4.6 Article

Commercial Vaccines Do Not Confer Protection against Two Genogroups of Piscirickettsia salmonis, LF-89 and EM-90, in Atlantic Salmon

期刊

BIOLOGY-BASEL
卷 11, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology11070993

关键词

pentavalent vaccine; bacterin vaccine; live attenuated vaccine; monovalent vaccine; Piscirickettsiosis; Salmo salar; cohabitation; sea lice; vaccine efficacy

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资金

  1. CONICYT-Chile through the project FONDECYT [1140772]
  2. Cooperative Research Program Fellowships of OECD-PCI 2015-CONICYT
  3. PUCV
  4. CONICYT-Chile through a Postdoctoral fellowship (Proyecto VRIEA-PUCV Postdoctorado)
  5. PUCV and CONICYT-Chile through a Postdoctoral fellowship (FONDECYT) [3170744]
  6. ANID-Chile through a Postdoctoral fellowship (Fondecyt) [3210502]
  7. National Research and Development Agency of Chile (ANID-Chile) [74200139]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study evaluated the effectiveness of two commercial vaccines against two prevalent genetic variants of Piscirickettsia salmonis. The vaccines were found to be ineffective in providing protection. Further research is needed to explore the impact of pathogen heterogeneity on vaccine efficacy.
Simple Summary Vaccination represents one of the most relevant strategies to prevent and control infectious diseases in aquaculture. However, vaccines have failed to control and prevent Piscirickettsia salmonis, a bacterium that causes large economic losses to the industry. Therefore, we evaluated the performance of two commercial vaccines in Atlantic salmon through a cohabitation challenge (healthy fish were challenged by cohabitation with infected fish) of the two most prevalent and ubiquitous Piscirickettsia genetic variants in Chile. We found no evidence that vaccines confer protection against the LF-89 or EM-90 genogroups in Atlantic salmon. In Atlantic salmon, vaccines have failed to control and prevent Piscirickettsiosis, for reasons that remain elusive. In this study, we report the efficacy of two commercial vaccines developed with the Piscirickettsia salmonis isolates AL100005 and AL 20542 against another two genogroups which are considered highly and ubiquitously prevalent in Chile: LF-89 and EM-90. Two cohabitation trials were performed to mimic field conditions and vaccine performance: (1) post-smolt fish were challenged with a single infection of LF-89, (2) adults were coinfected with EM-90, and a low level coinfection of sea lice. In the first trial, the vaccine delayed smolt mortalities by two days; however, unvaccinated and vaccinated fish did not show significant differences in survival (unvaccinated: 60.3%, vaccinated: 56.7%; p = 0.28). In the second trial, mortality started three days later for vaccinated fish than unvaccinated fish. However, unvaccinated and vaccinated fish did not show significant differences in survival (unvaccinated: 64.6%, vaccinated: 60.2%, p = 0.58). Thus, we found no evidence that the evaluated vaccines confer effective protection against the genogroups LF-89 and EM-90 of P. salmonis with estimated relative survival proportions (RPSs) of -9% and -12%, respectively. More studies are necessary to evaluate whether pathogen heterogeneity is a key determinant of the lack of vaccine efficacy against P. salmonis.

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