The impact of functional feed on Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) systemic immune response to high and low levels of sea lice infection (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) and co-infection with infectious salmon anemia virus

Due to the nature of open-pen farming, salmon are exposed to numerous pathogens shared by other farms and their wild counterparts. Industry must manage these outbreaks through vaccination, oral or bath treatments, and more recently through functional feed administration. Globally, the most important...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Comparative Immunology Reports
Main Authors: Laura A. Carvalho, Shona K. Whyte, Sara L. Purcell, Tyson Hay, Richard G. Taylor, Rachel Balder, Nellie Gagné, Sussie Dalvin, Mark D. Fast
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cirep.2024.200147
https://doaj.org/article/88b1c9a473ab41d59879aaf00064e7dd
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Summary:Due to the nature of open-pen farming, salmon are exposed to numerous pathogens shared by other farms and their wild counterparts. Industry must manage these outbreaks through vaccination, oral or bath treatments, and more recently through functional feed administration. Globally, the most important pathogens of salmon are sea lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis, and Caligus rogercresseyi) not only due to their direct impacts on the host, but indirectly by enhancing host susceptibility to co-infection. This study aims to characterize molecular responses during a co-infection of L. salmonis and a salmon orthomyxovirus (infectious salmon anemia virus; ISAv) under administration of four functional feed diets: a control feed with a low 0.3 % EPA/DHA + high-ω6 (Ctrl), an EPA/DHA enriched pro-inflammatory diet 1 % EPA/DHA + high-ω6; FA + I), an EPA/DHA enriched anti-inflammatory diet (1 % EPA/DHA+high-ω3; FA-I), and a low EPA/DHA feed (0.3 %) with an immunostimulant added (0.3 % EPA/DHA + high-ω6 + immunostimulant (IS); Ctrl + IS). Atlantic salmon (40 fish per tank; 8 tanks per feed) were acclimated to one of the four experimental diets. Sea lice copepodids were introduced to all experimental tanks and 10 fish sampled from each tank at each time point (prior to infection [−3], and 11, 33, 47 days post infection). A high virulence ISAv isolate (ISAV-HPR4) was intraperitoneally injected into donor fish 6 days prior to their transfer into the experimental tanks for cohabitation (ca. 10–15 % of tank density; 4 tanks per feed group) to achieve peak shedding rates at time of stocking. Fatty acid enriched (FA + I and FA-I) diets had a significant impact on sea lice abundance on fish infected with lice only. Gene expression profiles measured by reverse transcriptase-qPCR showed significant upregulation in several antiviral genes (irf7b and mxb) associated with the interferon system in all but the fish fed the immunostimulating diet. An increase in transcript levels (irf7b, isg15a, mmp-9, mxb) accounted for high lice and high viral ...