By
Charmain Tan Courcelle MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Vaccine and pharmaceutical combinations are being
used in aquaculture production as the first line of defense
against disease-causing organisms. Sometimes
catfish producers lose some of their stock to disease
because an effective treatment does not exist or resistance
has developed to available drugs. Scientists at Mississippi
State University's College of Veterinary Medicine, in
association with the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry
Experiment Station, are using biotechnology to develop and
test vaccines against some important catfish
diseases. The new
vaccines may provide animal health benefits and increase
catfish production, which are two of MAFES' research
goals. One
control agent being developed is a live-attenuated vaccine
for the bacterium Edwardsiella ictaluri, the cause of
enteric septicemia of catfish. This type of vaccine is a
live bacteria modified in the laboratory so it is unable to
cause disease. ESC is
a major economic problem for the catfish industry, causing
annual losses on nearly all catfish farms. Fingerlings
infected with the bacteria have a characteristic
"hole-in-the-head" lesion that appears as a red ulcer
between the eyes. Other symptoms include large red or white
skin lesions, a distended abdomen, bulging eyes and
pale-colored gills. ESC
reduces catfish feeding, and once fish are sick, there is no
way to treat them with oral antibiotics. Because
ESC-infected catfish are more vulnerable to other diseases,
the preferred treatment is prevention through vaccination
and improved management. "The
first vaccine that was developed against ESC was a killed
vaccine," Mark Lawrence, CVM researcher, said. "This
treatment gave inconsistent results, so it never gained
acceptance among producers." Catfish
treated with killed ESC vaccine developed antibodies to a
membrane sugar found on the bacteria. But because the
bacterium lives part of its life cycle inside a type of host
catfish cell where it is hidden from these antibodies, even
when catfish produce high antibody numbers, they are not
always protected from ESC, Lawrence said. Defense
against pathogens that live within cells relies on the
activity of T-cells, a type of white blood cell, Lawrence
explained. Antigens &endash; proteins from invading bacteria
or viruses &endash; are present on the surfaces of infected
cells. T-cells recognize these antigens and cause a chain of
events clearing the host of infection. Once an animal has
been exposed to a pathogen, its body develops "immunological
memory" that protects against later infections. Unlike
killed vaccines that rely on dead microorganisms,
live-attenuated vaccines can reproduce within a vaccinated
animal's cells and stimulate T-cell immunity without
actually causing disease, Lawrence said. This type of
vaccine strategy may help to control ESC. To
develop a live-attenuated vaccine, Lawrence is first
identifying and characterizing some of the genes responsible
for E. ictaluri virulence. He has developed a modified form
of the bacteria that is less able to cause ESC disease in
catfish. This less-virulent mutant could serve as a
potential live vaccine. "We've
tested one mutant of E. ictaluri in catfish and observed
that it takes 100,000 times more bacteria to cause ESC death
using this mutant E. ictaluri compared to wild-type (normal)
E. ictaluri," Lawrence said. He is
now working to further define how certain genes contribute
to the bacteria's ability to cause disease. This will help
researchers make better selections in vaccine
design. CVM
scientist Larry Hanson is taking a different approach in the
fight against ESC. He is using channel catfish viruses to
deliver pieces of E. ictaluri that may induce immunity in
catfish. "Our
big focus has been to identify protective antigens (proteins
that cause a good immune response) of E. ictaluri and move
these into channel catfish virus," Hanson said. In
1996, Hanson and a graduate student built a less virulent
channel catfish virus and he is trying to add to this
vaccine an antigen that causes immunity to ESC as
well. "By
carrying a small fragment of E. ictaluri DNA in with channel
catfish virus, we may be able to express bacterial proteins
that stimulate T-cell immunity," Hanson said. "This form of
immune response is important for clearing this
bacterium." Hanson
has developed a genetic tool to screen for potential
protective antigens that could induce an effective immune
response against ESC. He has some encouraging results, and
it appears he will one day be able to transmit ESC immunity
to catfish using channel catfish virus as a vaccine
carrier. Released:
July 23, 2001
Animal
Health
Vaccine work
aims to improve
animal health
For more information, contact:
Dr.
Mark Lawrence, (662) 325-1195 or Dr. Larry Hanson, (662)
325-1202
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:37
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm01/010723.html
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