コンテンツメニュー

Fukuda Kohei


Bacterial Diseases of Marine Fish and Development of Vaccine in Japan

Journal of National Fisheries University Volume 60 Issue 1 Page 51-56
published_at 2011-10
60-1-51-56.pdf
[fulltext] 1.15 MB
Title
日本における海水魚の細菌性疾病とワクチン開発の現状
Bacterial Diseases of Marine Fish and Development of Vaccine in Japan
Creators Takahashi Yukinori
Creators Fukuda Kohei
Creators Kondo Masakazu
Creators Yasumoto Shinya
Creators Hirono Ikuo
Creators Aoki Takashi
Source Identifiers [PISSN] 0370-9361
Creator Keywords
bacterial diseases marine fish vaccine Streptococcus parauberis Edwardsiella tarda
In Japan, mass mortalities of cultured marine fish due to bacterial diseases have been often reported. Among diseases caused by Gram-positive bacteria, Lactococcus garvieae infection in yellowtail, amberjack, jack mackerel and striped jack, Streptococcus iniae infection in yellowtail, Japanese flounder and filefish, S. parauberis infection in Japanese flounder, Nocardia seriolae infection in yellowtail. Among diseases caused by Gram-negative bacteria, Edwardsiella tarda infection in Japanese flounder and red sea bream, Photobacterium damsela subsp. piscicida infection in yellowtail, red sea bream, striped jack and Japanese flounder, Tenacibaculum maritimum infection in Japanese flounder, red sea bream and striped jack, Vibrio spp. infection in various marine fishes cause serious damages every year. A commercially available L. garvieae and V. anguillarum vaccine is used in yellowtail and amberjack by oral administration or injection. S. iniae vaccine is used in Japanese flounder by injection. Recently, oil-based bivalent vaccine against P. damsela and L. garvieae infection was developed in yellowtail and amberjack. We have developed pentavalent vaccine against streptococcicosis and edwardsiellosis in Japanese flounder. Efficacy of pentavalent vaccine with formalin-killed S. parauberis (serotype I and Ⅱ strain), S. iniae and E. tarda (motile and non-motile strain) were tested by vaccination followed by intramuscular challenge with the each pathogen. The Japanese flounder vaccined with pentavalent vaccine showed higher resistance against the each pathogen on two weeks post-vaccination. These results revealed that pentavalent vaccine was effective in prevention against streptococcicosis and edwardsiellosis in cultured Japanese flounder.
Languages jpn
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publishers National Fisheries University
Date Issued 2011-10
File Version Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Relations
[ISSN]0370-9361