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Factors affecting the Ceratomyxa shasta infectious cycle and transmission between polychaete and salmonid hosts

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Title Factors affecting the Ceratomyxa shasta infectious cycle and transmission between polychaete and salmonid hosts
Names Bjork, Sarah J. (creator)
Bartholomew, Jerri L. (advisor)
Date Issued 2010-04-14T17:56:01Z (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2010
Abstract Ceratomyxa shasta is a myxozoan parasite that infects salmonid fishes
causing the disease ceratomyxosis that is characterized by severe hemorrhage and
necrosis of the intestine and death of the fish host. Ceratomyxa shasta is endemic to
the Pacific Northwestern United States and Canada, where epizootics are reported for
both wild and hatchery reared fish. Identification of factors affecting the infectious
cycle of C. shasta is complicated by its obligate two host lifecycle. The parasite
infects the fish as an actinospore and develops into a myxospore in the fish host. The
myxospore infects the freshwater polychaete, Manayunkia speciosa where the
actinospore develops. A system for maintaining and infecting M. speciosa in the
laboratory was developed and a series of laboratory studies tested the effects of
temperature on polychaete survival, actinospore release and longevity. Temperature
did not affect polychaete survival, but actinospore release occurred earlier and in
greater abundance at the higher temperature, whereas actinospore longevity and
temperature had an inverse relationship. A laboratory flow experiment tested the
effects of two flow rates on M. speciosa survival, infection prevalence and fish
infection. Polychaetes had higher survival at the fast flow with low infection
prevalences compared to polychaetes held in the slow flow treatment. Susceptible
rainbow trout became infected when exposed to just 1 actinospore per fish. Fatal
infections in these fish were documented at 5 actinospores per fish. Infection
prevalence and mean day to death increased with increasing actinospore dose. Fish
size did not affect the infective dose; however, parasite dilution did have an effect.
Actinospores were labeled with a fluorescent stain and C. shasta attachment to the
gills was identified. In situ hybridization of histological sections was used to locate
the parasite as it migrated from the gill epithelium, to proliferation in the blood
vessel, and migration to the intestine. Quantitative PCR was used to quantify the
abundance of the parasite in the blood. When the infection of susceptible and
Resistant Chinook salmon were compared, there were no differences in actinospore
penetration into the gills but resistant Chinook salmon did eliminate parasites in the
blood after 2 weeks and isolate parasites in foci of inflammation in the intestine.
Resistant Chinook salmon more effectively regulated an immune response to
infection, effectively cleared the parasite showed evidence of recovery after infection.
The research presented here has been fundamental in performing C. shasta infection
studies in the laboratory in the fish and polychaete hosts. It has greatly affected our
understanding of host parasite interactions including the infective dose for rainbow
trout and the recognition of the gills and blood as early sites of C. shasta infection. It
has also revealed differences in fish host response to infection including the
characterization of a recovery from C. shasta infection.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Ceratomyxa shasta
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/15435

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