Abstract

Yersinia ruckeri is a salmonid pathogen with widespread distribution in cool-temperate waters including Australia and New Zealand, two isolated environments with recently developed salmonid farming industries. Phylogenetic comparison of 58 isolates from Australia, New Zealand, USA, Chile, Finland and China based on non-recombinant core genome SNPs revealed multiple deep-branching lineages, with a most recent common ancestor estimated at 18 500 years BP (12 355–24 757 95% HPD) and evidence of Australasian endemism. Evolution within the Tasmanian Atlantic salmon serotype O1b lineage has been slow, with 63 SNPs describing the variance over 27 years. Isolates from the prevailing lineage are poorly/non-motile compared to a lineage pre-vaccination, introduced in 1997, which is highly motile but has not been isolated since from epizootics. A non-motile phenotype has arisen independently in Tasmania compared to Europe and USA through a frameshift in fliI, encoding the ATPase of the flagella cluster. We report for the first time lipopolysaccharide O-antigen serotype O2 isolates in Tasmania. This phenotype results from deletion of the O-antigen cluster and consequent loss of high-molecular-weight O-antigen. This phenomenon has occurred independently on three occasions on three continents (Australasia, North America and Asia) as O2 isolates from the USA, China and Tasmania share the O-antigen deletion but occupy distant lineages. Despite the European and North American origins of the Australasian salmonid stocks, the lineages of Y. ruckeri in Australia and New Zealand are distinct from those of the northern hemisphere, suggesting they are pre-existing ancient strains that have emerged and evolved with the introduction of susceptible hosts following European colonization.

Highlights

  • Yersinia ruckeri is a member of the Enterobacteriaceae that causes enteric redmouth (ERM) disease in salmonid fishes and is endemic in cool temperate waters wherever salmonids are found (Barnes, 2011)

  • Our study shows that Yersinia ruckeri, a major pathogen of farmed salmonid fish, has multiple genetically distinct lineages globally and within the Australasian region, but that the lineages in Australia and New Zealand are only distantly related to their northern hemisphere conspecifics, suggesting local endemism

  • The genus Yersinia is a diverse group of species comprising pathogenic and non-pathogenic environmental enterobacteria of substantial animal and human health interest

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Summary

Introduction

Yersinia ruckeri is a member of the Enterobacteriaceae that causes enteric redmouth (ERM) disease in salmonid fishes and is endemic in cool temperate waters wherever salmonids are found (Barnes, 2011). Historical serotyping, based on the scheme of Romalde et al (1993), indicates that a single variant of the lipopolysaccharide This probably reflects the geographical isolation, lack of migratory salmonids and strict inward biosecurity since the introduction of salmonids into Tasmania for aquaculture (Jungalwalla, 1991; Kahn et al, 1999). Vaccination against Y. ruckeri has not been required in New Zealand

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