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Cytophaga psychrophila, the causative agent of bacterial cold-water disease in salmonid fish

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Title Cytophaga psychrophila, the causative agent of bacterial cold-water disease in salmonid fish
Names Holt, Richard Allen (creator)
Fryer, J. L. (advisor)
Date Issued 1987-08-13 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1988
Abstract Morphological, cultural, biochemical and serological characteristics of
33 bacterial strains, thought to be similar to Cytophaga psychrophila, the
causative agent of bacterial cold-water disease were compared. Bacterial
strains identified as C. psychrophila were obtained from diseased salmonids
collected at widely separated geographic locations, and from fish with
pathological signs different from bacterial cold-water disease. These included
coho salmon with spinal deformities and nervous tissue involvement, chinook
salmon with necrotic white liver or mixed infections (viral anemia), and
rainbow trout with gill lesions. Cytophaga psychrophila was also found in
tissues of sexually mature adult salmon including ovarian fluid. Presence of
the bacterium in ovarian fluid suggests an opportunity for vertical
transmission. Cytophaga psychrophila strains exhibited gliding motility, were
actively proteolytic and grew only at temperatures of 25°C or lower. All strains
possessed common antigens but serological differences were detected.
Shieh, tryptone-yeast extract and modified Cytophaga broth provided
improved growth when compared to Cytophaga broth. The percent guanine
plus cytosine in DNA was 34.3. Cellular protein patterns determined by
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and fatty acid composition were found to
be similar for all C. psychrophilia strains but distinctly different from other
cytophagals. Flexibacter aurantiacus strains were sufficiently different from
C. psychrophila, to be considered separate species. The existence of strains with
high or low virulence were demonstrated by infectivity experiments.
The effect of water temperature on progress of infection in three species
of salmonids was determined. Mortality was highest for all three species at
temperatures of 3-15°C but decreased progressively up to 23°C. The mean
time from infection to death was shortest at 15°C which correlates with the
most rapid doubling time for this bacterium in culture medium. Deaths from
experimental infections of C.psychrophila could be prevented by exposure of
infected steelhead trout to a water temperature of 22°C.
Vaccination by intraperitoneal injection of formalin-killed cells and
adjuvant or by direct immersion in formalin-killed cells effectively protected
coho salmon against experimental challenge with this bacterium. With the
immersion method, best protection was obtained in fish at 1.5 g mean weight
or larger. Serological type of C. psychrophila, incorporated in bacterin
preparations influenced efficacy of the bacterin.
Genre Thesis
Topic Salmonidae -- Diseases
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/10002

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