Assessment of Gill Pathological Responses in Yellowfin Sea Bream (Acanthopagrus Latus) Under Aeromonas Hydrophila Exposure

Authors

  • F. Azadbakht Department of Marine Biology, Faculty of Marine Science, Khorramshahr University of Marine Science and Technology, Khouzestan, Iran
  • I. Zamani Department of Marine Biology, Faculty of Marine Science, Khorramshahr University of Marine Science and Technology, Khouzestan, Iran
  • M. T. Ronagh Department of Marine Biology, Faculty of Marine Science, Khorramshahr University of Marine Science and Technology, Khouzestan, Iran
  • S. Shirali Department of Marine Biology, Faculty of Marine Science, Khorramshahr University of Marine Science and Technology, Khouzestan, Iran
Abstract:

Bacterial diseases in cultured fish are considered the main problem with aquaculture system in Iran. The gills are multifunctional organs responsible for respiration, osmoregulation, nitrogenous waste excretion, and acid-base balance. Moreover, they are very sensitive to water contamination. Aeromonas hydrophila (A. hydrophila) is an opportunist pathogen responsible for a wide range of diseases in different species of fish. The gill histological alterations were used to assess the effects of A. hydrophila exposure on yellowfin sea bream, Acanthopagrus latus (A. latus). In this regard, 90 A. latus were exposed to the concentrations of A. hydrophila (103 and 106 CFU/ml) for three weeks. The most histopathological alterations in the gill of the exposed fish included hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the epithelial cells, lamellar fusion, club shaping of gill lamellae, lifting of the epithelium and edema of lamellae with large sub-epithelial space, blood congestion, and hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the mucosal cells. The histopathological alterations were observed in the gill of fish exposed to higher levels of A. hydrophila (106 CFU/ml) consisted of aneurysm and hemorrhage with blood congestion. According to the obtained results of this study, A. hydrophila could cause severe histopathological changes in the gill of A. latus and decrease gas change capability in yellowfin sea bream. Furthermore, the findings of the present study suggested that histopathological changes of the gill provide helpful information about the environmental conditions and as particular biomarkers may help the evaluation of fish general health.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Assessment of Skin Pathological Responses in the Yellowfin Seabream (Acanthopagrus latus) under the Aeromonas hydrophila Exposure

Background: Bacterial diseases in cultured fish are considered the main problem to aquaculture system. Skin is the structure that covers the body in fish. Skin histopatological alterations were used to assess the effects of Aeromonas hydrophila exposure on the yellowfin seabream )Acanthopagrus latus(. Methods: In this regard, 90 A. latus were exposed to sublethal concentrations of A. hydrophil...

full text

Alterations in the Plasma Thyroid and Cortisol Hormones in Yellowfin Sea bream, Acanthopagrus latus, following exposure to Benzo(α)Pyrene

The goal of this research is to study the effect of benzo-alpha-pyrene (BαP) as a pollutant on the plasma levels of cortisol, thyroxin (T4), and triiodothyronine (T3) hormones, and the T3/T4 ratio in the yellowfin sea bream, Acanthopagrus latus. The BαP (50 mg kg-1) in vegetable oil was peritoneally injected. Blood samples were obtained from the treated and control groups after 3 and 72 hr, res...

full text

Alterations in the Plasma Thyroid and Cortisol Hormones in Yellowfin Sea bream, Acanthopagrus latus, following exposure to Benzo(α)Pyrene

The goal of this research is to study the effect of benzo-alpha-pyrene (BαP) as a pollutant on the plasma levels of cortisol, thyroxin (T4), and triiodothyronine (T3) hormones, and the T3/T4 ratio in the yellowfin sea bream, Acanthopagrus latus. The BαP (50 mg kg-1) in vegetable oil was peritoneally injected. Blood samples were obtained from the treated and control groups after 3 and 72 hr, res...

full text

Characterization of Blood Cells and Hematological Parameters of Yellowfin Sea Bream (Acanthopagrus latus) in Some Creeks of Persian Gulf

In this study we detect different levels of blood cells and hematological parameters in five creeks of Mahshahr region in North West of Persian Gulf with different levels of pollutant to characterized hematological response of Yellowfin seabream to environmental pollutant and undesirable materials. Numbers of Blood leukocytes was performed by a hemocytometer Neubauer under the light microscope....

full text

Pathological alterations in response to water soluble fraction of Iranian crude oil in gill of yellow fin sea bream Acanthopagrus latus (Houttuyn, 1782)

Water soluble fraction (WSF) of crude oil can pollute water and cause histopathological alterations in fishes. Therefore, sea water pollution with crude oil could detrimentally impact the fish health. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effect of different concentrations of WSF on gills of yellow fin sea bream. The fish were exposed to 0% (control), 2%, 4%, 8% and 16% of WSF for a ...

full text

Assessment of gill pathological responses in the tropical fish yellowfin seabream of Persian Gulf under mercury exposure

Gill histomorphological alterations were used to assess the effects of chronic exposure to HgCl2 on the yellowfin seabream, Acanthopagrus latus. In this regard, 90 A. latus were exposed to sublethal concentrations of HgCl2 (10, 20, 35 and 50 μg/L) for 3 weeks. Treated fish were erratic and showed respiratory distress. The most common morphological abnormalities included: filaments disorganizati...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 74  issue 1

pages  83- 89

publication date 2019-03-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023