Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Plankton-mediated oral delivery of Vibrio anguillarum vaccine to juvenile ayu.

1989; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 55; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2331/suisan.55.35

ISSN

1349-998X

Autores

Kenji Kawai, Shozo Yamamoto, Riichi Kusuda,

Tópico(s)

Aquaculture Nutrition and Growth

Resumo

Juvenile ayu Plecoglossus altivelis are very sensitive to handling stress. For this reason, it is difficult to immunize the fish using immersion or spray delivery methods. In order to immunize these juvenile ayu against Vibrio anguillarum infection, oral delivery was attempted using feed plankton as a mediator of the vaccine. Two zooplankton species: water flea Moina macrocopa and brackish water rotifer Branchionus plicatilis were examined on their intake of the bacterial antigen. The water flea incorporated three kinds of V. anguillarum antigens: formialin-killed cells (FKC), formalin-killed and washed cells (FWC) and heat-killed cells (HKC), but the rotifer incorporated only HKC. One g of wet live water flea incorporated at most 520μg lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of FKC for 30min when FKC was added at a concentration of 1, 400μg wet FKC/10 water fea/ml culture water. The rotifer lost HKC easily by a few washings. Seventy-three-day-old juvenile ayu weighing an average of 63mg incorporated 0.64μg LPS (81μg wet FKC)/fish in 2h after FKC-fed water flea was given. Both the vaccinated fish by feeding FKC-fed water flea for 22 days and the unvaccinated fish fed untreated water flea were challenged with V. anguillarum by water-borne infection. The vaccinated and unvaccinated fish showed 92.4% and 64.2% survival rate, respectively, and this result indicates juvenile ayu efficiently incorporated the antigen and acquired protective immunity against vibriosis.

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