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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 06 1997, 1322-1326, Vol 35, No. 6
A Miriam, SG Griffiths, JE Lovely and WH Lynch
A simple, rapid PCR assay for the identification of Renibacterium
salmoninarum in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) tissues detected DNA
extracted from between 4 and 40 bacterial cells. PCR was at least as
sensitive as culture when it was used to identify subclinically infected
fish experimentally challenged with R. salmoninarum. However, PCR
identified much higher numbers of kidney tissue and ovarian fluid samples
from commercially reared broodstock fish to be positive for R. salmoninarum
than did culture. This difference may be due to the antibiotic chemotherapy
of broodstock fish used by the industry in 1994 to control the vertical
transmission of R. salmoninarum. A much closer relationship between PCR and
culture results was observed for ovarian fluid samples collected from
broodstock fish in 1993. Also, PCR scored a much higher percentage of
kidney tissue samples than ovarian fluid samples from 1994 broodstock fish
positive for R. salmoninarum, which may reflect the uneven distribution of
the pathogen in different fish tissues. Inclusion of a nested probe to
identify the PCR-positive 1994 ovarian fluid samples increased the
sensitivity of detection to between one and four cells and the number of
samples that scored positive by almost threefold. These data indicate that
many infected ovarian fluid samples contained very low numbers of R.
salmoninarum cells and, because almost all these samples were culture
negative, that PCR may have detected dead or otherwise unculturable
bacterial cells.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
PCR and probe-PCR assays to monitor broodstock Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) ovarian fluid and kidney tissue for presence of DNA of the fish pathogen Renibacterium salmoninarum
Department of Biology, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, Canada.
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