Abstract

There is a long-standing debate on the attributes of temperature for fish health. We recently showed that thermoregulatory programs exerted through natural behavioural fever drive molecular and cellular responses that contribute to pathogen clearance, inflammation control, and tissue repair. These offered a mechanistic basis for the survival advantage conferred through fever. Herein, we show the attributes of mechanical replication of this fever response. Central to our approach was consideration of both, the maximal temperatures naturally selected by fish after infection, as well as the dynamics of thermal changes induced through this response. Coarse replication of the febrile thermal program as well as shorter truncated thermal schedules offered immune-regulatory capacity. Most notably, these promoted induction of acute inflammation and significant enhancements to pathogen clearance. However, the coarse protocols tested only partially recapitulated enhancements to induction and control of tissue repair. Our findings highlight a promising new alternative to combat infections in fish using a natural, drug-free, sustainable approach.

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