Abstract

BackgroundNumerous prevalence studies of Vibrio spp. infection in fish have been extensively reported worldwide, including Malaysia. Unfortunately, information on the prevalence of Vibrio spp. in groupers (Epinephelus spp.) is limited. In this study, groupers obtained from nine farms located at different geographical regions in Malaysia were sampled for the presence of pathogenic Vibrio spp. and their susceptibility profiles against seven antibiotics.ResultsOut of 270 grouper samples, 195 (72%) were detected with the presence of Vibrio spp. Vibrio communis showed highest prevalence in grouper (28%), followed by V. parahaemolyticus (25%), V. alginolyticus (19%), V. vulnificus (14%), V. rotiferianus (3%), Vibrio sp. (3%), V. campbellii (2%), V. mytili (2%), V. furnissii (2%), V. harveyi (1%), V. tubiashii (1%), V. fluvialis (0.3%) and V. diabolicus (0.3%). Assessment on the antibiotic susceptibility profiles of the Vibrio spp. revealed that majority of the isolates were susceptible to tetracycline, streptomycin, erythromycin and bacitracin, but resistance to ampicillin, penicillin G and vancomycin. The mean MAR index of the Vibrio isolates was 0.51, with 85% of the isolates showed MAR index value of higher than 0.2. Results indicate that the Vibrio spp. were continuously exposed to antibiotics. Furthermore, the plasmid profiles of Vibrio spp. showed that 38.7% of the isolates harbored plasmid with molecular weight of more than 10 kb, while 61.3% were without plasmid. During curing process, Vibrio spp. lost their plasmid, but remained resistant to ampicillin, penicillin G, bacitracin and vancomycin while a few isolates remained resistant to erythromycin, streptomycin and tetracycline. The results suggested that the resistance to antibiotics in isolated Vibrio spp. might be due to chromosomal and plasmid borne.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates the prevalence of Vibrio spp. in groupers and the distribution of multidrug resistance strains that could be of concern to the farmers in Malaysia. In addition, data from this study can be further used in fish disease management plan.

Highlights

  • Numerous prevalence studies of Vibrio spp. infection in fish have been extensively reported worldwide, including Malaysia

  • Molecular methods were used for the identification of bacteria species based on the specific molecular markers. pyrH genes is one of the common markers used in PCR and multi-locus sequence analysis (MLSA) to determine the taxonomic diversity of Vibrio spp

  • Clinical signs and gross lesions of groupers A total of 150 (56%) of the 270 groupers were collected from nine farms were healthy and the remaining 120 (44%) were unhealthy due to observed clinical signs and gross lesions

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Summary

Introduction

Numerous prevalence studies of Vibrio spp. infection in fish have been extensively reported worldwide, including Malaysia. Groupers obtained from nine farms located at different geographical regions in Malaysia were sampled for the presence of pathogenic Vibrio spp. and their susceptibility profiles against seven antibiotics. Disease outbreaks following infections by pathogenic bacteria have been reported among various cultured marine fish such as grouper (Epinephelus spp.), pompano (Trachinotus blochii) and Asian seabass (Lates calcarifer) [3, 15, 44, 60]. PyrH genes is one of the common markers used in PCR and multi-locus sequence analysis (MLSA) to determine the taxonomic diversity of Vibrio spp. Various studies have reported on the efficiency of the pyrH gene in identification and differentiation of Vibrio spp. The pyrH gene has high discriminatory power at species level due to slight overlapped of intraspecies and interspecies distance [48, 59]

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