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ECB-ART-50262
Microb Pathog 2022 Aug 01;169:105651. doi: 10.1016/j.micpath.2022.105651.
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Isolation and characterization of four pathogenic strains of Vibrio spp. from farmed sea urchins, Strongylocentrotus intermedius, in China.

Zhao T , Liu L , Li C , Zou Y , Yan H , Zhan Y , Chang Y .


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The sea urchin Strongylocentrotus intermedius, famous for its gonadal quality, is one of the most important farmed species in the sea area of northern China. Since 2020, outbreaks of black peristomial membrane disease (commonly called black mouth disease) have frequently occurred in spring and winter in cultured S. intermedius. In this study, we isolated the predominant bacteria from different tissues of diseased sea urchins from a North China farm in the spring of 2021. Four pathogenic strains (named SIBMPM01, SIBMPM02, SIBMPM03 and SIBMCF01) were obtained and characterized by Gram staining, morphological observation, artificial infection tests, and metabolic characteristics. Our results showed that: 1) all obtained strains belonged to the genus Vibrio and had morphological differences. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the four obtained strains might be novel Vibrio species. 2) Laboratory-based artificial infection tests showed that sea urchins infected with either SIBMPM01, SIBMPM02, SIBMPM03 or SIBMCF01 exhibited pathological symptoms of a black peristomial membrane in a dosage-dependent and temperature-dependent manner. The virulence of SIBMCF01 was greater than those of the others. 3) Metabolic characterization data showed that SIBMPM01, SIBMPM02, SIBMPM03 and SIBMCF01 shared similar metabolic characteristics. 4) Antimicrobial susceptibility tests demonstrated that the four obtained strains were all sensitive to ampicillin, doxycycline, norfloxacin, ofloxacin, furazolidone and chloramphenicol. SIBMPM01 was specifically sensitive to neomycin, and SIBMCF01 was specifically sensitive to carboxybenzyl penicillin.

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