Abstract

Proliferative kidney disease (PKD) caused by the myxozoan parasite Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae is one of the most serious infectious diseases negatively impacting farmed and wild salmonids throughout Europe and North America. PKD pathogenesis results in a massive B cell proliferation and dysregulation with aberrant immunoglobulin production and plasma cell differentiation along with a decrease in myeloid cells and inhibition of innate pathways. Despite the huge immunopathological reaction in the kidney during infection, under specific conditions, fish can survive and return to full fitness. Fish are unique in this ability to recover renal structure and functionality from extensive tissue damage in contrast to mammals. However, only limited knowledge exists regarding the host immune response coinciding with PKD recovery. Moreover, almost no studies of the immune response during disease recovery exist in fish. We utilized the rainbow trout–T. bryosalmonae system as an immunological model of disease recovery. Our results demonstrated that recovery is preceded by an intense immune response at the transcript level, decreasing parasite burden, and an increased degree of kidney inflammation. Later in the recovery phase, the immune response transpired with a significant decrease in lymphocytes and an increase in myeloid cells. These lymphocytes populations contained lower levels of B cells comparative to the control in the anterior and posterior kidney. Additionally, there was downregulation of several transcripts used as markers for plasma cells (blimp1, igt sec, igm sec, igd sec, and cd38) and T cell subsets (cd4, cd8α, cd8β, and tcrβ). The decrease in these T cell transcripts significantly correlated with decreasing parasite intensity. Alternatively, there was strong upregulation of pax-5 and igt mem. This suggests a change in B cell processes during the recovery phase relative to clinical PKD may be necessary for the host to re-establish homeostasis in terms of an arrest in the dominant antibody like response transitioning to a transcriptional profile associated with resting B cells. The knowledge generated here in combination with earlier studies illuminates the full power of analyzing the entire trajectory of disease from the normal healthy state to recovery enabling the measurement of an immune response to pinpoint a specific disease stage.

Highlights

  • Proliferative kidney disease (PKD), one of the most serious emerging infectious diseases of salmonid fish, is caused by the myxozoan parasite Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae

  • At week 8 P.E, T. bryosalmonae intensity in the posterior kidney (PK) began declining in comparison to week 7 P.E. which was the plateau of parasite intensity when the parasite had appeared to reach its maximum burden within the fish host (Figure 1A)

  • Our results demonstrated that recovery from PKD in young-ofthe-year rainbow trout is preceded by an initial intense immune response in both the anterior and posterior kidney at least on the transcript level, a small decrease in parasite burden, but an increased degree of kidney inflammation involved in tissue regeneration

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Summary

Introduction

Proliferative kidney disease (PKD), one of the most serious emerging infectious diseases of salmonid fish, is caused by the myxozoan parasite Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae. T. bryosalmonae parasites in the form of malacospores are released from bryozoans infecting the fish host via the gills, eventually traveling via the blood to the main target organ, the posterior kidney, for development [4]. Fish malacospores infective to bryozoans are released with the urine [3]. Histopathological alterations observed in the posterior kidney during PKD pathogenesis include a reduction in melanomacrophage centres, proliferative and granulomatous nephritis, necrotizing vasculitis with thrombus formation and a strong hyperplastic response and a systemic deterioration of renal tubules [4, 6]. Parasites can proliferate and cause a reaction in the anterior kidney, the spleen and the liver [4]

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