Abstract

The isolation and characterization of bacterial species Lactococcus garvieae, previously unreported in whiteleg shrimp, Penaeus vannamei, has now been identified in the species. The pathogen was recovered from an affected shrimp farm in southern Taiwan. Bacterial characterization first identified the isolate as Gram-positive cocci, and biochemical profiles demonstrated that the causative agent of mortality was 97% L. garvieae. The bacterial cell DNA resulted in amplification of 1522 bp with 99.6% confirmation by PCR analysis. The phylogenetic tree revealed 100% evolutionary similarity among previously isolated strains. Experimental infection further confirmed higher susceptibility of whiteleg shrimp to L. garvieae in waters of lower salinity, particularly 5 ppt, than in higher salinity. Histopathological analysis showed severely damaged hepatopancreas with necrotized, elongated, collapsed tubules, dislodged membranes and granuloma formation in infected shrimp. Transmission electron microscopy observation indicated a hyaluronic acid capsular layer surrounding bacterial cell which is a virulence factor of L. garvieae and likely responsible for immunosuppression and higher mortality of shrimp cultured in lower salinity. Collectively, these findings report the first isolation of L. garvieae from whiteleg shrimp and shed new light on the disease that threatens the highly valuable species and accentuates the need for finding a solution.

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