Détail du document
Identifiant

doi:10.1186/s12866-024-03407-0...

Auteur
Chang, Yi-Ting Huang, Wan-Ting Wu, Ping-Lun Kumar, Ramya Wang, Han-Ching Lu, Hsiao-Pei
Langue
en
Editeur

BioMed Central

Catégorie

Mycology

Année

2024

Date de référencement

31/07/2024

Mots clés
aquaculture disease risk low salinity stress gut microbiota microbiota resilience shrimp farming increases susceptibility gut low vibrio infection microbiota shrimp stress
Métrique

Résumé

Background Extreme precipitation events often cause sudden drops in salinity, leading to disease outbreaks in shrimp aquaculture.

Evidence suggests that environmental stress increases animal host susceptibility to pathogens.

However, the mechanisms of how low salinity stress induces disease susceptibility remain poorly understood.

Methods We investigated the acute response of shrimp gut microbiota exposed to pathogens under low salinity stress.

For comparison, shrimp were exposed to Vibrio infection under two salinity conditions: optimal salinity (Control group) and low salinity stress (Stress group).

High throughput 16S rRNA sequencing and real-time PCR were employed to characterize the shrimp gut microbiota and quantify the severity level of Vibrio infection.

Results The results showed that low salinity stress increased Vibrio infection levels, reduced gut microbiota species richness, and perturbed microbial functions in the shrimp gut, leading to significant changes in lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis that promoted the growth of pathogens.

Gut microbiota of the bacterial genera Candidatus Bacilliplasma, Cellvibrio , and Photobacterium were identified as biomarkers of the Stress group.

The functions of the gut microbiota in the Stress group were primarily associated with cellular processes and the metabolism of lipid-related compounds.

Conclusions Our findings reveal how environmental stress, particularly low salinity, increases shrimp susceptibility to Vibrio infection by affecting the gut microbiota.

This highlights the importance of avoiding low salinity stress and promoting gut microbiota resilience to maintain the health of shrimp.

Chang, Yi-Ting,Huang, Wan-Ting,Wu, Ping-Lun,Kumar, Ramya,Wang, Han-Ching,Lu, Hsiao-Pei, 2024, Low salinity stress increases the risk of Vibrio parahaemolyticus infection and gut microbiota dysbiosis in Pacific white shrimp, BioMed Central

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