Abstract

Elevations in the non-specific defence mechanisms were noted after trout were injected or bathed in glucan solutions or in solutions containing the glucan combined with a bacterin, Y. ruckeri O-antigen. Periodic non-lethal blood samples showed that neutrophil activity as evaluated by the ability of the cells to stick to glass and produce oxidative radicals as detected by the nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) assay, rose after treatments within 2 days. Elevated phagocytosis, assessed by increased uptake of glutaraldehyde-treated sheep red blood cells, also confirmed these kinetics. The numbers of circulatory glass-adherent cells from fish given the glucans by injection or bath was twice the level of the sham-treated controls; likewise the phagocytic ratio also was two-fold higher. In following the kinetics of the non-specific defensive responses, the injection of the glucan caused an immediate, slight reduction of NBT staining cells and numbers of leukocytes before the 2–3 day rise; this was not obvious in the fish given the glucan by bath. The glucans could play an important role in the prevention of diseases in fish culture.

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