Abstract

Acute hepatopancreatic necrosis disease (AHPND), a newly emergent farmed penaeid shrimp bacterial disease originally known as early mortality syndrome (EMS), is causing havoc in the shrimp industry. The causative agent of AHPND was found to be a specific strain of bacteria, e.g., Vibrio and Shewanella sps., that contains pVA1 plasmid (63–70 kb) encoding the binary PirAVP and PirBVP toxins. The PirABVP and toxins are the primary virulence factors of AHPND-causing bacteria that mediates AHPND and mortality in shrimp. Hence, in this study using a germ-free brine shrimp model system, we evaluated the PirABVP toxin-mediated infection process at cellular level, including toxin attachment and subsequent toxin-induced damage to the digestive tract. The results showed that, PirABVP toxin binds to epithelial cells of the digestive tract of brine shrimp larvae and produces characteristic symptoms of AHPND. In the PirABVP-challenged brine shrimp larvae, shedding or sloughing of enterocytes in the midgut and hindgut regions was regularly visualized, and the intestinal lumen was filled with moderately electron-dense cells of variable shapes and sizes. In addition, the observed cellular debris in the intestinal lumen of the digestive tract was found to be of epithelial cell origin. The detailed morphology of the digestive tract demonstrates further that the PirABVP toxin challenge produces focal to extensive necrosis and damages epithelial cells in the midgut and hindgut regions, resulting in pyknosis, cell vacuolisation, and mitochondrial and rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) damage to different degrees. Taken together, our study provides substantial evidence that PirABVP toxins bind to the digestive tract of brine shrimp larvae and seem to be responsible for generating characteristic AHPND lesions and damaging enterocytes in the midgut and hindgut regions.

Highlights

  • The outbreak of acute hepatopancreatic necrosis disease (AHPND) caused by Vibrio spp. has been devastating in the cultivation of shrimp in a number of countries [1,2,3,4,5]

  • In this study, using a highly controlled gnotobiotic brine shrimp model system, we aimed to investigate the morphological changes in the guts of germ-free brine shrimp larvae during PirABVP

  • Since it is evident that PirABVP toxins produce pathognomonic Acute hepatopancreatic necrosis disease (AHPND) lesions and damage the digestive tract of brine shrimp larvae, we further studied the detailed morphology of the digestive tract in brine shrimp larvae [18,36]

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Summary

Introduction

The outbreak of acute hepatopancreatic necrosis disease (AHPND) caused by Vibrio spp. has been devastating in the cultivation of shrimp in a number of countries [1,2,3,4,5]. The Vibrio spp. becomes virulent by acquiring a 63–70 kb plasmid (pVA1) encoding the binary PirABVP toxins, which consist of two subunits PirAVP and PirBVP , and is homologous to the Photorhabdus luminescens insect-related (Pir) toxins PirA/PirB [8,9]. The PirABVP toxins are the primary virulence factor of AHPND-causing bacteria that mediates AHPND and mortality in shrimp [10]. Since the impact of these binary toxins are significant in shrimp aquaculture, more research attention is needed to unravel the toxin-mediated infection process at cellular level

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