Paramoeba perurans and salmon gill poxvirus may be associated with complex gill disease in Atlantic salmon. Co-infections involving two or more of these agents are common and histopathological...

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Autores principales: Gjessing, Mona C., Steinum, Terje, Olsen, Anne Berit, Lie, Kai Inge, Tavornpanich, Saraya, Colquhoun, Duncan J., Gjevre, Anne-Gerd
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6776330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31581255
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222926
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author Gjessing, Mona C.
Steinum, Terje
Olsen, Anne Berit
Lie, Kai Inge
Tavornpanich, Saraya
Colquhoun, Duncan J.
Gjevre, Anne-Gerd
author_facet Gjessing, Mona C.
Steinum, Terje
Olsen, Anne Berit
Lie, Kai Inge
Tavornpanich, Saraya
Colquhoun, Duncan J.
Gjevre, Anne-Gerd
author_sort Gjessing, Mona C.
collection PubMed
description Various agents including Ca. Piscichlamydia salmonis, Ca. Branchiomonas cysticola, Desmozoon lepeophtherii, Paramoeba perurans and salmon gill poxvirus may be associated with complex gill disease in Atlantic salmon. Co-infections involving two or more of these agents are common and histopathological interpretation of lesions is therefore challenging. In this study, we developed a semi-quantitative scoring system for examination of histopathological gill lesions in sea-farmed Atlantic salmon suffering from gill disease. Following qPCR analysis of gills sampled for Ca. P. salmonis, Ca. B. cysticola, D. lepeophtherii and P. perurans from 22 geographically spread outbreaks, five cases representing different infectious loads and combinations of agents were chosen for histopathological scoring. Twenty-eight histological features were evaluated and potential associations between individual pathological changes and the occurrence of individual agents studied. The inter-observer agreement in interpretation of histological parameters between the three pathologists involved, was calculated to validate robustness of the scoring scheme. Seventeen histological parameters met the criteria for inter-observer agreement analysis and were included in the calculation. The three most frequent findings were identification of subepithelial leukocytes, epithelial cell hyperplasia and mucus cell hyperplasia. While few findings could be specifically related to particular agents, necrosis in hyperplastic lesions, pustules and necrosis of subepithelial cells appeared to be associated with the presence of Ca. B. cysticola. Further, lesion profiles clearly support the previously identified association between P. perurans and pathological changes associated with AGD. Very few pathological changes were observed in the single case in which Ca. P. salmonis was the dominating agent. Some lesions were only very rarely observed e.g. chloride cell necrosis, epithelial cell apoptosis, lamellar deposition of melanin and haemophagocytosis. The scoring scheme developed and applied was robust and sensitive. A less extensive scheme for routine diagnostic use is proposed.
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spelling pubmed-67763302019-10-12 Histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed Atlantic salmon Gjessing, Mona C. Steinum, Terje Olsen, Anne Berit Lie, Kai Inge Tavornpanich, Saraya Colquhoun, Duncan J. Gjevre, Anne-Gerd PLoS One Research Article Various agents including Ca. Piscichlamydia salmonis, Ca. Branchiomonas cysticola, Desmozoon lepeophtherii, Paramoeba perurans and salmon gill poxvirus may be associated with complex gill disease in Atlantic salmon. Co-infections involving two or more of these agents are common and histopathological interpretation of lesions is therefore challenging. In this study, we developed a semi-quantitative scoring system for examination of histopathological gill lesions in sea-farmed Atlantic salmon suffering from gill disease. Following qPCR analysis of gills sampled for Ca. P. salmonis, Ca. B. cysticola, D. lepeophtherii and P. perurans from 22 geographically spread outbreaks, five cases representing different infectious loads and combinations of agents were chosen for histopathological scoring. Twenty-eight histological features were evaluated and potential associations between individual pathological changes and the occurrence of individual agents studied. The inter-observer agreement in interpretation of histological parameters between the three pathologists involved, was calculated to validate robustness of the scoring scheme. Seventeen histological parameters met the criteria for inter-observer agreement analysis and were included in the calculation. The three most frequent findings were identification of subepithelial leukocytes, epithelial cell hyperplasia and mucus cell hyperplasia. While few findings could be specifically related to particular agents, necrosis in hyperplastic lesions, pustules and necrosis of subepithelial cells appeared to be associated with the presence of Ca. B. cysticola. Further, lesion profiles clearly support the previously identified association between P. perurans and pathological changes associated with AGD. Very few pathological changes were observed in the single case in which Ca. P. salmonis was the dominating agent. Some lesions were only very rarely observed e.g. chloride cell necrosis, epithelial cell apoptosis, lamellar deposition of melanin and haemophagocytosis. The scoring scheme developed and applied was robust and sensitive. A less extensive scheme for routine diagnostic use is proposed. Public Library of Science 2019-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6776330/ /pubmed/31581255 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222926 Text en © 2019 Gjessing et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gjessing, Mona C.
Steinum, Terje
Olsen, Anne Berit
Lie, Kai Inge
Tavornpanich, Saraya
Colquhoun, Duncan J.
Gjevre, Anne-Gerd
Histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed Atlantic salmon
title Histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed Atlantic salmon
title_full Histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed Atlantic salmon
title_fullStr Histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed Atlantic salmon
title_full_unstemmed Histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed Atlantic salmon
title_short Histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed Atlantic salmon
title_sort histopathological investigation of complex gill disease in sea farmed atlantic salmon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6776330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31581255
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222926
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