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1.
Vet Pathol ; 50(3): 390-403, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23456970

ABSTRACT

Thirteen proliferative diseases in fish have been associated in the literature with 1 or more retroviruses. Typically, these occur as seasonal epizootics affecting farmed and wild fish, and most lesions resolve spontaneously. Spontaneous resolution and lifelong resistance to reinfection are 2 features of some piscine retrovirus-induced tumors that have stimulated research interest in this field. The purpose of this review is to present the reader with the epidemiological and morphological features of proliferative diseases in fish that have been associated with retroviruses by 1 or more of the following methods: detection of C-type retrovirus-like particles or reverse transcriptase activity in tumor tissues; successful tumor transmission trials using well-characterized, tumor-derived, cell-free inocula; or molecular characterization of the virus from spontaneous and experimentally induced tumors. Two of the diseases included in this review, European smelt spawning papillomatosis and bicolor damselfish neurofibromatosis, at one time were attributed to a retroviral etiology, but both are now believed to involve additional viral agents based on more recent investigations. We include the latter 2 entities to update the reader about these developments.


Subject(s)
Fish Diseases/pathology , Retroviridae Infections/veterinary , Retroviridae/pathogenicity , Tumor Virus Infections/veterinary , Air Sacs/pathology , Animals , Epidermis/pathology , Fibroma/pathology , Fibroma/veterinary , Fibroma/virology , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Fish Diseases/virology , Fishes , Hyperplasia/pathology , Hyperplasia/veterinary , Hyperplasia/virology , Leiomyosarcoma/pathology , Leiomyosarcoma/veterinary , Leiomyosarcoma/virology , Leukemia, Plasma Cell/pathology , Leukemia, Plasma Cell/veterinary , Leukemia, Plasma Cell/virology , Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin/pathology , Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin/veterinary , Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin/virology , Neurofibromatoses/pathology , Neurofibromatoses/veterinary , Neurofibromatoses/virology , Papilloma/pathology , Papilloma/veterinary , Papilloma/virology , Retroviridae Infections/epidemiology , Retroviridae Infections/pathology , Sarcoma/pathology , Sarcoma/veterinary , Sarcoma/virology , Skin Neoplasms/pathology , Skin Neoplasms/veterinary , Skin Neoplasms/virology , Tumor Virus Infections/epidemiology , Tumor Virus Infections/pathology
2.
Vet Pathol ; 50(3): 418-33, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23528941

ABSTRACT

This article documents an epizootic of inflammation and neoplasia selectively affecting the lateral line system of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in 4 Finger Lakes in New York from 1985 to 1994. We studied more than 100 cases of this disease. Tumors occurred in 8% (5/64) of mature and 21% (3/14) of immature lake trout in the most severely affected lake. Lesions consisted of 1 or more neoplasm(s) in association with lymphocytic inflammation, multifocal erosions, and ulcerations of the epidermis along the lateral line. Lesions progressed from inflammatory to neoplastic, with 2-year-old lake trout showing locally extensive, intense lymphocytic infiltrates; 2- to 3-year-old fish having multiple, variably sized white masses up to 3 mm in diameter; and fish over 5 years old exhibiting 1 or more white, cerebriform masses greater than 1 cm in diameter. Histologic diagnoses of the tumors were predominantly spindle cell sarcomas or benign or malignant peripheral nerve sheath neoplasms, with fewer epitheliomas and carcinomas. Prevalence estimates did not vary significantly between sexes or season. The cause of this epizootic remains unclear. Tumor transmission trials, virus isolation procedures, and ultrastructural study of lesions failed to reveal evidence of a viral etiology. The Finger Lakes in which the disease occurred did not receive substantially more chemical pollution than unaffected lakes in the same chain during the epizootic, making an environmental carcinogen an unlikely primary cause of the epizootic. A hereditary component, however, may have contributed to this syndrome since only fish of the Seneca Lake strain were affected.


Subject(s)
Fish Diseases/pathology , Lateral Line System/pathology , Neoplasms/veterinary , Trout , Animals , Cell Culture Techniques/veterinary , Epidemics/veterinary , Female , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Fresh Water , Head/pathology , Immunohistochemistry/veterinary , Inflammation/veterinary , Lakes , Lateral Line System/enzymology , Lateral Line System/ultrastructure , Male , Microscopy, Electron/veterinary , Neoplasms/epidemiology , Neoplasms/pathology , New York/epidemiology , Prevalence , RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/analysis
3.
Vet Pathol ; 50(3): 483-7, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22610032

ABSTRACT

An adult walleye (Sander vitreus) was submitted to Cornell University for evaluation of a hard pale-tan pharyngeal mass attached to the gill arches. Dozens of hard white conical structures radiated from the surface. Microscopically, conical structures were identified as denticles and rested on plates of dysplastic orthodentine, cementum, and acellular bone. A diagnosis of compound odontoma was made based upon the presence of proliferative epithelial and mesenchymal odontogenic tissues that recapitulated tooth structures normally present on gill rakers. Odontomas are classified as hamartomas and typically develop in immature diphyodont mammals. The pharyngeal location and lifelong regeneration of teeth in fish, however, both qualify the present diagnosis in the pharyngeal region of an adult teleost. Ontogenic and morphologic differences between mammalian and piscine dentition and differentials for tooth-bearing tumors in fish are presented within the context of a developmental anomaly.


Subject(s)
Fish Diseases/pathology , Hamartoma/veterinary , Odontoma/veterinary , Perches , Pharyngeal Neoplasms/veterinary , Animals , Gills/pathology , Hamartoma/pathology , Odontoma/pathology , Pharyngeal Neoplasms/pathology
4.
Res Vet Sci ; 92(2): 283-91, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21458012

ABSTRACT

Terramycin for Fish® (oxytetracycline, OTC) is one of three approved drugs for therapeutic treatment of fish in the United States. Nothing is known, however, of the effects of this therapeutic on drug metabolizing enzymes in fish post-treatment. The main purpose of the study was to examine whether the fish CYP1A and CYP3A enzymes would cross-react with antibodies to known mammalian cytochrome P-450 forms (CYP1A1 and CYP3A). Observational feeding studies of OTC effects were conducted in hybrid striped bass, channel catfish and Nile tilapia. Oxytetracycline was mixed into the feed to achieve a daily dose of 82.8 mg per kg body weight at a feeding rate of 1% body weight per day. Hepatic microsomes of each fish were prepared and Western blotting of CYP1A1 and CYP3A4 and enzyme assays of CYP1A2 and CYP3A4 were performed prior to OTC treatment and on post-treatment days 1, 6, 11 and 21. Both goat anti-rat CYP1A1 and rabbit anti-human CYP3A4 showed good cross-reactivity with all three species in this study. All three species exhibited distinct perturbations in one or more of the variables examined on day 1 post-treatment. Immediately following the 10-day medication period, relative liver weight (RLW) of hybrid striped bass was increased 44% and remained elevated through post-treatment day 21. Increased CYP3A4 enzyme activity and protein abundance were noted in channel catfish and Nile tilapia, respectively. This observational approach demonstrated species differences both in control activities and in the timing and extent of hepatic responses to OTC. The unique perturbations of hepatic CYP450 enzymes in different fish species to OTC treatment observed in this study may have relevance for the use of additional antibiotics or other therapeutics used in aquaculture.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bass/metabolism , Cichlids/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 CYP1A1/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A/metabolism , Ictaluridae/metabolism , Oxytetracycline/pharmacology , Animals , Blotting, Western/veterinary , Cross-Sectional Studies , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Microsomes, Liver/drug effects , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology
6.
Dis Aquat Organ ; 93(2): 117-27, 2011 Jan 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21381518

ABSTRACT

A novel viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) (genotype IVb) has been isolated from mortality events in a range of wild freshwater fish from the Great Lakes since 2005. In 2005 and 2006, numerous new freshwater host species (approximately 90 fish from 12 different species) were confirmed to have VHSV by cell culture and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. A prominent feature observed in infected fish were the petechial and ecchymotic haemorrhages on the body surface and in visceral organs, as well as serosanguinous ascites; however, many fish had few and subtle, gross lesions. Histologically, virtually all fish had a vasculitis and multifocal necrosis of numerous tissues. Excellent correlation was found between the presence of VHSV IVb antigen detected by immunohistochemistry and the pathological changes noted by light microscopy. Intact and degenerate leukocytes, including cells resembling lymphocytes and macrophages, also had cytoplasmic viral antigen. By contrast, renal tubules and gonadal tissues (ovary and testis), were strongly immunopositive for VHSV IVb, but no lesions were noted.


Subject(s)
Fish Diseases/virology , Novirhabdovirus/classification , Rhabdoviridae Infections/veterinary , Animals , Female , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Fish Diseases/pathology , Fishes/classification , Great Lakes Region , Immunohistochemistry , Mice , Ovary/virology , Rhabdoviridae Infections/epidemiology , Rhabdoviridae Infections/pathology , Rhabdoviridae Infections/virology
7.
J Fish Dis ; 34(3): 217-25, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21306588

ABSTRACT

From mid-2004 to mid-2005, several grass carp, Ctenophayngodon idella (Valenciennes), showing evidence of spinal deformity were presented to the Aquatic Animal Health Program, Cornell University. The carp were from three separate locations in New York State. The first case involved several fish from a natural body of water in the Catskill Mountain region of south-eastern New York State. The second was a single affected individual from a private pond in the Fingerlakes region of Central New York State. The third was a single individual from the Cold Springs Harbor Fish Hatchery, Cold Springs Harbor, Long Island. All fish were at least 7 years of age. Radiographs and computed tomography (CT) scans revealed the deformities to be of bony origin. The spinal deformities were characterized by variable amounts of kyphosis, scoliosis and rotation. While it is not possible to determine the specific cause(s) of the lesions, we consider a genetic component as a likely contributor to the observed pathology.


Subject(s)
Carps/anatomy & histology , Carps/genetics , Spinal Diseases/congenital , Triploidy , Animals , Radiography , Spinal Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Spine/diagnostic imaging
8.
J Aquat Anim Health ; 21(1): 8-13, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19485120

ABSTRACT

Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus, walleye Sander vitreus, and hybrid striped bass (female white bass Morone chrysops x male striped bass M. saxatilis) were medicated with florfenicol (AQUAFLOR type A medicated article; Schering-Plough Animal Health, Summit, New Jersey) via a medicated ration of 10 mg florfenicol x kg fish body weight(-1) d(-1) for 10 d to compare the elimination kinetics of the test article. This study was part of a larger effort in support of a species grouping concept that could contribute to the regulatory approval process for therapeutic compounds for cultured fishes. The trials in this study were conducted at the ideal water temperature for each species and at the temperature 5 degrees C lower than the ideal. The test temperatures were 30 degrees C and 25 degrees C for Nile tilapia, 25 degrees C and 20 degrees C for both walleyes and hybrid striped bass. In all cases, the elimination kinetics of florfenicol were more rapid at higher temperatures. The time to reach the tolerance of 1 microg/g in muscle-skin, as set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus and salmonids, ranged from 6.1 to 4.1 d for Nile tilapia, from 12.6 to 9.7 d for walleyes, and from 2.6 to 0.7 d for hybrid striped bass at temperatures between 20 degrees C and 30 degrees C.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/metabolism , Drug Residues , Perciformes/metabolism , Thiamphenicol/analogs & derivatives , Administration, Oral , Animal Feed , Animals , Species Specificity , Thiamphenicol/metabolism
9.
J Aquat Anim Health ; 21(1): 14-7, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19485121

ABSTRACT

Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus were medicated with florfenicol (AQUAFLOR type A medicated article; Schering-Plough Animal Health, Summit, New Jersey) via a medicated ration at 15 mg florfenicol x kg fish body weight(-1) d(-1) for 10 d to compare the elimination kinetics of the test article in different size fish held at 25 degrees C. The groups of fish used in the study had mean weights of approximately 100, 250, and 500 g. In each trial, the fish were provided the medicated ration and 15 fish were processed at each of seven time points postfeeding for determination of the florfenicol concentration in serum and the florfenicol residue in the edible portion (composite muscle and skin). There was a trend toward shorter half-lives of elimination in the smaller fish. The elimination times in muscle-skin (times to reach the established tolerance concentration for channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus and salmonids of 1.0 microg florfenicol residue/g) and half-lives were 9.2 and 1.2 d (100 g), 8.6 and 1.7 d (250 g), and 12.7 and 2.2 d (500 g), respectively.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/metabolism , Body Weight/physiology , Cichlids/physiology , Drug Residues , Thiamphenicol/analogs & derivatives , Administration, Oral , Animal Feed , Animals , Species Specificity , Thiamphenicol/metabolism
10.
J Aquat Anim Health ; 20(3): 158-64, 2008 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18942592

ABSTRACT

During 2004 and 2005 a survey was conducted to investigate the presence and geographic distribution of largemouth bass virus (LMBV) in New York State. This iridovirus is widely distributed across the eastern United States; however, it had not previously been reported in New York State. Two hundred and eighty-three wild largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides and 8 smallmouth bass M. dolomieu were collected from 37 locations across the state. No clinical signs of LMBV or mortalities attributable to the virus were observed in the fish collected. Using a quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) method, we detected LMBV in 28 fish from 13 locations. Viral cytopathic effect in cell culture was observed in 5 fish from 3 locations. The virus isolated from cell culture was confirmed to be LMBV by an independent PCR method. Statistical analysis of the largemouth bass samples collected during 2005 revealed a wide difference in prevalence between the QPCR results and the cell culture results. Analysis of possible predictors, including age, sex, and month collected, showed no significant associations with the QPCR results. This survey confirms the presence and wide distribution of a potentially pathogenic form of LMBV in multiple water systems across New York State.


Subject(s)
Bass/virology , DNA Virus Infections/veterinary , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Water Microbiology , Age Factors , Animals , DNA Virus Infections/epidemiology , DNA Virus Infections/virology , DNA, Viral/chemistry , DNA, Viral/genetics , Fish Diseases/virology , Iridovirus/isolation & purification , New York/epidemiology , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Seasons , Sex Factors
11.
J Fish Dis ; 31(1): 19-25, 2008 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18086031

ABSTRACT

The health status of the American lobster, Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards, in Long Island Sound (LIS) has been in decline, with seasonal mortality events occurring since 1998. In order to assess the potential effects of environmental conditions on lobster health via haemolymph analysis, lobsters collected from various sites in LIS were examined and sampled while concurrent environmental data (water temperature, salinity and dissolved oxygen) were recorded. The pH of the haemolymph of each lobster was tested, followed by a collection of haemolymph for serum biochemistry analysis and bacterial culture. This report focuses on the results of the bacterial sampling. The majority of bacteria cultured were opportunistic pathogens commonly found in the environment, including some that are associated with sewage and pollution. The prevalence of bacteraemia was correlated with the site of collection, the month in which the lobsters were sampled, and water temperature.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/pathogenicity , Nephropidae/microbiology , Animals , Atlantic Ocean , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Female , Geography , Hemolymph/microbiology , Male , New York , Oxygen/analysis , Seawater/analysis , Temperature
12.
Dis Aquat Organ ; 76(3): 187-92, 2007 Jul 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17803104

ABSTRACT

In May 2006 a large mortality of several thousand round gobies Neogobius melanostomus (Pallas, 1814) occurred in New York waters of the St. Lawrence River and Lake Ontario. Necropsies of sampled fish from these areas showed pallor of the liver and gills, and hemorrhagic areas in many organs. Histopathologic examination of affected tissues revealed areas of necrosis and hemorrhage. Inoculations of fathead minnow Pimephales promelas (Rafinesque, 1820) cell cultures with dilutions of tissue samples from the necropsied gobies produced a cytopathic effect within 5 d post-inoculation. Samples of cell culture supernatant were tested using RT-PCR and confirmed the presence of viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV). Sequence analysis of the VHSV isolate resulted in its assignment to the type-IVb subgroup. The detection of VHSV in a relatively recent invasive fish species in the Great Lakes and the potential impact of VHSV on the ecology and economy of the area will require further investigation and careful management considerations.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks/veterinary , Fish Diseases/virology , Flatfishes , Novirhabdovirus/isolation & purification , Rhabdoviridae Infections/veterinary , Animals , Cytopathogenic Effect, Viral , Female , Fish Diseases/mortality , Fish Diseases/pathology , Glycoproteins/chemistry , Glycoproteins/genetics , Great Lakes Region/epidemiology , Histocytochemistry/veterinary , Male , New York/epidemiology , Novirhabdovirus/genetics , RNA, Viral/chemistry , RNA, Viral/genetics , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Rhabdoviridae Infections/mortality , Rhabdoviridae Infections/pathology , Rhabdoviridae Infections/virology , Rivers
13.
Peptides ; 28(1): 83-93, 2007 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17175069

ABSTRACT

The role of the YXFGLa family of allatostatin (AST) peptides in dipterans is not well-established. The recent completion of sequencing of genomes for multiple Drosophila species provides an opportunity to study the evolutionary variation of the allatostatins and to examine regulatory elements that control gene expression. We performed comparative analyses of Ast genes from seven Drosophila species (Drosophila melanogaster, Drosophila simulans, Drosophila ananassae, Drosophila yakuba, Drosophila pseudoobscura, Drosophila mojavensis, and Drosophila grimshawi) and used phylogenetic footprinting methods to identify conserved noncoding motifs, which are candidates for regulatory regions. The peptides encoded by the Ast precursor are nearly identical across species with the exception of AST-1, in which the leading residue may be either methionine or valine. Phylogenetic footprinting predicts as few as 3, to as many as 17 potential regulatory sites depending on the parameters used during analysis. These include a Hunchback motif approximately 1.2 kb upstream of the open reading frame (ORF), overlapping motifs for two Broad-complex isoforms in the first intron, and a CF2-II motif located in the 3'-UTR. Understanding the regulatory elements involved in Ast expression may provide insight into the function of this neuropeptide family.


Subject(s)
Drosophila/genetics , Genomics/methods , Neuropeptides/genetics , Phylogeny , Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Drosophila/classification , Molecular Sequence Data , Sequence Alignment , Species Specificity
14.
J Aquat Anim Health ; 19(2): 109-15, 2007 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18201051

ABSTRACT

Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus, summer flounder Paralichthys dentatus, and walleyes Sander vitreus were treated with Romet-30 (PHARMAQ AS, Oslo, Norway) via a medicated ration at 50 mg Romet-30 kg fish body weight(- 1) d(-1) for 10 d to compare the elimination kinetics of the test substance. This study was part of a larger effort to develop a species grouping concept for the labeling of therapeutic compounds for cultured fishes. The fish tests were conducted at the ideal water temperature for each species and at 5 degrees C lower than the ideal temperature except for summer flounder, which would not feed at the lower temperature of 15 degrees C. Test temperatures were 30 degrees C and 25 degrees C for Nile tilapia, 20 degrees C and 17 degrees C for summer flounder, and 25 degrees C and 20 degrees C for walleyes. Neither component of Romet-30 (sulfadimethoxine and ormetoprim) could be detected in samples of the edible portion of walleyes (muscle plus skin) collected at day 10 posttreatment or thereafter. In studies with summer flounder, only one fish had a detectable concentration of either component on day 21 or thereafter. Elimination of Romet-30 by Nile tilapia was extremely rapid. The limited number of Nile tilapia with detectable sulfadimethoxine or ormetoprim during the posttreatment period prevented the determination of elimination half-life or elimination in this species.


Subject(s)
Anti-Infective Agents/pharmacokinetics , Cichlids/metabolism , Drug Residues/analysis , Flounder/metabolism , Perciformes/metabolism , Animal Feed , Animals , Anti-Infective Agents/analysis , Drug Residues/pharmacokinetics , Fishes , Pyrimidines/analysis , Pyrimidines/pharmacokinetics , Species Specificity , Sulfadimethoxine/analysis , Sulfadimethoxine/pharmacokinetics , Temperature
15.
J Aquat Anim Health ; 19(4): 226-33, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18333479

ABSTRACT

The use of quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) to test for largemouth bass virus (LMBV) was evaluated during a challenge experiment in which largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides were immersed in the type strain of LMBV. The real-time PCR and cell culture methods were both used to measure LMBV present in the inoculum. Additional samples tested by QPCR included gill, gonad, kidney, liver, mucus, spleen, and swim bladder. A plasmid clone containing a 248-base pair (bp) fragment of the major capsid protein gene (MCP*) was serially diluted and used as a standard to quantify the number of LMBV DNA copies present in the samples tested. A 62-bp fragment of DNA located in MCP* was amplified in the real-time PCR assay. This work has demonstrated the value of the QPCR assay in LMBV surveys.


Subject(s)
Bass/virology , DNA Virus Infections/veterinary , Fish Diseases/diagnosis , Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Ranavirus/isolation & purification , Animals , Capsid Proteins/genetics , Cell Line , DNA Primers/chemistry , DNA Virus Infections/diagnosis , DNA Virus Infections/virology , Fish Diseases/virology , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Ranavirus/genetics , Reference Values , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
16.
J Aquat Anim Health ; 18(4): 247-53, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26599041

ABSTRACT

Walleyes Stizostedion vitreum were challenged with a topical application of a dilution series of cell-free dermal sarcoma tumor filtrates to determine the minimum dose of virus needed to induce these walleye tumors. A series of six 10-fold dilutions of the filtrate were applied to the side of the fish, which were allowed to develop grossly visible tumors at 15°C for 20 weeks. Quantification of the virus in the filtrates was accomplished by quantitative (real-time) reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. We determined that there are approximately 10(10) viral RNA copies in 100 µL of walleye dermal sarcoma inoculum. The minimum dose of walleye dermal sarcoma virus that could induce tumors by the topical challenge method was the 1,000-fold dilution of this 10(10) inoculum, or approximately 10(7) viral RNA copies.

17.
J Fish Dis ; 28(11): 663-75, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16303028

ABSTRACT

Monthly variations in serum chemistry of the American lobster, Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards, were investigated at one location in Long Island Sound (LIS). Comparisons between three locations within and outside LIS were also made for a single time point. Most serum analytes displayed significant fluctuation over the study period and between locations. Temporal patterns could be classified as: low in cool months/high in warm months, i.e. Na, Cl, Na:K ratio, Ca, albumin:globulin ratio, percentage Fe saturation; high in cool months/low in warm months, i.e. pH, K, urea, total protein, albumin, globulin, alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), lipaemia; June spike, i.e. glucose, cholesterol, creatine kinase, iron, transferrin iron-binding capacity; other less obvious fluctuations, i.e. Mg, PO4; and no apparent fluctuation, i.e. HCO3, alkaline phosphatase. The proportion of samples correctly classified into month of collection by a subset of 13 analytes using discriminant analysis improved as the months progressed from May (0.75) to October (>0.95). Discriminant analysis also resolved 96.5% of samples by location. The significant depression of serum calcium at the eastern LIS site correlates with excretory calcinosis, a calcium storage disease described from lobsters at this site, but contrasts with a seasonal elevation in serum calcium recorded in the temporal component of the study. Serum proteins, the electrolytes Ca and K and the enzymes ALT and AST proved to have the strongest spatio-temporal patterns of variation. Serum chemistry is a useful research tool for lobster populations, but the dearth of information on the homology of analyte functions in this species with those in vertebrate species makes interpretation of the results challenging. Late summer/autumn water conditions appear to cause stress for lobsters in LIS.


Subject(s)
Blood Chemical Analysis , Hemolymph/chemistry , Nephropidae/chemistry , Proteins/analysis , Animals , Atlantic Ocean , Discriminant Analysis , Electrolytes/analysis , Geography , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , New York , Principal Component Analysis , Seasons , Temperature , Time Factors
20.
J Aquat Anim Health ; 14(4): 247-253, 2002 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28880799

ABSTRACT

Walleyes Stizostedion vitreum were challenged with a topical application of a dilution series of cell-free dermal sarcoma tumor filtrates to determine the minimum dose of virus needed to induce these walleye tumors. A series of six 10-fold dilutions of the filtrate were applied to the side of the fish, which were allowed to develop grossly visible tumors at 15°C for 20 weeks. Quantification of the virus in the filtrates was accomplished by quantitative (real-time) reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. We determined that there are approximately 1010 viral RNA copies in 100 µL of walleye dermal sarcoma inoculum. The minimum dose of walleye dermal sarcoma virus that could induce tumors by the topical challenge method was the 1,000-fold dilution of this 1010 inoculum, or approximately 107 viral RNA copies.

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