Abstract

Antibiotics are commonly employed in most fish aquacultures to prevent disease. One major risk in this practice is that antibiotic-resistant pathogens may be selected. Therefore, we wanted to examine the feasibility of producing an economical, non-antibiotic alternative. The microalga Nannochloropsis oculata is an essential phytoplankton used as live feed for fish larvae. We attempted to culture N. oculata in a way that would provide an organism against bacterial pathogenic infection. To test this idea, we constructed an algae-codon-optimized bovine lactoferricin (LFB) fused with a red fluorescent protein (DsRed) driven by a heat-inducible promoter, which is a heat shock protein 70A promoter combined with a ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase small subunit 2′ promoter from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. After electroporation, we examined 491 microalgal clones and generated two stable transgenic lines, each expressing a stable transgene inheritance for at least 26 months. This was confirmed by the positive detection of the mRNA transcript and the protein of LFB-DsRed produced by the transgenic microalgae. To test the efficacy of the antimicrobial peptide LFB, medaka fish ( Oryzias latipes) were adapted from freshwater to seawater and were fed with the transgenic algae by oral-in-tube delivery method. Bacterial infection with 1 × 10 5 Vibrio parahaemolyticus per fish was induced 6 h thereafter by oral-in-tube delivery as well. For medaka fish fed with 1 × 10 8 transgenic algae per fish, the average survival rate after a 24-h period of infection was much higher than that of medaka fed with wild-type algae (85 ± 7.1% versus 5 ± 7.1%). This result suggests that medaka fish fed with the LFB-containing transgenic microalgae will have bactericidal defense against V. parahaemolyticus infection in its digestive tract.

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