Background: Infectious diseases cause significant production losses in aquaculture every year. Since the gut
microbiota plays an essential role in regulating the host immune system, health and physiology, altered gut
microbiota compositions are often associated with a diseased status. However, few studies have examined the
association between disease severity and degree of gut dysbiosis, especially when the gut is not the site of the
primary infection. Moreover, there is a lack of knowledge on whether bath treatment with formalin, a disinfectant
commonly used in aquaculture to treat external infections, might affect the gut microbiome as a consequence of
formalin ingestion. Here we investigate, through 16S rRNA gene metabarcoding, changes in the distal gut
microbiota composition of a captive-reared cohort of 80 Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.), in consequence of an
external bacterial skin infection due to a natural outbreak and subsequent formalin treatment.
Results: We identified Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi as the causative disease pathogen and we show that the distal
gut of diseased salmon presented a different composition from that of healthy individuals. A new, yet undescribed,
Mycoplasma genus characterized the gut of healthy salmon, while in the sick fish we observed an increase in terms
of relative abundance of Aliivibrio sp., a strain regarded as opportunistic. We also noticed a positive correlation
between fish weight and Mycoplasma sp. relative abundance, potentially indicating a beneficial effect for its host.
Moreover, we observed that the gut microbiota of fish treated with formalin was more similar to those of sick fish
than healthy ones.
Conclusions: We conclude that external Tenacibaculum infections have the potential of indirectly affecting the host
gut microbiota. As such, treatment optimization procedures should account for that. Formalin treatment is not an
optimal solution from a holistic perspective, since we observe an altered gut microbiota in the treated fish. We
suggest its coupling with a probiotic treatment aimed at re-establishing a healthy community. Lastly, we have
observed a positive correlation of Mycoplasma sp. with salmon health and weight, therefore we encourage further
investigations towards its potential utilization as a biomarker for monitoring health in salmon and potentially other
farmed fish species.
Keywords: Microbiota, Atlantic salmon, Infectious diseases, Dysbiosis, Tenacibaculosis, Aliivibrio, Mycoplasma,
Biomarkers, Fish growth
This document provides an overview of bioencapsulation of live food organisms with probiotics for better growth and survival of freshwater fish juveniles. It discusses how probiotics can be used to bioencapsulate (coat) live food organisms fed to fish in order to improve the nutritional status and health benefits provided to the fish. Probiotics are live microorganisms that when consumed in sufficient amounts can benefit the health of the host. Bioencapsulating live food with probiotics may help enhance the growth and survival of different fish species by modulating the immune system, competing with pathogens, and improving nutrient absorption from food. This technique represents a new approach for using probiotics in aquaculture to maximize fish production.
The aquaculture industry has developed significantly over recent decades and is, today, one of the fastest-growing food production sectors in the world. One of the most important problems that affect aquaculture is the appearance of infectious diseases. Among bacterial diseases affecting cultured salmonid fish, Bacterial Cold-Water Disease, caused by Flavobacterium psychrophilum, produces high mortality and morbidity and consequently, economical losses worldwide.
Much has been made of gut health recently. By unpacking the concept, we can arrive at a better understanding of the driving factors, influences, indicators and implications of gut health for aquaculture.
The study was carried out to determine the effect of fungi contaminated feed on the growth and survival of catfish, Clarias gariepinus juveniles. This research was carried out for a period of twelve weeks. Forty catfish juveniles were stocked at a rate of twenty juveniles per plastic tank. Catfish juveniles in one tank were fed with moldy feed and the control was served with non -moldy feed and was observed for twelve weeks to determine and compare their growth and survival. Catfish juveniles fed with moldy feed had the highest mortality as well as slower growth as compared to the control fed with non-moldy feed. The survival rate of juveniles stocked was 55% and mortality rate was 45% and majority of mortality was from juveniles fed with moldy feed and majority of the survival rate was from juveniles fed with non-moldy feed. Some water quality parameters such as temperature, dissolved oxygen and pH were also taken and no significant difference was observed. Moldy feed or feedstuff should not be used as this can cause great mortality and therefore loss to fish farmers.
Nutrigenomics and its application in aquaculture. Nutrigenomics is the manipulation of gene expression through diet to achieve optimal genetic performance. Probiotics and prebiotics are used in aquaculture to control disease, improve growth and health. Probiotics work by competitively excluding pathogens, producing inhibitory substances, and improving water quality. They also upregulate growth genes and immune genes, activate the immune system, and improve gut immunity. Symbiotics, which combine probiotics and prebiotics, have synergistic beneficial effects in aquaculture.
Aquaculture products can harbor pathogenic bacteria which are part of the natural microflora of the environment. A study was conducted aiming at the isolation of human pathogenic bacteria in gills, intestines, mouth and the skin of apparently healthy fish, Tilapia rendali and Oreochromic mossambicus, from the Fletcher dam. Bacterial pathogens associated with fish can be transmitted to human beings from fish used as food or by handling the fish causing human diseases. Differentiation and characterization of various isolates was based on their growth characteristics on specific culture media (biochemical and gram staining reactions). The following human pathogenic bacteria were isolated Salmonella typhi, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Vibrio cholerae, Shigella dysenteriae and Enterococcus faecalis. All the bacterial species which were isolated from the fish were also present in the initial water samples collected. The isolation of enteric bacteria in fish serves as indicator organisms of faecal contamination and or water pollution. Their presence also represents a potential hazard to humans. The mean bacterial load of the isolates was found to be markedly higher than the recommended public health and standard value of 5.0 x 106 CFU/ml which has been adopted by many countries.
The Salmonidae family, collectively known as Salmonids, comprises of salmon, trout, chars, freshwater whitefishes, and graylings, but it is the trout and Atlantic salmon, of the genus Salmo, which gives the family their name. A slender teleost fish, they can range in size between just 13 cm to a whopping 2 m in length. With a single row of sharp teeth, Salmonids are predators, choosing to feed on smaller fish, aquatic insects and small crustaceans. Despite spawning in fresh water Salmonids are mostly anadromous, spending their lives at sea, choosing only to return to rivers to reproduce.
This document provides an overview of bioencapsulation of live food organisms with probiotics for better growth and survival of freshwater fish juveniles. It discusses how probiotics can be used to bioencapsulate (coat) live food organisms fed to fish in order to improve the nutritional status and health benefits provided to the fish. Probiotics are live microorganisms that when consumed in sufficient amounts can benefit the health of the host. Bioencapsulating live food with probiotics may help enhance the growth and survival of different fish species by modulating the immune system, competing with pathogens, and improving nutrient absorption from food. This technique represents a new approach for using probiotics in aquaculture to maximize fish production.
The aquaculture industry has developed significantly over recent decades and is, today, one of the fastest-growing food production sectors in the world. One of the most important problems that affect aquaculture is the appearance of infectious diseases. Among bacterial diseases affecting cultured salmonid fish, Bacterial Cold-Water Disease, caused by Flavobacterium psychrophilum, produces high mortality and morbidity and consequently, economical losses worldwide.
Much has been made of gut health recently. By unpacking the concept, we can arrive at a better understanding of the driving factors, influences, indicators and implications of gut health for aquaculture.
The study was carried out to determine the effect of fungi contaminated feed on the growth and survival of catfish, Clarias gariepinus juveniles. This research was carried out for a period of twelve weeks. Forty catfish juveniles were stocked at a rate of twenty juveniles per plastic tank. Catfish juveniles in one tank were fed with moldy feed and the control was served with non -moldy feed and was observed for twelve weeks to determine and compare their growth and survival. Catfish juveniles fed with moldy feed had the highest mortality as well as slower growth as compared to the control fed with non-moldy feed. The survival rate of juveniles stocked was 55% and mortality rate was 45% and majority of mortality was from juveniles fed with moldy feed and majority of the survival rate was from juveniles fed with non-moldy feed. Some water quality parameters such as temperature, dissolved oxygen and pH were also taken and no significant difference was observed. Moldy feed or feedstuff should not be used as this can cause great mortality and therefore loss to fish farmers.
Nutrigenomics and its application in aquaculture. Nutrigenomics is the manipulation of gene expression through diet to achieve optimal genetic performance. Probiotics and prebiotics are used in aquaculture to control disease, improve growth and health. Probiotics work by competitively excluding pathogens, producing inhibitory substances, and improving water quality. They also upregulate growth genes and immune genes, activate the immune system, and improve gut immunity. Symbiotics, which combine probiotics and prebiotics, have synergistic beneficial effects in aquaculture.
Aquaculture products can harbor pathogenic bacteria which are part of the natural microflora of the environment. A study was conducted aiming at the isolation of human pathogenic bacteria in gills, intestines, mouth and the skin of apparently healthy fish, Tilapia rendali and Oreochromic mossambicus, from the Fletcher dam. Bacterial pathogens associated with fish can be transmitted to human beings from fish used as food or by handling the fish causing human diseases. Differentiation and characterization of various isolates was based on their growth characteristics on specific culture media (biochemical and gram staining reactions). The following human pathogenic bacteria were isolated Salmonella typhi, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Vibrio cholerae, Shigella dysenteriae and Enterococcus faecalis. All the bacterial species which were isolated from the fish were also present in the initial water samples collected. The isolation of enteric bacteria in fish serves as indicator organisms of faecal contamination and or water pollution. Their presence also represents a potential hazard to humans. The mean bacterial load of the isolates was found to be markedly higher than the recommended public health and standard value of 5.0 x 106 CFU/ml which has been adopted by many countries.
The Salmonidae family, collectively known as Salmonids, comprises of salmon, trout, chars, freshwater whitefishes, and graylings, but it is the trout and Atlantic salmon, of the genus Salmo, which gives the family their name. A slender teleost fish, they can range in size between just 13 cm to a whopping 2 m in length. With a single row of sharp teeth, Salmonids are predators, choosing to feed on smaller fish, aquatic insects and small crustaceans. Despite spawning in fresh water Salmonids are mostly anadromous, spending their lives at sea, choosing only to return to rivers to reproduce.
This document summarizes a presentation on probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics. It discusses the gut microbiome and how critical illness can disrupt it. It defines probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics and provides examples of each. It outlines proposed mechanisms of action and potential health benefits, particularly in treating ICU patients. However, the document also notes challenges in using probiotics for critically ill patients, as a large recent trial found that the probiotic L. rhamnosus GG did not significantly reduce ventilator-associated pneumonia in ICU patients.
This study investigated the microbiome of three copepod species (Acartia longiremis, Centropages hamatus, Calanus finmarchicus) from the Gulf of Maine over a 3-week period in early summer. The microbiome contained both stable associations and temporal variability. Gammaproteobacteria, especially Pseudoalteromonas species, were consistently abundant across copepod species, suggesting a stable association. However, the microbiome composition also varied between full and starved gut copepods, and over time, influenced by environmental factors like food availability. While some core microbiome was present, temporal changes appeared important in structuring the bacterial communities associated with copepods.
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology an...rinzindorjej
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology and Control Engineering (IJCSITCE) is an open access peer-reviewed journal that publishes quality articles which make innovative contributions in all areas of Computational Science, Mathematical Modeling, Information Technology, Networks, Computer Science, Control and Automation Engineering. IJCSITCE is an abstracted and indexed journal that focuses on all technical and practical aspects of Scientific Computing, Modeling and Simulation, Information Technology, Computer Science, Networks and Communication Engineering, Control Theory and Automation. The goal of this journal is to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on advanced techniques in computational science, information technology, computer science, chaos, control theory and automation, and establishing new collaborations in these areas.
International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology and Co...rinzindorjej
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology and Control Engineering (IJCSITCE) is an open access peer-reviewed journal that publishes quality articles which make innovative contributions in all areas of Computational Science, Mathematical Modeling, Information Technology, Networks, Computer Science, Control and Automation Engineering. IJCSITCE is an abstracted and indexed journal that focuses on all technical and practical aspects of Scientific Computing, Modeling and Simulation, Information Technology, Computer Science, Networks and Communication Engineering, Control Theory and Automation. The goal of this journal is to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on advanced techniques in computational science, information technology, computer science, chaos, control theory and automation, and establishing new collaborations in these areas.
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology an...rinzindorjej
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology and Control Engineering (IJCSITCE) is an open access peer-reviewed journal that publishes quality articles which make innovative contributions in all areas of Computational Science, Mathematical Modeling, Information Technology, Networks, Computer Science, Control and Automation Engineering. IJCSITCE is an abstracted and indexed journal that focuses on all technical and practical aspects of Scientific Computing, Modeling and Simulation, Information Technology, Computer Science, Networks and Communication Engineering, Control Theory and Automation. The goal of this journal is to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on advanced techniques in computational science, information technology, computer science, chaos, control theory and automation, and establishing new collaborations in these areas.
The document discusses the significance of the gut microbiome and potential roles of probiotics. It notes that the gut microbiome contains trillions of microbes and plays an important role in health, immunity, and metabolism. Factors like diet, lifestyle, antibiotics, and other medications can disrupt the normal gut microbiome and lead to dysbiosis, which has been linked to various conditions. Probiotics may help maintain a balanced gut microbiome and mitigate disruption through interactions with the immune system and production of metabolites. Future research could further explore probiotics and manipulation of gut flora to treat certain diseases.
Phage Endolysins as Potential Antimicrobials against Multidrug Resistant Vibr...Pig Farm Solution
Phage Endolysins as Potential Antimicrobials against Multidrug Resistant Vibrio alginolyticus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus: Current Status of Research and Challenges Ahead
Nandita Matamp and Sarita G. Bhat *
Department of Biotechnology, Cochin University of Science and Technology, Kochi-682022, Kerala, India; nandita.matamp@gmail.com
* Correspondence: saritagbhat@gmail.com; Tel.: 91-984-603-3486. Fax: 0484-257-7595
Received: 25 February 2019; Accepted: 15 March 2019; Published: 18 March 2019
The document discusses health and disease management challenges in aquaculture and strategies to address them. A survey found disease was the most limiting factor for 63% of aquaculture participants. New technologies like vaccination, biosecurity procedures, and biofloc have helped control diseases. Another strategy is immune stimulation through balanced diets or additives. A trial tested doses of a yeast parietal fraction additive in seabass diets. It found 500g/tonne optimized immune response and survival after challenge, while 2000g/tonne optimized gut health and growth. The study demonstrates this additive can enhance gut health or immunity depending on dosage and diet composition.
A brief info on the immunostimulants and probiotics in aquaculture. hope it will help whoever visits and go through the seminar.
Please comment if any mistakes found for my rectification as well as for others.
thank you
This document discusses new drug discovery from marine sources. It begins by introducing how humans have long sought medicines from their environment, including currently efficacious drugs derived from natural products. It then focuses on the marine environment as a less explored but rich source of novel bioactive molecules, with over 16,000 compounds isolated from marine invertebrates so far. The document provides examples of marine natural products that have become drugs, such as Eribulin, Discodermolide, and Dolastatin-10. It concludes by stating that natural products from marine sources give hope to treat diseases like cancer, HIV, and Alzheimer's, and that the marine environment remains largely untapped with promise for novel pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals.
Microbiome: The genes and genomes of the microbiota, as well as the products of the microbiota and the host environment” [the collective genomes of the micro-organisms in a particular environment. Although the composition of the gut microbiota varies between individuals, the community in each individual is relatively stable over time.
Fish disease is a major constraint to aquaculture development in Bangladesh. Common diseases include bacterial, fungal, parasitic and physical ailments. The risk of disease outbreaks increases with intensification of aquaculture and high stocking densities. Proper management practices like monitoring health, controlling transboundary movements, training workers and utilizing disease prevention techniques can help control disease spread and its impacts on aquaculture.
This document discusses the disease development process in fish and shellfish. It begins with objectives and introductions. It then explains that disease results from an imbalance between the host, pathogen, and environment. The pathogen attaches and enters the host, the host has susceptibility factors, and the environment can stress the host or favor the pathogen. Signs of disease include reduced feeding, color changes, behavior changes, and lesions. Diagnosis involves on-site examination of live and dead fish, tissue collection, and environmental measurement.
The document discusses the human gut microbiota and its therapeutic applications. It provides details on the composition and functions of the gut microbiota, factors that influence it, methods for assessing its functions, and associated diseases. It also discusses probiotics, prebiotics, postbiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation, and the development of microbiome-based therapeutics to modulate the gut microbiota for therapeutic purposes.
Probiotics are live microorganisms that confer health benefits when colonize the gastrointestinal tract. The various microbial strains are now found to provide therapeutic effects through the metabolites they produce, digestion of dietary fibers, inhibition of pathogen adhesion, provide missing enzyme, maintaining homeostasis and also controlling brain activities which may lead to autism if disturbed.
Stavropoulou et al-2021-frontiers_in_medicineCarolynCampos4
This document reviews the relationship between the gut and kidney, known as the gut-kidney axis. It discusses how recent technological advances have improved understanding of the gut microbiome and its role in health and disease. The gut microbiome helps absorb nutrients, synthesize vitamins and enzymes, and produces short-chain fatty acids that support epithelial integrity and immunomodulation. Disruptions to the gut microbiome balance (known as dysbiosis) have been linked to various diseases. The review also briefly discusses the urinary microbiome and its role in urinary tract health. It suggests the gut microbiome can influence other body systems like the kidneys, and that disruptions to microbial communities may undermine their interactions with human cells and
Camel is very important in the economy of a State like Rajasthan,
and it has been a privilege to be associated with something that aids and
assists a project connected with the economic development of this State.
This report on the anatomy of the camel is based on a few observations made during a short time, with limIted facilities and in the absence
of a record of the age .of the specimens studied. Therefore, it may give
less elaborate details of the anatomy of this animal.
I wish to express my gratitude to Lt. Col. A. C. Aggarwala,
Principal, Rajasthan College of Veterinary Science and Animal Hus-
• bandry, for the aid and encouragement given to me and to Messrs. N.K.
Goel and K.C. Joshi, 4th and 2nd year veterinary students respectively,
for the splendid service rendered by them towards the completion of this
report. It has been very useful to be located near the 13th Grenadiers
(Ganga Jaisalmer) whose officers have shown me every courtesy.
It is hoped that this report may inspire some other veterinarian to
carry this investigation to completion
Atlas of Large animal surgery VeterinarySamerPaser
A thorough anatomical and pathophysiological knowledge ofthe condition
and meticulous attention to surgical principles are the basis for all surgical
procedures. Assuming these requirements are fulfilled, surgery is by its
very nature a discipline which should be visualized. Modern visual aids
are therefore playing an increasingly important role in the instruction of
surgical techniques. This does not mean that textbooks will become redundant, but there is a trend toward more illustrations and less text, a tendency
which underlies the preparation and publishing of this atlas.
The authors are of the opinion that it will be elucidating to students and
veterinary surgeons to have available a full colour photographic atlas of the
treatment of the most important surgical conditions. We have attempted to
show the essential steps of each procedure, accompanied by pertinent but
limited text. It often has been a challenge to find a balance between text and
photographs and at the same time to meet the requirements of adequate
description, within the limitations of the concept of this atlas.
This publication does not aim at replacing a textbook, and thus chapters on
general surgical principles have been omitted. It is therefore assumed that
the reader has knowledge of current concepts of, for instance, asepsis and
antisepsis, instrumentation, suture materials and techniques, wound healing, principles of fracture repair, and supportive measures (fluid therapy,
role of antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs etc.).
The surgical techniques are in most cases time-honoured and are used in
the Department of General and Large Animal Surgery and the Department of Obstetrics, Gynaecology and A.I. at Utrecht. The majority of the
presented techniques, especially those concerning the bovine species and
other food animals, can be carried out in general practice. However, a number of advanced techni
Contenu connexe
Similaire à Salmon_gut_microbiota_correlates_with_disease_infe.pdf
This document summarizes a presentation on probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics. It discusses the gut microbiome and how critical illness can disrupt it. It defines probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics and provides examples of each. It outlines proposed mechanisms of action and potential health benefits, particularly in treating ICU patients. However, the document also notes challenges in using probiotics for critically ill patients, as a large recent trial found that the probiotic L. rhamnosus GG did not significantly reduce ventilator-associated pneumonia in ICU patients.
This study investigated the microbiome of three copepod species (Acartia longiremis, Centropages hamatus, Calanus finmarchicus) from the Gulf of Maine over a 3-week period in early summer. The microbiome contained both stable associations and temporal variability. Gammaproteobacteria, especially Pseudoalteromonas species, were consistently abundant across copepod species, suggesting a stable association. However, the microbiome composition also varied between full and starved gut copepods, and over time, influenced by environmental factors like food availability. While some core microbiome was present, temporal changes appeared important in structuring the bacterial communities associated with copepods.
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology an...rinzindorjej
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology and Control Engineering (IJCSITCE) is an open access peer-reviewed journal that publishes quality articles which make innovative contributions in all areas of Computational Science, Mathematical Modeling, Information Technology, Networks, Computer Science, Control and Automation Engineering. IJCSITCE is an abstracted and indexed journal that focuses on all technical and practical aspects of Scientific Computing, Modeling and Simulation, Information Technology, Computer Science, Networks and Communication Engineering, Control Theory and Automation. The goal of this journal is to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on advanced techniques in computational science, information technology, computer science, chaos, control theory and automation, and establishing new collaborations in these areas.
International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology and Co...rinzindorjej
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology and Control Engineering (IJCSITCE) is an open access peer-reviewed journal that publishes quality articles which make innovative contributions in all areas of Computational Science, Mathematical Modeling, Information Technology, Networks, Computer Science, Control and Automation Engineering. IJCSITCE is an abstracted and indexed journal that focuses on all technical and practical aspects of Scientific Computing, Modeling and Simulation, Information Technology, Computer Science, Networks and Communication Engineering, Control Theory and Automation. The goal of this journal is to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on advanced techniques in computational science, information technology, computer science, chaos, control theory and automation, and establishing new collaborations in these areas.
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology an...rinzindorjej
The International Journal of Computational Science, Information Technology and Control Engineering (IJCSITCE) is an open access peer-reviewed journal that publishes quality articles which make innovative contributions in all areas of Computational Science, Mathematical Modeling, Information Technology, Networks, Computer Science, Control and Automation Engineering. IJCSITCE is an abstracted and indexed journal that focuses on all technical and practical aspects of Scientific Computing, Modeling and Simulation, Information Technology, Computer Science, Networks and Communication Engineering, Control Theory and Automation. The goal of this journal is to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on advanced techniques in computational science, information technology, computer science, chaos, control theory and automation, and establishing new collaborations in these areas.
The document discusses the significance of the gut microbiome and potential roles of probiotics. It notes that the gut microbiome contains trillions of microbes and plays an important role in health, immunity, and metabolism. Factors like diet, lifestyle, antibiotics, and other medications can disrupt the normal gut microbiome and lead to dysbiosis, which has been linked to various conditions. Probiotics may help maintain a balanced gut microbiome and mitigate disruption through interactions with the immune system and production of metabolites. Future research could further explore probiotics and manipulation of gut flora to treat certain diseases.
Phage Endolysins as Potential Antimicrobials against Multidrug Resistant Vibr...Pig Farm Solution
Phage Endolysins as Potential Antimicrobials against Multidrug Resistant Vibrio alginolyticus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus: Current Status of Research and Challenges Ahead
Nandita Matamp and Sarita G. Bhat *
Department of Biotechnology, Cochin University of Science and Technology, Kochi-682022, Kerala, India; nandita.matamp@gmail.com
* Correspondence: saritagbhat@gmail.com; Tel.: 91-984-603-3486. Fax: 0484-257-7595
Received: 25 February 2019; Accepted: 15 March 2019; Published: 18 March 2019
The document discusses health and disease management challenges in aquaculture and strategies to address them. A survey found disease was the most limiting factor for 63% of aquaculture participants. New technologies like vaccination, biosecurity procedures, and biofloc have helped control diseases. Another strategy is immune stimulation through balanced diets or additives. A trial tested doses of a yeast parietal fraction additive in seabass diets. It found 500g/tonne optimized immune response and survival after challenge, while 2000g/tonne optimized gut health and growth. The study demonstrates this additive can enhance gut health or immunity depending on dosage and diet composition.
A brief info on the immunostimulants and probiotics in aquaculture. hope it will help whoever visits and go through the seminar.
Please comment if any mistakes found for my rectification as well as for others.
thank you
This document discusses new drug discovery from marine sources. It begins by introducing how humans have long sought medicines from their environment, including currently efficacious drugs derived from natural products. It then focuses on the marine environment as a less explored but rich source of novel bioactive molecules, with over 16,000 compounds isolated from marine invertebrates so far. The document provides examples of marine natural products that have become drugs, such as Eribulin, Discodermolide, and Dolastatin-10. It concludes by stating that natural products from marine sources give hope to treat diseases like cancer, HIV, and Alzheimer's, and that the marine environment remains largely untapped with promise for novel pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals.
Microbiome: The genes and genomes of the microbiota, as well as the products of the microbiota and the host environment” [the collective genomes of the micro-organisms in a particular environment. Although the composition of the gut microbiota varies between individuals, the community in each individual is relatively stable over time.
Fish disease is a major constraint to aquaculture development in Bangladesh. Common diseases include bacterial, fungal, parasitic and physical ailments. The risk of disease outbreaks increases with intensification of aquaculture and high stocking densities. Proper management practices like monitoring health, controlling transboundary movements, training workers and utilizing disease prevention techniques can help control disease spread and its impacts on aquaculture.
This document discusses the disease development process in fish and shellfish. It begins with objectives and introductions. It then explains that disease results from an imbalance between the host, pathogen, and environment. The pathogen attaches and enters the host, the host has susceptibility factors, and the environment can stress the host or favor the pathogen. Signs of disease include reduced feeding, color changes, behavior changes, and lesions. Diagnosis involves on-site examination of live and dead fish, tissue collection, and environmental measurement.
The document discusses the human gut microbiota and its therapeutic applications. It provides details on the composition and functions of the gut microbiota, factors that influence it, methods for assessing its functions, and associated diseases. It also discusses probiotics, prebiotics, postbiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation, and the development of microbiome-based therapeutics to modulate the gut microbiota for therapeutic purposes.
Probiotics are live microorganisms that confer health benefits when colonize the gastrointestinal tract. The various microbial strains are now found to provide therapeutic effects through the metabolites they produce, digestion of dietary fibers, inhibition of pathogen adhesion, provide missing enzyme, maintaining homeostasis and also controlling brain activities which may lead to autism if disturbed.
Stavropoulou et al-2021-frontiers_in_medicineCarolynCampos4
This document reviews the relationship between the gut and kidney, known as the gut-kidney axis. It discusses how recent technological advances have improved understanding of the gut microbiome and its role in health and disease. The gut microbiome helps absorb nutrients, synthesize vitamins and enzymes, and produces short-chain fatty acids that support epithelial integrity and immunomodulation. Disruptions to the gut microbiome balance (known as dysbiosis) have been linked to various diseases. The review also briefly discusses the urinary microbiome and its role in urinary tract health. It suggests the gut microbiome can influence other body systems like the kidneys, and that disruptions to microbial communities may undermine their interactions with human cells and
Similaire à Salmon_gut_microbiota_correlates_with_disease_infe.pdf (20)
Camel is very important in the economy of a State like Rajasthan,
and it has been a privilege to be associated with something that aids and
assists a project connected with the economic development of this State.
This report on the anatomy of the camel is based on a few observations made during a short time, with limIted facilities and in the absence
of a record of the age .of the specimens studied. Therefore, it may give
less elaborate details of the anatomy of this animal.
I wish to express my gratitude to Lt. Col. A. C. Aggarwala,
Principal, Rajasthan College of Veterinary Science and Animal Hus-
• bandry, for the aid and encouragement given to me and to Messrs. N.K.
Goel and K.C. Joshi, 4th and 2nd year veterinary students respectively,
for the splendid service rendered by them towards the completion of this
report. It has been very useful to be located near the 13th Grenadiers
(Ganga Jaisalmer) whose officers have shown me every courtesy.
It is hoped that this report may inspire some other veterinarian to
carry this investigation to completion
Atlas of Large animal surgery VeterinarySamerPaser
A thorough anatomical and pathophysiological knowledge ofthe condition
and meticulous attention to surgical principles are the basis for all surgical
procedures. Assuming these requirements are fulfilled, surgery is by its
very nature a discipline which should be visualized. Modern visual aids
are therefore playing an increasingly important role in the instruction of
surgical techniques. This does not mean that textbooks will become redundant, but there is a trend toward more illustrations and less text, a tendency
which underlies the preparation and publishing of this atlas.
The authors are of the opinion that it will be elucidating to students and
veterinary surgeons to have available a full colour photographic atlas of the
treatment of the most important surgical conditions. We have attempted to
show the essential steps of each procedure, accompanied by pertinent but
limited text. It often has been a challenge to find a balance between text and
photographs and at the same time to meet the requirements of adequate
description, within the limitations of the concept of this atlas.
This publication does not aim at replacing a textbook, and thus chapters on
general surgical principles have been omitted. It is therefore assumed that
the reader has knowledge of current concepts of, for instance, asepsis and
antisepsis, instrumentation, suture materials and techniques, wound healing, principles of fracture repair, and supportive measures (fluid therapy,
role of antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs etc.).
The surgical techniques are in most cases time-honoured and are used in
the Department of General and Large Animal Surgery and the Department of Obstetrics, Gynaecology and A.I. at Utrecht. The majority of the
presented techniques, especially those concerning the bovine species and
other food animals, can be carried out in general practice. However, a number of advanced techni
book Vet medicine large animal procedure.pdfSamerPaser
Care has been taken in each chapter to present the material in a uniform, easyto-follow format. We have intentionally departed from the standard paragraph
prose format to introduce various techniques in a step-by-step manner along
with clear explanations and rationale for each action. Our intent? To concisely
answer the critical questions everyone has when learning a new procedure:
“What do I need, what do I do, and what can go wrong?” Ultimately, our goal was
to provide these answers in a clinically accessible format, eliminating the need
to wade through more traditional texts.
After giving a presentation on the topic of “ Modern Research on Traditional Herbal
Medicine ” in the American Chemical Society national meeting (September 2006,
San Francisco), I received an e - mail from John Wiley & Sons asking if I would write
a book with the same title.
Research on traditional herbal medicine involves botany, chemistry, biology,
pharmacology, toxicology, clinical trials, and other disciplines. Chemical composi-
tion and biological or biochemical activities of many herbs have been studied by
researchers in universities and pharmaceutical companies for purposes of investiga-
tion or new drug development. So far, there have been many books introducing
functions or actions of herbs. Books on the chemistry of herbal medicines (often
called phytochemistry), biochemistry, biology, and pharmacology of herbal medi-
cines are also available. But there is no book giving a full description of all aspects
of herbal research and development.
The purpose of research on traditional herbal medicine is not only for new drug
development, but also for quality control and mechanism study of herbs. Unlike
screening for new drug candidates simply using one or two bioassay tests, explora-
tion of the mechanisms of traditional herbal medicines is much more complex. It
requires close cooperation between scientists from many disciplines to unveil the
secrets of the herbal kingdom. For maximal cooperation, pharmacologists, biolo-
gists, chemists, and clinical doctors need to have basic knowledge of the cooperating
fi elds. To scientists who are very knowledgeable in modern science and have exten-
sive research experience, their knowledge about the applications and theories of
traditional medicines they are studying, for example, traditional Chinese medicine
(TCM) and Ayurveda, might be limited. For this reason, their research designs for
these herbs may simply copy those for new drug development. As a consequence,
the results may not be accurate due to either inappropriate design of extract methods,
insufficient experiment duration in animal study, or lower concentration of samples
used for bioassay tests. This is why studies using the same assay for the same herb
from different labs have often reported different results.
This book introduces the methodology of collection and identification of herbal
materials, extraction and isolation of compounds from herbs, in vitro bioassay, in
vivo animal test, toxicology, and clinical trial for herbal research. It is not written as
a literature review. Instead, it introduces the basic content and methodology of each
research field and the keys for the study of herbal medicine. The purpose of this
book is to help scientists who are interested in the study of traditional herbal medi-
cine gain a broader view of herbal medicine and knowledge about its research.
General Introduction to Herbal Industry.pdfSamerPaser
Know about the present scope and future prospects of herbal drug industry
2. Know about the various plant based industries and institutions
3. Know about the various industries involved in work on medicinal and aromatic plants in
India
4. Know about the Schedule-T and its objectives
5. Know about the components of GMP and various infrastructural requirements of
working space
12. Detailed Planning For Fish Farm Construction.pdfSamerPaser
evaluate a potential site for the construction of a freshwater sh farm;
select the type of pond best adapted to this site and to your needs;
lay out your sh farm;
build eahen ponds; and
construct the various structures required for proper water control and transpo
12. Detailed Planning For Fish Farm Construction.pdfSamerPaser
evaluate a potential site for the construction of a freshwater sh farm;
select the type of pond best adapted to this site and to your needs;
lay out your sh farm;
build eahen ponds; and
construct the various structures required for proper water control and transpo
DNA fingerprint methods. • The locations for genes for specific traits such as egg number, body weight or carcass quality can be identified using markers and then they can be selected directly.
hematic appreciation test is a psychological assessment tool used to measure an individual's appreciation and understanding of specific themes or topics. This test helps to evaluate an individual's ability to connect different ideas and concepts within a given theme, as well as their overall comprehension and interpretation skills. The results of the test can provide valuable insights into an individual's cognitive abilities, creativity, and critical thinking skills
(June 12, 2024) Webinar: Development of PET theranostics targeting the molecu...Scintica Instrumentation
Targeting Hsp90 and its pathogen Orthologs with Tethered Inhibitors as a Diagnostic and Therapeutic Strategy for cancer and infectious diseases with Dr. Timothy Haystead.
EWOCS-I: The catalog of X-ray sources in Westerlund 1 from the Extended Weste...Sérgio Sacani
Context. With a mass exceeding several 104 M⊙ and a rich and dense population of massive stars, supermassive young star clusters
represent the most massive star-forming environment that is dominated by the feedback from massive stars and gravitational interactions
among stars.
Aims. In this paper we present the Extended Westerlund 1 and 2 Open Clusters Survey (EWOCS) project, which aims to investigate
the influence of the starburst environment on the formation of stars and planets, and on the evolution of both low and high mass stars.
The primary targets of this project are Westerlund 1 and 2, the closest supermassive star clusters to the Sun.
Methods. The project is based primarily on recent observations conducted with the Chandra and JWST observatories. Specifically,
the Chandra survey of Westerlund 1 consists of 36 new ACIS-I observations, nearly co-pointed, for a total exposure time of 1 Msec.
Additionally, we included 8 archival Chandra/ACIS-S observations. This paper presents the resulting catalog of X-ray sources within
and around Westerlund 1. Sources were detected by combining various existing methods, and photon extraction and source validation
were carried out using the ACIS-Extract software.
Results. The EWOCS X-ray catalog comprises 5963 validated sources out of the 9420 initially provided to ACIS-Extract, reaching a
photon flux threshold of approximately 2 × 10−8 photons cm−2
s
−1
. The X-ray sources exhibit a highly concentrated spatial distribution,
with 1075 sources located within the central 1 arcmin. We have successfully detected X-ray emissions from 126 out of the 166 known
massive stars of the cluster, and we have collected over 71 000 photons from the magnetar CXO J164710.20-455217.
PPT on Direct Seeded Rice presented at the three-day 'Training and Validation Workshop on Modules of Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) Technologies in South Asia' workshop on April 22, 2024.
When I was asked to give a companion lecture in support of ‘The Philosophy of Science’ (https://shorturl.at/4pUXz) I decided not to walk through the detail of the many methodologies in order of use. Instead, I chose to employ a long standing, and ongoing, scientific development as an exemplar. And so, I chose the ever evolving story of Thermodynamics as a scientific investigation at its best.
Conducted over a period of >200 years, Thermodynamics R&D, and application, benefitted from the highest levels of professionalism, collaboration, and technical thoroughness. New layers of application, methodology, and practice were made possible by the progressive advance of technology. In turn, this has seen measurement and modelling accuracy continually improved at a micro and macro level.
Perhaps most importantly, Thermodynamics rapidly became a primary tool in the advance of applied science/engineering/technology, spanning micro-tech, to aerospace and cosmology. I can think of no better a story to illustrate the breadth of scientific methodologies and applications at their best.
The debris of the ‘last major merger’ is dynamically youngSérgio Sacani
The Milky Way’s (MW) inner stellar halo contains an [Fe/H]-rich component with highly eccentric orbits, often referred to as the
‘last major merger.’ Hypotheses for the origin of this component include Gaia-Sausage/Enceladus (GSE), where the progenitor
collided with the MW proto-disc 8–11 Gyr ago, and the Virgo Radial Merger (VRM), where the progenitor collided with the
MW disc within the last 3 Gyr. These two scenarios make different predictions about observable structure in local phase space,
because the morphology of debris depends on how long it has had to phase mix. The recently identified phase-space folds in Gaia
DR3 have positive caustic velocities, making them fundamentally different than the phase-mixed chevrons found in simulations
at late times. Roughly 20 per cent of the stars in the prograde local stellar halo are associated with the observed caustics. Based
on a simple phase-mixing model, the observed number of caustics are consistent with a merger that occurred 1–2 Gyr ago.
We also compare the observed phase-space distribution to FIRE-2 Latte simulations of GSE-like mergers, using a quantitative
measurement of phase mixing (2D causticality). The observed local phase-space distribution best matches the simulated data
1–2 Gyr after collision, and certainly not later than 3 Gyr. This is further evidence that the progenitor of the ‘last major merger’
did not collide with the MW proto-disc at early times, as is thought for the GSE, but instead collided with the MW disc within
the last few Gyr, consistent with the body of work surrounding the VRM.
Mending Clothing to Support Sustainable Fashion_CIMaR 2024.pdfSelcen Ozturkcan
Ozturkcan, S., Berndt, A., & Angelakis, A. (2024). Mending clothing to support sustainable fashion. Presented at the 31st Annual Conference by the Consortium for International Marketing Research (CIMaR), 10-13 Jun 2024, University of Gävle, Sweden.
The binding of cosmological structures by massless topological defectsSérgio Sacani
Assuming spherical symmetry and weak field, it is shown that if one solves the Poisson equation or the Einstein field
equations sourced by a topological defect, i.e. a singularity of a very specific form, the result is a localized gravitational
field capable of driving flat rotation (i.e. Keplerian circular orbits at a constant speed for all radii) of test masses on a thin
spherical shell without any underlying mass. Moreover, a large-scale structure which exploits this solution by assembling
concentrically a number of such topological defects can establish a flat stellar or galactic rotation curve, and can also deflect
light in the same manner as an equipotential (isothermal) sphere. Thus, the need for dark matter or modified gravity theory is
mitigated, at least in part.
Current Ms word generated power point presentation covers major details about the micronuclei test. It's significance and assays to conduct it. It is used to detect the micronuclei formation inside the cells of nearly every multicellular organism. It's formation takes place during chromosomal sepration at metaphase.
Or: Beyond linear.
Abstract: Equivariant neural networks are neural networks that incorporate symmetries. The nonlinear activation functions in these networks result in interesting nonlinear equivariant maps between simple representations, and motivate the key player of this talk: piecewise linear representation theory.
Disclaimer: No one is perfect, so please mind that there might be mistakes and typos.
dtubbenhauer@gmail.com
Corrected slides: dtubbenhauer.com/talks.html
2. Background
The aquaculture market is expanding. As reported by
the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations in a 2018 report [1], in 2016 the global aquacul-
ture production was 110.2 million tonnes with a first-
sale value of $243.5 Billion (USD).
The world population is assessed at around 7.8 billion
people today and an increase of 2 billion is expected by
2050 according to the 2019 United Nations world popu-
lation prospect (https://population.un.org/wpp/) [2]. As
a consequence, despite the remarkable growth of the
aquaculture industries, The United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization forecast a global seafood short-
age of 50–80 million tonnes by 2030 [1]. As the world
population grows, and the demand for seafood increases,
the importance of sustainable food production comes
with the need to further optimise sustainable farming
practices including improved fish health and growth
performance.
Fish diseases are a cause of major production losses
every year in the world of aquaculture [3] and many of
them are caused by bacterial pathogenic infections (e.g.
Vibriosis, Furunculosis, Yersiniosis, Tenacibaculosis) [4].
Infectious diseases have been historically treated with
the use of antibiotics. However, with the rise of the anti-
biotic resistance crisis, sustainable alternatives for dis-
ease control are gaining momentum [5].
Given the pivotal role played by the fish gut micro-
biota in regulating host immune system, health status
and physiology [6–10], and with an altered gut micro-
biota often associated with diseases [11–13], interest has
risen in the possibility of controlling the fish health sta-
tus by modulating the gut microbiome through the use
of pre-, pro- and synbiotics [14–18].
For the selection of a new probiotic, basic information
regarding its genetics and physiology must be gained to
better understand its functions and interactions with the
other microorganisms in the gut. Identifying the factors
that govern the gut microbiota and understanding their
effect, is the first step to actively establish and maintain
a healthy gut microbiota community [10].
Environment [19], diet [20] and host genotype [21]
have been demonstrated to play an important role in de-
fining the Atlantic salmon gut microbiota composition.
However, only few studies have examined the associ-
ation between disease severity and degree of dysbiosis in
fish [10, 12, 13]. Diseases caused by external bacterial in-
fections, such as Tenacibaculosis, are responsible for
major production losses every year [4], and little is
known about potential secondary effects to the gut
microbiome during an infection and potential treatment.
Studying disease-induced alterations of the gut micro-
biota is of crucial importance for understanding the on-
set and progression of the disease as well as the
optimization of the treatment. Studies focusing on ana-
lyzing the alteration in the gut microbiota during disease
progression could give insight into this process and help
to develop new strategies for disease monitoring, preven-
tion and control. As an example, the study of the micro-
biota in the context of a disease could lead to the
identification of microbial gut signatures that correlates
with the health status of the fish and may serve as useful
biomarkers for monitoring gut health and earlier detec-
tions of a disease.
In aquaculture, water disinfection treatments with for-
malin are commonly applied to treat external infections
[3], however, their long-term effect on the fish gut
microbiota has, to our knowledge, not been investigated.
These treatments, while immediately contrasting the ex-
pansion of an external pathogen, can potentially cause
an alteration of the healthy gut microbiota composition,
and compromise the general fish growth performance by
depleting commensal symbionts involved in nutrient
metabolism, and overall health status, including immune
system modulation.
In the present study, a population of captive-reared
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) (approx. one-year-old)
was affected by a natural outbreak of an external bacter-
ial infection causing an ulcerative skin disease.
We use 16S rRNA gene metabarcoding to describe the
distal gut microbiota of fish affected to different degrees
by an external infection as well as the secondary effects
of formalin treatment. Our results provide new insight
into both disease- and treatment-related alteration of a
healthy salmon gut microbiota.
Methods
Fish rearing conditions and disease phenotype
The experimental trial was performed at the LetSea land
facility (Bjørn, Dønna, Norway) in a seawater based
flow-through system heated by heat pump and aerated.
Juvenile Atlantic salmon were obtained from the com-
mercial hatchery Grytåga Settefisk AS (Vefsn, Norway).
Fish were approximately one-year-old and vaccinated
with ALPHA JECT micro® 6 (PHARMAQ), a vaccine
that protects against furunculosis, vibriosis, cold water
vibriosis, winter sore, and infectious pancreatic necrosis.
Salmon were initially kept in brackish water (24 ppt of
salinity) for 53 days at 12 °C before being stabilized at
14 °C. The fish were acclimatized whilst being fed com-
mercial feed. Fish were then transferred to 12 replicate
2000 l tanks containing saltwater (33-34 ppt of salinity)
directly pumped from the sea and subjected to UV treat-
ment for sterilization. Each tank contained between 200
and 300 fish. After the transfer into saltwater, a subset
of the fish in each tank unexpectedly started to develop
large skin ulcers (Additional file 1 - Supplementary Fig-
ure 1). Some fish showed a more severe ulcer phenotype
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 2 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
3. while others seemed in overall good health condition
with no external signs of disease. Fish with ulcers were
then considered sick, while fish with no visible wounds
were scored as healthy. The lack of visible wounds is not
per se proof of the absence of the causal pathogen, but it
indicates that fish scored as healthy were at a less pro-
gressed stage of the disease. Therefore, we assume that
fish scored as healthy were able to resist the pathogen
for a longer period serving as a useful reference group of
more resilient fish compared to fish clearly affected by
the pathogen.
Diagnostic analysis of disease
To identify the causative agent of the ulcerative disease,
a culture-based bacteriological analysis from both wound
and kidney swabs samples was performed by Vaxxinova
Norway AS. The aim of this analysis was to identify the
pathogen and not to describe the composition of the
overall microbiome. Two different kinds of culture
media were used: marine agar medium and blood agar
with 2% NaCl medium. Sequencing of the V1-V2 hyper-
variable region of the 16S rRNA gene (primers: 27F
AGAGTTTGATCCTGGCTCAG; 519R GWATTACC
GCGGCKGCTG [22]) was performed for the identifica-
tion of the bacterial species.
Water disinfection treatment with formalin
To disinfect the entire water system, formalin was ap-
plied (aqueous solution of formaldehyde stabilized with
methanol), [23, 24]. For the treatment, we used 1 l of
formaldehyde 38% (38 mg/ml) for every 4000 L of water.
Formalin was left in the tank water to act for 30 min be-
fore reopening the water flow-through. The treatment
included two separate disinfection procedures carried
out with a period of 4 days in between. Food was with-
held for 24 h prior to treatment. Samples were collected
before and after the complete formalin treatment and
fish mortality was assessed during the trial.
Distal gut content and distal gut mucosa samples
collection
Two sampling events were performed 9 days apart dur-
ing May 2019: one sampling before and one sampling
after formalin treatment. The first sampling was per-
formed 12 days after fish were transferred to saltwater. A
total number of 80 fish were sampled from different
tanks. Of these, 40 salmon were sampled before formalin
treatment and 40 after treatment. At both time points,
20 healthy and 20 sick fish were randomly picked across
replicate tanks (Fig. 1), (see Additional file 1 - Supple-
mentary Figure 1 for tank information).
Fish were euthanized using an overdose of Finquel
MS-222 (Tricaine Methanesulfonate). Within ca. 10
mins after the euthanization, the abdominal cavity was
opened at the ventral midline, and the intestine was
aseptically removed. For each salmon, samples from
both the distal gut content and the distal gut mucosa
were collected (Fig. 1) using scalpels disinfected with
bleach 10% and ethanol 70%. For the gut content, we
carefully collected content while avoiding the inclusion
of host cells, while for the gut mucosa we sampled the
intestinal mucosal layer by scraping the epithelial surface
using a sterile scalpel. Samples were stored in 1.5 ml
sterile Lysing matrix E tubes (MP Biomedicals™) contain-
ing 1x DNA/RNA Shield™ buffer (Zymo Research).
Tubes were kept at room temperature for transport to
the laboratory and then transferred to a − 20 °C freezer
until DNA extraction.
Length (cm), weight (g) and gutted weight (g) were
measured for each fish to investigate possible correla-
tions between fish dimensions and the gut microbiota
composition. Information on the presence or absence of
visible wounds were recorded and then utilized to
categorize each fish as healthy or sick as defined above.
Three binary variables can be recognized in our ex-
perimental design: 1) healthy vs sick fish, 2) before vs
after formalin treatment and 3) type of sample (distal
gut content vs distal gut mucosa), for a total of eight
groups with 20 samples (Fig. 1 and Additional file 2).
The above-mentioned groups were used in the subse-
quent analysis and are hereafter referred to with their
acronyms as presented in Fig. 1.
DNA extraction and quality control
DNA extraction and purification from both distal gut
content and distal gut mucosa samples was performed
with an in-house extraction protocol as described in the
Additional file 3. DNA concentration was assessed with
Qubit fluorometric 3.0 quantification (Thermo-Fisher
Scientific), following the manufacturer’s
recommendations.
Real-time qPCR was performed on all extracts prior to
metabarcoding. Specifically, all DNA extracts were pre-
screened using SYBR Green qPCR [25] with both primer
sets to 1) screen for contamination in extraction nega-
tives, 2) identify the potential presence of PCR inhibi-
tors, and 3) optimise the cycles needed for
metabarcoding PCR. The qPCR were performed in 21 μl
reactions containing 2 μl DNA template, 9.5 μl of Accu-
Prime SuperMix II (Invitrogen), 6.5 μl ddH20, 0.5 μM
16S forward primer, 0.5 μM 16S-reverse primer and 1 μl
of SYBR Green/ROX solution (Invitrogen). The qPCR
amplifications were performed on an Mx3005 qPCR ma-
chine (Agilent Technologies) with the following cycling
conditions: 95 °C for 10 min, followed by 40 cycles of
95 °C for 30 s, 55 °C for 20 s, and 68 °C for 40 s. Negative
controls were included in every qPCR reaction. Using
serial dilutions of the DNA template (1:10 and 1:20) we
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 3 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
4. tested for the presence of contaminants (e.g. excess of
host DNA), responsible for PCR inhibition [26]. For
some samples only the dilutions amplified. In those
cases, the 1:10 dilution was selected for the subsequent
PCR (Additional file 4).
The Ct values obtained from the qPCR (Additional file
5) were also used to inspect relative differences in the
total microbial content of different samples or groups of
samples, with the assumption that the 16S rRNA gene
can serve as a proxy for the total microbial biomass. We
accounted for a potential bias introduced by differences
in the 16S rRNA gene copy number among OTUs (see
below).
Metabarcoding and sequencing
For 16S rRNA gene profiling, the following primers were
used: 341 F (5′-CCTAYGGGRBGCASCAG-3′) and 806
R (5′-GGACTACNNGGGTATCTAAT-3′), to amplify
the V3-V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene [27]. Previous
studies have claimed that the V3-V4 region produces
more reproducible results and retrieves a greater num-
ber of taxa when compared to the V1-V2 region [28,
29]. For this reason, we selected the V3-V4 region to de-
scribe the gut microbiota rather than the V1-V2 regions
used for the diagnostic analysis described above.
PCR was performed in 0.2 ml PCR tubes using the
same reaction composition used for qPCR with the ex-
clusion of the SYBR green and ROX dyes. Tagged
primers were used in different combinations to allow
multiplexing of samples during sequencing. According
to the qPCR results, some distal gut content samples
were subjected to 30 PCR cycles of amplification while
the others needed 35 PCR cycles to amplify. For the dis-
tal gut mucosa samples, some were subjected to 35 PCR
Fig. 1 Experimental design and types of samples collected. A total of 80 salmon were sampled, 40 before and 40 after formalin treatment, in
both cases, 20 healthy and 20 sick fish were selected (bottom). Two different types of samples, distal gut content and distal gut mucosa, have
been collected for each fish (top-left panel), for a total of 160 samples. According to the experimental design for samples collection, eight groups
of 20 samples can be recognized as described in the top-right legend: CHB = Distal gut Content of Healthy salmon Before treatment, CSB = Distal
gut Content of Sick salmon Before treatment, MHB = Distal gut Mucosa of Healthy salmon Before treatment, MSB = Distal gut Mucosa of Sick
salmon Before treatment, CHA = Distal gut Content of Healthy salmon After treatment, CSA = Distal gut Content of Sick salmon After treatment,
MHA = Distal gut Mucosa of Healthy salmon After treatment, MSA = Distal gut Mucosa of Sick salmon After treatment. (Created
with BioRender.com)
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 4 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
5. cycles while others were given 40 PCR cycles (Additional
file 4). Samples from the gut content amplified better
than those from the mucosa (see Additional file 5). PCR
was performed in triplicates under the following condi-
tions: denaturation at 95 °C for 5 min followed by the de-
termined number of cycles of denaturation at 95 °C for
15 s, annealing at 55 °C for 20 s and extension at 68 °C
for 40 s. After the completion of the cycles, samples were
left at 68 °C for 10 min for final extension and then
cooled to 4 °C. Two PCR blanks were included in all
PCR reactions with ultrapure water replacing the DNA
template. To reduce the risk of contamination, pre- and
post-PCR products were handled in two different labora-
tories designated for pre-PCR setup and post-PCR pro-
cessing respectively and PCR master mix solutions were
prepared in a designated DNA template-free laboratory.
PCR products were visualized using 2% agarose gel elec-
trophoresis (GE) to check the amplification products
quality and amount. All the samples in one PCR repli-
cate have been pooled prior to library preparation. To
reduce bias introduced by differential amplification be-
tween samples, PCR products were pooled at approxi-
mately equimolar ratios determined by gel band strength
on the agarose gel. Extraction and PCR blanks were in-
cluded in the pools for downstream quality filtering, but
in a non-equimolar fashion to avoid excessive dilution.
PCR replicates were purified through SPRI bead purifi-
cation [30], with a beads-to-sample ratio of 1X, two
washing steps in 0.5 ml of ethanol 80% and elution in
35 μl of EB Elution Buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl). DNA con-
centration measurement was performed with Qubit 3.0
(Thermo-Fisher Scientific), following the manufacturer’s
recommendations. We used the Tagsteady protocol [31]
to generate seven sequencing libraries, including three
PCR replicates from the distal gut content samples, three
PCR replicates from the distal gut mucosa samples and
one library blank made of ultrapure water. Tagsteady is
a PCR-free Illumina library preparation protocol specif-
ically developed for metabarcoding studies to avoid false
assignment of sequences to samples [25]. Indexed library
quantification was performed using NEBNext® Library
Quant Kit for Illumina® (NEB, New England Biolabs),
following the manufacturer’s recommendations. Sequen-
cing of 300 bp paired-end reads was performed at the
Danish National High-Throughput Sequencing Center,
University of Copenhagen, Denmark, using an Illumina
MiSeq platform with reagent kit v3, 600 cycles.
Bioinformatic data processing
Raw reads were quality filtered and de-multiplexed prior
to downstream analyses. Read quality was initially
checked with FastQC [32]. Sequences were trimmed
with AdapterRemoval [33], adapters were removed to-
gether with low-quality bases (minquality = 28). Only
sequences with a minimum length of 100 bp were
retained. AdapterRemoval was also used to merge over-
lapping paired-end sequences to obtain the entire 16S
rRNA gene V3-V4 region covered by the primers. Reads
within each amplicon library were demultiplexed and fil-
tered using Begum (https://github.com/shyamsg/
Begum), a modified version of DAMe [34]. Singletons
were removed and only sequences present in at least
two out of three PCR replicates were maintained for
downstream analyses. Merged read pairs were further fil-
tered for their length, conserving only sequences with a
length between 380 and 480 bp.
The remaining sequences were then used to detect
OTUs. OTU clustering was performed with SUMA-
CLUST, using a 97% similarity threshold [35]. The use
of higher clustering thresholds can provide an improved
resolution and their adoption should always be taken
into consideration [36]. As such, we also performed a
clustering with a 99% similarity to generate amplicon se-
quence variants (ASVs). The use of a higher clustering
threshold did not increase the resolution of the strains
relevant in our study, therefore we opted to use OTUs
instead of ASVs to be able to better relate our results
with previous studies.
Begum was used to convert the sequences in a suitable
format for the clustering and to generate an OTU abun-
dance table from the SUMACLUST output. After the
OTU table was generated, sequences were blasted using
QIIME (version 1.9.1) [37] against the NCBI nucleotide
(nt) database for taxonomy assignment.
Contaminants identification and removal
We identified and removed sequences originating from
putative contaminants. To identify contaminants, all the
DNA extraction and PCR amplification negative controls
were included in the sequencing. The compositional
profile of the negative controls was used to identify pu-
tative contaminants. To avoid removal of genuine OTUs
present in the negative controls as a consequence of
cross-contamination, all OTUs present in the negative
controls were further investigated through BLAST
search and, in some cases, phylogenetic analysis.
One OTU representing an unknown Mycoplasma was
highly dominant in one out of the 11 negative controls
while also being dominant in most of the biological sam-
ples. For this unknown Mycoplasma genus, a maximum
likelihood (ML) phylogenetic tree was built. The se-
quence of the unknown Mycoplasma was blasted against
NCBI database with blastn. A total of 28 sequences re-
trieved from GenBank were included in the tree, com-
prising 15 sequences obtained from fish gut or fish-
related samples such as fish farm sediments. Myco-
plasma mobile, a fish gill pathogen that diverged from
all the other sequences, was included as an outgroup.
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 5 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
6. The 29 sequences were aligned with MUSCLE [38] and
the multiple alignment was used to build a ML
neighbor-joining (NJ) phylogenetic tree with MEGA5
[39]. A model selection test was performed with MEGA5
to test for the optimal substitution model. The General
Time Reversible (GTR) substitution model retrieved the
lowest BIC scores (Bayesian Information Criterion) and
was therefore considered the model that best described
the substitution pattern in the data. The ML-NJ-
phylogenetic tree was then constructed using the GTR
substitution model and 1000 bootstrap tests.
We further investigated a putative non-biological ori-
gin of the so-identified contaminants. We combined in-
formation from patterns of co-occurrence between the
OTUs, their prevalence in samples with low total micro-
bial content and support from previous literature on re-
agent contamination [40–42]. Spearman correlation
coefficient between OTUs (after rarefaction) was calcu-
lated in R (version 3.6.3) [43, 44] and plotted as a heat-
map with the corrplot R package [45]. The qPCR based
Ct values for each sample (Additional file 5) were incor-
porated in the analysis as a relative proxy for total mi-
crobial content to support identified contaminants.
Reagent contaminants are known to affect mostly the
samples with low total microbial content [40–42, 46].
We visualized this trend by plotting the relative abun-
dances of contaminants (calculated as the sum of all the
putative contaminants relative abundances) against Ct
values using the “ggscatter” function (ggplot2 R package)
[47]. We included OTUs recognized as genuine, OTU1
(Aliivibrio sp.) and OTU2 (Mycoplasma sp.), for
comparison.
We complemented our analysis with a standard
method for removing contaminants to avoid unnecessar-
ily strict filtering. Specifically, we applied decontam [48]
using the prevalence method as suggested for samples
with low biomass and selecting a classification threshold
of P* = 0.5.
Data normalization and diversity analysis
After contaminants removal, also mitochondrial and
chloroplast sequences were manually removed. Samples
were then normalized by sub-sampling to a depth of
4000 reads. All samples with less than 4000 reads were
discarded. It is worth noting that since the rarefaction
process may lead to the loss of low abundant OTUs and
reduced richness values, studies interested in investigat-
ing low abundant OTUs should consider other methods
of data normalization [49, 50]. Diversity analyses were
conducted, using the hilldiv R-package [51] in Rstudio
version 1.2.5033 [43, 44]. Wilcoxon rank-sum test was
performed with the hilldiv package to test for statistically
significant differences in the mean richness and Shannon
index among the described groups.
Microbial composition analysis
Stacked bar plots representing the microbial compos-
ition of the different samples or groups of samples were
generated using phyloseq [52], vegan [53] and ggplot2
[47] R packages. We used the gplots package “heat-
map.2” function [54] and RColorBrewer [55] to create a
heatmap representing OTU abundances among all eight
groups. A heatmap dendrogram representing beta diver-
sity among groups was calculated using Jaccard distance
metric in vegan. We used Wilcoxon rank-sum test to as-
sess differences in the relative abundance of OTUs
among groups of samples. Health status effect and tank
effect on the gut microbiota composition were assessed
with a permutational analysis of variance (PERM
ANOVA) using the “adonis” vegan function.
Correlation between microbiota and fish weight
We investigated potential correlations between the
microbiota and the fish weight by calculating the Spear-
man’s correlation coefficients between fish weight and
the relative abundance of the most abundant OTUs
(Aliivibrio sp. and Mycoplasma sp.). For this analysis,
only samples before formalin treatment were considered.
Spearman correlations were calculated and plotted using
ggpubr [56] and ggplot2 R packages. Condition factor K
(K value), a normalization of fish weight according to its
length, is a useful measure that allows for the standard-
ized assessment of fish condition [57]. We calculated the
K value for every fish via the formula: K ¼ 10N
W
L3 (where
W is the weight of the fish in grams (g), L is the length
of the fish in millimeters (mm) and parameter N = 5 as
suited for salmonids [57]). We then included the calcu-
lated K values in the correlation analysis.
Fish were then grouped according to Aliivibrio sp. and
Mycoplasma sp. relative abundances in their microbiota.
Salmon with a percentage of Aliivibrio sp. higher than
80% (25 fish in total) were pooled together in one group
and salmon with a percentage of Mycoplasma sp. higher
than 80% (37 fish in total) were pooled in another group.
All the other samples were discarded from this analysis.
After testing for prerequisites, we used Welch’s t-test to
assess differences in the mean fish weight between the
two groups.
Comparison of total microbial content
We considered the qPCR Ct values to assess variations
in total microbial content among groups. Ct values are
inversely proportional to the amount of target DNA in
the sample, meaning that in microbial metabarcoding
studies the Ct value increases as the amount of total mi-
crobial content in the sample decreases. The assumption
is that the 16S rRNA gene can serve as a proxy for the
actual abundance of microorganisms. A major deviation
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 6 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
7. from this assumption can be introduced by differences
in the 16S rRNA gene copy number among microorgan-
isms. We used qPCR Ct values as a proxy for the sam-
ples’ total microbial content and tested for differences in
the qPCR Ct values among groups with an ANOVA
coupled with a Tukey’s HSD post-hoc test for pairwise
comparisons in R (version 3.6.3) [43]. We checked that
our conclusions were robust by accounting for differ-
ences in 16S rRNA gene copy number between Myco-
plasma sp. and Aliivibrio sp., the two OTUs dominating
our dataset. We utilized the information on EzBioCloud
database (https://www.ezbiocloud.net/) (Accessed 28 July
2020) [58] to estimate the 16S rRNA gene copy number
in Aliivibrio sp. and Mycoplasma sp. Median values for
both genera were selected as an approximation of the
real copy number value of our OTUs. Aliivibrio genus
has a median value of 12, while the value for the Myco-
plasma genus is two. We then calculated a Ct value cor-
rection coefficient as log2(12/2) and, for each sample, we
multiplied this value for the Aliivibrio sp. relative abun-
dance and added the result to the sample Ct value:
Corrected Ct value ¼ Ct value þ log2
a
m
Aliivibrio relative abundance
a = Aliivibrio genus median 16S rRNA gene copy
number.
m = Mycoplasma genus median 16S rRNA gene copy
number.
This correction does not account for changes in the
OTUs relative abundances as a consequence of the dif-
ferent copy number, which, if included, would reduce
the bias by reducing the Aliivibrio sp. relative abun-
dance. Therefore, the applied correction is intended as a
conservative approach to test the robustness of the Ct
value based observations by demonstrating that they are
not an artifact derived by differences in 16 rRNA gene
copy number.
Data and scripts used for the analysis are available at
the GitHub repository: https://github.com/DavideBozzi/
Bozzi_et_al_2020_analysis.
Results
Identification of the causative disease agent
The bacteriological analysis led to the identification of
Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi as the most likely causative
agent of the ulcerative disease. Tenacibaculum is a
known pathogenic genus causing ulcerative disease
(Tenacibaculosis) in salmonids [59–64]. Vibrio tapetis, a
known pathogen of cultured clams where it causes
brown ring disease [65], was also isolated from the
wounds and kidney samples. V. tapetis has been previ-
ously isolated from diseased fish [66–68] but it is not
regarded as a primary pathogen for fish [69].
Reagent contamination affect samples with lower
bacterial biomass
Contamination from the reagent microbiome is a known
problem that can affect samples with low bacterial bio-
mass [40–42]. The contaminants identification analysis
recognized 22 OTUs as contaminants. The composition
of the negative controls was used to identify putative
contaminants (Additional file 1 - Supplementary Figure
2). Remarkably, almost all the OTUs found in the nega-
tive controls corresponded to well-known reagent con-
taminants [40–42]. Among all OTUs detected in the
negative controls, only OTU2 (an unknown Mycoplasma
genus) could be clearly assigned, with a phylogenetic
analysis, to fish gut or fish-related environments and was
therefore retained (Additional file 1 - Supplementary
Figure 3). All other OTUs detected as contaminants
were discarded. Further support for the non-biological
origin of these OTUs comes from the pattern of co-
occurrence (Additional file 1 - Supplementary Figure 4),
which are known to characterize reagents contaminants
[40], and from the observed trend of these OTUs to in-
crease their relative abundance in samples with lower
microbial content (higher qPCR Ct value), (Additional
file 1 - Supplementary Figure 5). Notably, Mycoplasma
sp. did not co-occur with the OTUs regarded as contam-
inants and did not increase its abundance in samples
with lower microbial content.
Decontam supported our analysis, recognizing 14
OTUs out of the 22 identified with our customized
method as contaminants. The eight OTUs only detected
as contaminants in our customized approach were all
characterized by having a very low relative abundance,
while all the major contaminants were identified by both
methods.
The distal gut microbiota is characterized by low alpha
diversity
In total, 13.7 million reads were generated by the Illu-
mina MiSeq sequencing platform for the distal gut con-
tent and the distal gut mucosa samples. After quality
inspection and trimming, reads were clustered into 130
OTUs using a similarity threshold of 97% (Add-
itional file 6). After taxonomy assignment (Add-
itional file 7), contaminants reads, as well as chloroplasts
and mitochondrial reads were removed and the samples
were rarefied to 4000 reads per sample. In this way, 47
of the original 160 samples were discarded. For the
remaining 113 samples, the contaminants removal pro-
cedure and the rarefaction process reduced the total
number of OTUs to 65.
The relative abundance of OTUs was highly uneven,
with just two OTUs being highly abundant across all
samples: Aliivibrio sp. and an unknown Mycoplasma
genus. These two OTUs alone accounted for 99.68% of
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 7 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
8. the total number of reads after filtering and
normalization.
BLAST search of the Aliivibrio sp. sequence did not
identify the specific species since the sequence recovered
an exact match (100% of similarity) with two, closely re-
lated [70], Aliivibrio species: Aliivibrio logei and Aliivi-
brio salmonicida, the latter being a well-known
pathogen causing cold water vibriosis in salmonids [71].
Conversely, the Mycoplasma sp. sequence is part of a
yet undescribed genus in the Mycoplasmateceae family.
Interestingly, our sequence showed to be phylogenetically
related to other Mycoplasma species identified in fish gut
samples [72–76] which phylogenetically clustered together
(Additional file 1 - Supplementary Figure 3), suggesting
the existence of a fish-associated Mycoplasma genus.
The alpha diversity analysis highlighted a low micro-
bial biodiversity in the investigated salmon intestine
(Additional file 8). Samples were clustered according to
the eight groups defined in Fig. 1 and mean alpha diver-
sity values for each group are shown in Fig. 2. Given the
highly uneven microbial relative abundances, Shannon
index values are expected to better describe the system
[51]. The Shannon index values highlight a striking fea-
ture characterizing the investigated samples: many of
them are dominated in the composition by just one
OTU (Fig. 2b). The increase of the Shannon index in
CHA and CSA indicate the coexistence of the two highly
abundant OTUs in some samples of these groups.
The distal gut microbiota of healthy and sick fish differs
in both composition and total microbial content
Relative abundances of the two most abundant bacteria,
Aliivibrio sp. and Mycoplasma sp., have been investigated
for both the single samples (Additional file 1 - Supple-
mentary Figure 6) and the eight groups (Fig. 3a). All other
OTUs constituted less than 0.5% of the total number of
reads and were clustered into a single category referred to
as Others. In accordance with the alpha diversity results,
many samples were either dominated by Aliivibrio sp. or
Mycoplasma sp. Few samples were characterized by
a more even abundance of both OTUs, and many of these
samples were from the distal gut content of both healthy
and sick fish after formalin treatment. Beta diversity
among groups is visualized in Fig. 3b.
A striking difference in the microbiota composition be-
tween healthy and diseased salmon was observed. In
healthy fish, the relative abundance of Mycoplasma sp.
was higher in percentage when compared to sick fish and
vice versa for Aliivibrio sp. (Fig. 3). The observed differ-
ence in Mycoplasma sp. and Aliivibrio sp. relative abun-
dances between healthy and sick fish before formalin
treatment was statistically significant (Wilcoxon rank-sum
test: p 0.05) and a PERMANOVA analysis showed a sta-
tistically significant effect of the fish health status on
determining the gut microbiota composition (R2
= 0.23,
P ≤ 0.001). Some individual outlier samples were present
(Additional file 1 - Supplementary Figure 6). It is possible
that fish initially evaluated as healthy were affected by
Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi, but that they had not devel-
oped external ulcers yet.
Beta diversity among groups also showed that CHB
and MHB cluster together, indicating that the healthy
fish gut microbiota presents a distinct compositional
profile that differs from groups affected by the disease
and/or the formalin treatment. Together, the Shannon
index and the relative abundance observations suggest
that the microbiome of healthy fish before formalin
treatment is dominated by the unknown Mycoplasma
sp., while the sick fish gut microbiota is dominated by
Aliivibrio sp. and that this difference is visible from both
the gut content and the gut mucosa samples (Fig. 3).
We observed a statistically significant tank effect on
the gut microbiota composition (PERMANOVA R2
=
0.35, P 0.01). However, since the compositional differ-
ences observed between healthy and sick fish were statis-
tically supported (see above), we exclude the possibility
of the tank effect having affected our main findings. In-
stead, we retain that differences in the stage of the dis-
ease progression among tanks and discrepancies in the
number of healthy and sick fish sampled from different
tanks might play a major role in the observed tank effect
(Additional file 1 - Supplementary Figure 1).
We further investigated possible differences in the total
gut microbial content of healthy and sick salmon. Differ-
ences in mean Ct values among groups were tested with
ANOVA coupled with a Tukey’s HSD post-hoc test for
pairwise comparisons (Fig. 4). Statistically significant differ-
ences were observed when comparing CHB vs. CSB and
MHB vs. MSB. In both cases, the healthy samples presented
higher Ct values than their diseased counterpart. This indi-
cates that healthy salmon tend to have lower total microbial
content than sick ones, pointing to a disease-associated in-
crease in the total microbial content in the gut.
Taken together, compositional and abundance data in-
dicates that the distal gut microbiota of healthy salmon
was colonized almost entirely by Mycoplasma sp. Fish
affected by the external T. dicentrarchi infection experi-
enced an expansion of Aliivibrio sp. relative abundance
which also corresponded to an increase in the total mi-
crobial content in the distal gut.
High fish weight correlate with a Mycoplasma dominated
gut microbiota
We checked the presence of a possible correlation between
specific OTUs and other relevant phenotypic traits: fish
weight and condition factor K (see methods). Fish weight
was positively correlated with Mycoplasma sp. relative
abundance, and negatively correlated with Aliivibrio sp.
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 8 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
9. relative abundance (Fig. 5). Results based on the condition
factor K showed a similar pattern (Additional file 1 - Sup-
plementary Figure 7).
Fish with high Mycoplasma sp. relative abundance
were statistically bigger (mean = 207.6 ± 18.4 g) than fish
with high Aliivibrio sp. relative abundances (mean =
187.1 ± 22.4 g; Welch’s t-test: p 0.001).
The distal gut mucosa harbors a lower total microbial
biomass than the gut content and is more affected by
Aliivibrio sp. colonization
Interesting compositional differences were observed
between the gut mucosa and gut content microbiota
profiles. Mucosa samples have a higher Aliivibrio sp.
relative abundance compared to the content samples
Fig. 2 Richness and Shannon index mean values and standard deviations for the eight groups. Boxplot showing the richness (effective number
of OTUs) (a) and Shannon index (b) values for the eight groups. The group name abbreviations are defined in Fig. 1. Groups of samples before
formalin treatment are on the left side of the plot, while those after treatment are on the right. Gut content samples are colored in blue while
gut mucosa samples are shown in red. Color intensity discriminates between healthy (light) and sick (darker). All groups show low alpha
diversities. Statistically significant pairwise differences (Wilcoxon rank-sum test, p 0.05) in the mean richness and Shannon index values among
the groups are highlighted with an asterisk (*)
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 9 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
10. in the groups affected by the disease and/or the for-
malin treatment (Fig. 3). This spatial difference be-
tween sample types indicates that the Aliivibrio sp.
efficiently colonizes the mucosal tissue, in line with
what is expected from pathogenic microorganisms,
whose success in the infection largely depends on
their ability to adhere to host cells and colonize host
tissue [77].
We also observed a signal of different total micro-
bial content between microbiota originating from the
gut mucosa and the gut content samples. Statistically
significant differences (Tukey’s HSD post-hoc test:
p 0.05) were observed in the comparison between
the mean Ct values of distal gut content groups and
their distal gut mucosa counterparts, with the mucosa
always presenting a higher mean Ct value (Fig. 4).
This suggests that the distal gut mucosa is character-
ized by a relatively lower microbial biomass than the
distal gut content, an observation in accordance with
the fact that only distal gut mucosa samples were af-
fected by reagent contamination. Together, these ob-
servations indicate that in some fish the mucosa
tissue might have harbored an incredibly low total
microbial biomass.
Aliivibrio sp. relative abundance increases after formalin
treatment
While formalin treatment proved to induce a reduction
in fish mortality (Additional file 1 - Supplementary Fig-
ure 8) its effect on the gut microbiome remains debat-
able. The gut microbiota composition of the formalin
treated salmon, both healthy and sick, seems to mimic
the composition of the sick fish before treatment, with
an increased relative abundance of Aliivibrio sp. (Fig.
3a). This increase in Aliivibrio sp. relative abundance
also in the healthy individuals seems to be responsible
for the increase of Shannon index observed in some
samples after formalin treatment.
The comparison of the mean Ct values of the groups,
before and after formalin treatment, showed no signifi-
cant differences in the total microbial biomass (Fig. 4).
This indicates that the disinfectant was not inducing a
reduction in the total gut bacterial biomass of the
treated fish.
Discussion
We identified Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi as the most
plausible cause of the ulcerative skin disease (Tenaciba-
culosis). Vibrio tapetis was also identified from wound
and kidney swabs. Vibrio tapetis is expected to be an op-
portunistic species, taking advantage of the weakened
immune system of the host to expand, as previously ob-
served [69]. The disease developed after the juvenile sal-
mon (approximately one-year-old) were moved from
freshwater to saltwater, pointing to a possible role of the
change in salinity in triggering the Tenacibaculosis, in
accordance with previous studies describing changes in
fish skin and gut microbiome in response to change in
salinity [78–81].
The distal gut microbiota of the investigated salmon
was characterized by low levels of alpha diversity com-
pared to previous studies on salmon [12, 19, 82–84]. Al-
most all fish were characterized by only one, highly
abundant OTU, with few samples being characterized by
Fig. 3 Microbial composition of the investigated groups and groups beta diversity. a Barplots depicting the microbial composition of the
investigated groups (see Fig. 1 for definition) shows that they are dominated in the composition by two OTUs: Aliivibrio sp. and Mycoplasma sp.
Specific shifts in the relative abundance of the two highly abundant OTUs across groups are visualized. b Clustering based on beta diversity
(represented as a dendrogram) is mainly determined by the relative abundance of the two dominating OTUs as shown by the heatmap
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 10 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
11. two abundant OTUs. The strict filtering that we applied
to the sequence data to minimize the chance of over-
inflation of OTU richness from contamination and the
rarefaction process could partially explain the low values
of richness observed in the salmon distal gut in the
present study. However, the low microbial biodiversity ob-
served could be a true biological phenomenon, explained,
for example, by the impact of relatively sterile captive rear-
ing conditions in the microbiota ontogeny process. Marine
water is highly enriched in pathogens. For this reason,
water sterilization procedures are commonly applied in
land-based aquaculture systems to control pathogen infec-
tions. These practices, while helping to prevent infectious
disease outbreaks, may also compromise the colonization
of the fish gut by other, potentially beneficial, bacteria.
This, combined with a generally more uniform diet, might
be responsible for the lower levels of alpha diversity ob-
served in the investigated salmon when compared to their
wild counterparts [83].
However, low levels of biodiversity are usually ob-
served also in wild adult salmon, indicating a natural re-
duction in the microbiome alpha diversity during life-
cycle stage progression, with the lowest values observed
in marine adults [85]. This suggests that high levels of
alpha diversity are not necessarily beneficial in adult sal-
mon in contrast to what is often observed in mammals
[86] and that a relatively low microbial biodiversity
should be expected also in healthy salmon.
A comparison between healthy and sick fish showed
that healthy fish were characterized by higher
Fig. 4 Ct values comparison across groups of samples. The boxplot shows the qPCR Ct values for all sample groups. Groups of samples before
formalin treatment are on the left side of the plot, while those after treatment are on the right. Gut content samples are colored in blue while
gut mucosa samples in red. Color intensity discriminates between healthy (light) and sick (darker). ANOVA coupled with a Tukey’s HSD post-hoc
test for pairwise comparisons was performed. Differences in the mean Ct values across groups can be seen when comparing groups of healthy
fish with their sick counterpart (e.g. CHB vs CSB) and when distal gut content groups with their distal gut mucosa counterpart (e.g. CHB vs MHB).
Sick fish present lower Ct values than the healthy ones indicating an increase in the total microbial biomass in relation to disease progression,
and gut mucosa samples harbor a lower total microbial biomass than the gut content. No difference in the Ct values could be detected in
response to formalin treatment indicating a negligible direct effect on the gut total microbial content. Statistically significant differences in the
mean Ct value between groups are highlighted for biologically relevant comparisons (see Additional file 9 for all the comparisons p-values)
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 11 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
12. Mycoplasma sp. relative abundances, while sick fish were
enriched for Aliivibrio sp. This pattern has been previ-
ously observed also in salmon infected by Tenacibacu-
lum finnmarkense [87]. Differences in the total microbial
biomass were found between healthy and sick salmon,
with the sick fish characterized by a higher total micro-
bial content. This corresponds to the increase in Aliivi-
brio sp. relative abundance and suggests that Aliivibrio
sp. might be the driver of the observed increase in the
total microbial content in the diseased fish. These obser-
vations highlight a correlation between the identified
Aliivibrio sp. and the disease, pointing to a pathogenic
or an opportunistic nature of this strain, as also observed
with Vibrio tapetis on the skin. Our Aliivibrio sp. se-
quence showed 100% similarity with the salmon patho-
gen A. salmonicida. Interestingly, the studied salmon
were vaccinated against A. salmonicida, therefore the
fish are expected to mount an immune response against
this pathogen. The fact that Aliivibrio sp. is capable of
escaping the host’s immune control might be a conse-
quence of the compromised health condition of the fish
affected by the external T. dicentrarchi infection. In
Fig. 5 Spearman’s rank correlation between OTUs relative abundance and fish weight. A positive correlation (Spearman’s R = 0.43, p 0.001) was
found when comparing Mycoplasma sp. relative abundance and fish weight (top). Similarly, a negative correlation (Spearman’s R = − 0.44, p
0.001) was observed when comparing Aliivibrio sp. relative abundance with fish weight (bottom)
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 12 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
13. these conditions, a sick fish may fail to mount an effi-
cient immunological response against Aliivibrio sp.
These observations suggest that the external skin infec-
tion may favor the expansion of other opportunistic spe-
cies inducing a dysbiosis of the gut microbiota
community, potentially predisposing the fish to further
infections and compromised health conditions post
treatment.
While the formalin treatment is useful to treat the ex-
ternal skin infection, as also supported by the reduced
mortality in our salmon cohort after treatment with for-
malin (Additional file 1 - Supplementary Figure 8), it
also induced changes of the gut microbiota community
towards profiles similar to those observed in sick fish be-
fore treatment. All groups of samples presented higher
Aliivibrio sp. relative abundances after treatment, which
might be the consequence of a disruptive effect exerted
by the formalin treatment. Using Ct values as a proxy
for microbial biomass revealed that formalin treatment
did not induce a reduction in the total gut microbial
abundance, although we cannot rule out more subtle ef-
fects. Specifically, formalin treatment may have had a
larger impact in inhibiting the growth and abundance of
Mycoplasma sp. compared to the presumed opportunis-
tic/pathogenic Aliivibrio sp. in the gut of healthy fish.
However, it should also be noted that the absence of an
untreated control group at the second time point pre-
vents us from discriminating between direct effects
caused by the formalin treatment as opposed to longitu-
dinal changes independent from the treatment itself.
Among the possible confounding factors we exclude a
role of salinity in affecting these changes since previous
studies have highlighted an increase in Mycoplasma sp.
abundance in the gut of marine adult salmon [85]. In-
stead, we retain that the progression of the gut dysbiosis
might play a relevant role in the observed changes of the
diseased fish gut mucosa microbiota after formalin treat-
ment (MSA). Notably, CSA was the only group of sam-
ples that did not show an increase in Aliivibrio sp.
abundance if compared with CSB, its pre-treatment
counterpart. This might be explained by the observed
preference of Aliivibrio sp. of colonizing the gut mucosa
compared to the gut content.
Together, these observations imply that even if forma-
lin is an effective treatment for external infections, it
does not avoid the expansion of other opportunistic/
pathogenic strains in the gut of diseased fish. Moreover,
the formalin treatment seems to compromise the gut of
healthy fish. Even after a full recovery from the T. dicen-
trarchi infection, the compromised gut microbiome
established during the disease and the formalin treat-
ment might negatively affect the subsequent health sta-
tus of the fish by making it more prone to develop
further infections. In conclusion, it would be advisable
to consider strategies, such as probiotic administration,
aimed at re-establishing a healthy gut microbiome after
formalin treatments.
Compositional and beta diversity results highlighted
that gut microbiota in healthy salmon before formalin
treatment was almost exclusively characterized by the
unknown Mycoplasma genus. The Mycoplasmataceae
are members of the phylum Tenericutes, class Molli-
cutes [88] (Note - in the SILVA database, “Tenericutes”
has been updated to “Firmicutes” and “Mollicutes” has
been updated to “Bacilli.”). They are characterized by
small genomes and the absence of a cell wall [88]. Inter-
estingly they are found in a wide range of habitats but
each strain seems specifically adapted to a particular
host environment as suggested by their reduced genome
sizes, which may reflect secondary gene loss after having
adapted to the specific niche [88]. This characteristic
also makes the Mycoplasmataceae organisms difficult to
grow on conventional media. As a consequence, the
identification of Mycoplasma spp. in salmonids and
other fish guts has not been possible using culture-based
methods. Since the introduction of culture-free methods
for microbiome investigations, such as shotgun metage-
nomics and targeted gene amplicon sequencing, Myco-
plasma species have been more often reported in
salmonid gut samples, including commercially relevant
species such as Atlantic salmon [19, 85, 87, 89–91], Chi-
nook salmon [81, 92], and Rainbow trout [93–97], where
Mycoplasma spp. often account for the majority of the
sequenced reads. Specifically, it has been observed that
Mycoplasma spp. relative abundances increase during
salmon development [98], and in particular after transi-
tion to saltwater [85]. In light of these facts, there is a
growing interest regarding this microorganism and the
functional roles it might play in the gut of salmonids.
The classification of Mycoplasma species is not a triv-
ial issue. It has been observed that the Mycoplasma
genus is a polyphyletic group including species known
to be metabolically diverse, with all the species falling
into one order (Mycoplasmatales) and one family
(Mycoplasmataceae). To address the Mycoplasma genus
polyphyly issue, Gupta and colleagues [88], have recently
proposed the creation of a new order (Mycoplasmoid-
males), two new families (Mycoplasmoidaceae fam. Nov.
and Metamycoplasmataceae fam. Nov.) and five new
genera. Our phylogenetic analysis identified the Myco-
plasma sp. observed in our study as part of a new, yet
undescribed, genus, more closely related to the newly
proposed Malacoplasma genus [88]. The 16S rRNA
gene sequence of the Mycoplasma sp. identified in this
study clustered with those of other Mycoplasma spp.
identified in the gut of other fish constituting, a new
undescribed genus specific to fish intestines. This new
Mycoplasma genus might be the result of a long-
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 13 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
14. established symbiosis, in which the microorganisms have
evolved to specifically adapt to the fish gut environment
[84], as indeed supported by a recent study that, using
shotgun metagenomics, suggested that the Mycoplasma
species dominating the microbiota in healthy salmonids
may represent an evolutionary adaptation providing
beneficial roles to their host [99]. The lack of the micro-
organism in the surrounding waters observed by a previ-
ous study [100], as well as their small genomes, further
support this hypothesis.
The Mycoplasma strains found in salmonid gut en-
vironments have so far not been associated with any
negative fitness effects on their host. This is in con-
trast to what has been observed in other vertebrates
[88], or even with strains found in other fish species
[101–103], where Mycoplasma species are often
pathogenic. In the present study, Mycoplasma sp.
showed a negative correlation with Aliivibrio sp. and
characterized the gut microbiota of healthy salmon.
Previous studies have reported a similar negative
correlation between Mycoplasma and pathogenic
bacteria like Flavobacterium psychrophilum [93], and
genera including potentially pathogenic species such
as Aeromonas spp. [97] and Vibrio spp. [92]. To-
gether, these observations point to a general trend
where Mycoplasma sp. can be seen as a biomarker
negatively associated with the presence of pathogenic
strains.
Conclusion and perspective
In the present study we have shown how an external
bacterial skin infection can cause a systemic shift, fa-
voring the expansion of an opportunistic strain pre-
sumably causing dysbiosis of the gut microbiota.
Furthermore, fish treated with formalin showed a gut
microbiota composition more similar to that of sick
fish than to healthy ones. These observations are rele-
vant for treatment optimization, which may include
strategies to restore a healthy microbiota profile after
infection treatment.
We retain that our results should be considered for
the development of a novel 16S rRNA gene
barcoding-based monitoring tool. Here, we suggest
the possibility of utilizing Mycoplasma sp. as a new
microbial biomarker to monitor the health status of
farmed salmonids in real-time, possibly through non-
invasive sampling procedures. The non-invasive sam-
pling of feces has been shown to provide useful infor-
mation on the fish gut microbiomes [104] and can
hence be implemented for such monitoring strategies.
If we assume our results represent a general pattern,
then temporal monitoring of the relative abundance
of the Mycoplasma sp. can be used to detect possible
pathogen infections earlier than e.g. visual
identification of skin ulcers. Such faster diagnostics
could allow more timely treatment of the fish before
severe phenotypic traits develop, substantially redu-
cing disease-associated production losses.
Supplementary Information
The online version contains supplementary material available at https://doi.
org/10.1186/s42523-021-00096-2.
Additional file 1. Supplementary Figures.
Additional file 2. Metadata file. File containing all the metadata
associated with the samples.
Additional file 3. DNA extraction protocol.
Additional file 4. PCR info file. File containing the information on the
number of PCR cycles and dilution used for each sample.
Additional file 5. qPCR Ct values file. File containing the qPCR Ct value
for each sample.
Additional file 6. Original un-rarefied OTU table with associated OTU
sequences.
Additional file 7. OTU taxonomy file. Taxonomic classification of each
OTU.
Additional file 8. Samples alpha diversity.
Additional file 9. Table with the p-values for all the mean Ct values
comparison.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank the HoloFood partners for sampling efforts
and the Erasmus + Traineeship programme for its financial support to DB
during his stay at the University of Copenhagen.
Authors’ contributions
MTL and MTPG were responsible for the study design. MTL, JAR and KN
performed the sampling. DB, in collaboration with JAR, has performed all the
laboratory procedures and bioinformatic analysis of the data. CC developed
the DNA extraction protocol used in this study. HS and KN were in charge of
the experimental design, salmon husbandry and performance of the
experimental trial including the formalin treatment. DB drafted the
manuscript and all authors read and approved the final version.
Funding
This project was funded by the Innovation Fund Denmark grant to M.T.P.G.
(FoodTrancriptomics - 6150-00033B), The Danish National Research Founda-
tion award to M.T.P.G. (CEH - DNRF143), The Independent Research Fund
Denmark grant to M.T.L. (HappyFish - (#8022-00005A), the European Unionʼs
Horizon 2020 Innovation Action grant to M.T.P.G. and M.T.L. (HoloFood -
817729).
Availability of data and materials
Sequencing data are provided at the NCBI Sequence Read Archive (SRA)
database under the study accession code PRJNA665207. Scripts and data
used for the analysis can be found in the Github repository: https://github.
com/DavideBozzi/Bozzi_et_al_2020_analysis.
Vaxxinova Norway AS diagnosis report is available upon request.
Declarations
Ethics approval and consent to participate
The experimental procedures used in this study were approved by the
Norwegian Food Safety Authority. The trial was done under «Forskrift om
bruk av. dyr i forsøk» 2.F. as a feed trial and was not specifically applied to
mattilsynet pre-trial. Use of treatment (Compassionate use) was applied and
approved pre-treatment. (https://lovdata.no/dokument/SF/forskrift/2015-06-1
8-761).
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 14 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
15. Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Author details
1
Department of Biotechnology and Biosciences, University of Milano-Bicocca,
Milan, Italy. 2
Center for Evolutionary Hologenomics, GLOBE Institute,
University of Copenhagen, DK-1353 Copenhagen, Denmark. 3
Laboratory of
Genomics and Molecular Medicine, Department of Biology, University of
Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark. 4
Lerøy Seafood Group ASA, N-5020
Bergen, Norway. 5
Let Sea AS, 8801 Sandnessjøen, Norway.
Received: 27 December 2020 Accepted: 4 April 2021
References
1. FAO Meeting the sustainable development goals. 2018.
2. World population prospects 2019. Available at https://population.un.org/
wpp/.
3. Assefa A, Abunna F. Maintenance of fish health in aquaculture: review of
epidemiological approaches for prevention and control of infectious disease
of fish: Veterinary Medicine International; 2018. https://www.hindawi.com/
journals/vmi/2018/5432497/. Accessed 8 Apr 2020.
4. Pridgeon J. Major bacterial diseases in aquaculture and their vaccine
development. CAB Rev Perspect Agric Vet Sci Nutr Nat Resour. 2012;7(048):
1-16. https://doi.org/10.1079/PAVSNNR20127048.
5. Ventola CL. The antibiotic resistance crisis. Pharm Ther. 2015;40(4):277–83.
6. Nayak SK. Role of gastrointestinal microbiota in fish. Aquac Res. 2010;41(11):
1553–73. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2109.2010.02546.x.
7. Romero J, Ringø E, Merrifield DL. The gut microbiota of fish. In: Aquaculture
nutrition: Wiley; 2014. p. 75–100.
8. Egerton S, Culloty S, Whooley J, Stanton C, Ross RP. The gut microbiota of
marine fish. Front Microbiol. 2018;9:873. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.
00873.
9. de Bruijn I, Liu Y, Wiegertjes GF, Raaijmakers JM. Exploring fish microbial
communities to mitigate emerging diseases in aquaculture. FEMS Microbiol
Ecol. 2018;94(1):fix161. https://doi.org/10.1093/femsec/fix161.
10. Xiong J-B, Nie L, Chen J. Current understanding on the roles of gut
microbiota in fish disease and immunity. Zool Res. 2019;40(2):70–6. https://
doi.org/10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2018.069.
11. Tran NT, Zhang J, Xiong F, Wang G-T, Li W-X, Wu S-G. Altered gut
microbiota associated with intestinal disease in grass carp
(Ctenopharyngodon idellus). World J Microbiol Biotechnol. 2018;34(6):71.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11274-018-2447-2.
12. Wang C, Sun G, Li S, Li X, Liu Y. Intestinal microbiota of healthy and
unhealthy Atlantic salmon Salmo salar L. in a recirculating aquaculture
system. J Oceanol Limnol. 2018;36(2):414–26. https://doi.org/10.1007/
s00343-017-6203-5.
13. Rosado D, Xavier R, Severino R, Tavares F, Cable J, Pérez-Losada M. Effects of
disease, antibiotic treatment and recovery trajectory on the microbiome of
farmed seabass ( Dicentrarchus labrax ). Sci Rep. 2019;9(1):1–11. https://doi.
org/10.1038/s41598-019-55314-4.
14. Standen BT, Rawling MD, Davies SJ, Castex M, Foey A, Gioacchini G, et al.
Probiotic Pediococcus acidilactici modulates both localised intestinal- and
peripheral-immunity in tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus). Fish Shellfish
Immunol. 2013;35(4):1097–104. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fsi.2013.07.018.
15. Tarnecki AM, Wafapoor M, Phillips RN, Rhody NR. Benefits of a Bacillus
probiotic to larval fish survival and transport stress resistance. Sci Rep. 2019;
9(1):1. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-39316-w.
16. Nguyen TL, et al. Dietary probiotic effect of lactococcus lactis WFLU12 on
low-molecular-weight metabolites and growth of olive flounder
(Paralichythys olivaceus). Front Microbiol. 2018;9:2059. https://doi.org/10.33
89/fmicb.2018.02059.
17. Yi Y, Zhang Z, Zhao F, Liu H, Yu L, Zha J, et al. Probiotic potential of Bacillus
velezensis JW: antimicrobial activity against fish pathogenic bacteria and
immune enhancement effects on Carassius auratus. Fish Shellfish Immunol.
2018;78:322–30. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fsi.2018.04.055.
18. Liu C-H, Wu K, Chu T-W, Wu T-M. Dietary supplementation of probiotic,
Bacillus subtilis E20, enhances the growth performance and disease
resistance against Vibrio alginolyticus in parrot fish (Oplegnathus fasciatus).
Aquac Int. 2018;26(1):63–74. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10499-017-0189-z.
19. Dehler CE, Secombes CJ, Martin SAM. Environmental and physiological factors
shape the gut microbiota of Atlantic salmon parr (Salmo salar L.). Aquaculture.
2017;467:149–57. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2016.07.017.
20. Gajardo K, et al. Alternative protein sources in the diet modulate microbiota
and functionality in the distal intestine of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar).
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2017;83(5):1. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02615-16.
21. Zhang Z, Li D, Xu W, Tang R, Li L. Microbiome of co-cultured fish exhibits
host selection and niche differentiation at the organ scale. Front Microbiol.
2019;10:2576. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.02576.
22. Turner S, Pryer KM, Miao VP, Palmer JD. Investigating deep phylogenetic
relationships among cyanobacteria and plastids by small subunit rRNA
sequence analysis. J Eukaryot Microbiol. 1999;46(4):327–38. https://doi.org/1
0.1111/j.1550-7408.1999.tb04612.x.
23. Leal JF, Neves MGPMS, Santos EBH, Esteves VI. Use of formalin in intensive
aquaculture: properties, application and effects on fish and water quality.
Rev Aquac. 2018;10(2):281–95. https://doi.org/10.1111/raq.12160.
24. Francis-Floyd R. Use of formalin to control fish parasites; 1996.
25. Schnell IB, Bohmann K, Gilbert MTP. Tag jumps illuminated – reducing
sequence-to-sample misidentifications in metabarcoding studies. Mol Ecol
Resour. 2015;15(6):1289–303. https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.12402.
26. Schrader C, Schielke A, Ellerbroek L, Johne R. PCR inhibitors – occurrence,
properties and removal. J Appl Microbiol. 2012;113(5):1014–26. https://doi.
org/10.1111/j.1365-2672.2012.05384.x.
27. Yu Y, Lee C, Kim J, Hwang S. Group-specific primer and probe sets to detect
methanogenic communities using quantitative real-time polymerase chain
reaction. Biotechnol Bioeng. 2005;89(6):670–9. https://doi.org/10.1002/bit.2
0347.
28. Graspeuntner S, Loeper N, Künzel S, Baines JF, Rupp J. Selection of validated
hypervariable regions is crucial in 16S-based microbiota studies of the
female genital tract. Sci Rep. 2018;8(1):1. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-01
8-27757-8.
29. Teng F, et al. Impact of DNA extraction method and targeted 16S-rRNA
hypervariable region on oral microbiota profiling. Sci Rep. 2018;8(1):1.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-34294-x.
30. DeAngelis MM, Wang DG, Hawkins TL. Solid-phase reversible immobilization
for the isolation of PCR products. Nucleic Acids Res. 1995;23(22):4742–3.
31. Carøe C, Bohmann K. Tagsteady: a metabarcoding library preparation
protocol to avoid false assignment of sequences to samples. Mol Ecol
Resour. 2020. https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13227.
32. Andrews S. Babraham bioinformatics - FastQC a quality control tool for high
throughput sequence data; 2010. http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.
uk/projects/fastqc/ (Accessed 20 Apr 2020).
33. Schubert M, Lindgreen S, Orlando L. AdapterRemoval v2: rapid adapter
trimming, identification, and read merging. BMC Res Notes. 2016;9(1):88.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-016-1900-2.
34. Zepeda-Mendoza ML, Bohmann K, Carmona Baez A, Gilbert MTP. DAMe: a
toolkit for the initial processing of datasets with PCR replicates of double-
tagged amplicons for DNA metabarcoding analyses. BMC Res Notes. 2016;
9(1):255. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-016-2064-9.
35. Mercier et al. SUMATRA and SUMACLUST: fast and exact comparison and
clustering of sequences; 2013.
36. Callahan BJ, McMurdie PJ, Holmes SP. Exact sequence variants should
replace operational taxonomic units in marker-gene data analysis. ISME J.
2017;11(12):12. https://doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2017.119.
37. Caporaso JG, Kuczynski J, Stombaugh J, Bittinger K, Bushman FD, Costello
EK, et al. QIIME allows analysis of high-throughput community sequencing
data. Nat Methods. 2010;7(5):335–6. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.f.303.
38. Edgar RC. MUSCLE: multiple sequence alignment with high accuracy and
high throughput. Nucleic Acids Res. 2004;32(5):1792–7. https://doi.org/10.1
093/nar/gkh340.
39. Tamura K, Peterson D, Peterson N, Stecher G, Nei M, Kumar S. MEGA5:
molecular evolutionary genetics analysis using maximum likelihood,
evolutionary distance, and maximum parsimony methods. Mol Biol Evol.
2011;28(10):2731–9. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msr121.
40. de Goffau MC, et al. Recognizing the reagent microbiome. Nat Microbiol.
2018;3(8):8. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-018-0202-y.
41. Salter SJ, et al. Reagent and laboratory contamination can critically impact
sequence-based microbiome analyses. BMC Biol. 2014;12(1):87. https://doi.
org/10.1186/s12915-014-0087-z.
42. Glassing A, Dowd SE, Galandiuk S, Davis B, Chiodini RJ. Inherent bacterial
DNA contamination of extraction and sequencing reagents may affect
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 15 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
16. interpretation of microbiota in low bacterial biomass samples. Gut Pathog.
2016;8(1):24. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13099-016-0103-7.
43. R Core Team and R Foundation for Statistical Computing. R: a language and
environment for statistical computing; 2020. Available: https://www.R-
project.org/.
44. RStudio Team. RStudio: integrated development for R. RStudio, PBC, Boston,
MA; 2020. Available: http://www.rstudio.com/.
45. Wei T, Simko V. R package “corrplot”: visualization of a correlation matrix
(version 0.84). 2017. Available: https://github.com/taiyun/corrplot.
46. Dahlberg J, et al. Microbiota data from low biomass milk samples is
markedly affected by laboratory and reagent contamination. PLoS ONE.
2019;14(6):e0218257. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218257.
47. Wickham H. ggplot2: elegant graphics for data analysis, 978–3–319-24277-4.
Springer-Verlag; 2016. https://ggplot2.tidyverse.org.
48. Davis NM, Proctor DM, Holmes SP, Relman DA, Callahan BJ. Simple statistical
identification and removal of contaminant sequences in marker-gene and
metagenomics data. Microbiome. 2018;6(1):226. https://doi.org/10.1186/s401
68-018-0605-2.
49. Gloor GB, Macklaim JM, Pawlowsky-Glahn V, Egozcue JJ. Microbiome
datasets are compositional: and this is not optional. Front Microbiol. 2017;8:
2224. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.02224.
50. Weiss S, et al. Normalization and microbial differential abundance strategies
depend upon data characteristics. Microbiome. 2017;5(1):27. https://doi.
org/10.1186/s40168-017-0237-y.
51. Alberdi A, Gilbert MTP. A guide to the application of hill numbers to DNA-
based diversity analyses. Mol Ecol Resour. 2019;19(4):804–17. https://doi.
org/10.1111/1755-0998.13014.
52. McMurdie PJ, Holmes S. phyloseq: an R package for reproducible interactive
analysis and graphics of microbiome census data. PLoS ONE. 2013;8(4):
e61217. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061217.
53. Oksanen J, Blanchet FG, Friendly M, Kindt R, Legendre P, McGlinn D,
Minchin PR, O’Hara RB, Simpson GL, Solymos P, Stevens MHH, Szoecs E,
Wagner H. vegan: community ecology package. 2019 R package version 2.
5–6., and https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=vegan.
54. Warnes GR, Bolker B, Bonebakker L, Gentleman R, Huber W, Liaw A, Lumley
T, Maechler M, Magnusson A, Moeller S, Schwartz M, Venables B. gplots:
various R programming tools for plotting data, 2020. R package version 3.0.
3., [Online]. Available: https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=gplots.
55. Neuwirth E. RColorBrewer: ColorBrewer palettes. 2014. Available: https://CRA
N.R-project.org/package=RColorBrewer.
56. Kassambara A. ggpubr: “ggplot2” based publication ready plots; 2020.
Available: https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=ggpubr.
57. Barnham C, Baxter A. Condition factor, K, for salmonid fish; 2003. p. 3.
58. Yoon S-H, Ha SM, Kwon S, Lim J, Kim Y, Seo H, et al. Introducing
EzBioCloud: a taxonomically united database of 16S rRNA gene sequences
and whole-genome assemblies. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol. 2017;67(5):1613–7.
https://doi.org/10.1099/ijsem.0.001755.
59. Avendaño-Herrera R, Toranzo AE, Magariños B. Tenacibaculosis infection in
marine fish caused by Tenacibaculum maritimum: a review. Dis Aquat Org.
2006;71(3):255–66. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao071255.
60. Pérez-Pascual D, et al. The complete genome sequence of the fish pathogen
Tenacibaculum maritimum provides insights into virulence mechanisms. Front
Microbiol. 2017;8:1542. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01542.
61. Småge SB, Brevik ØJ, Duesund H, Ottem KF, Watanabe K, Nylund A.
Tenacibaculum finnmarkense sp. nov., a fish pathogenic bacterium of the
family Flavobacteriaceae isolated from Atlantic salmon. Antonie Van
Leeuwenhoek. 2016;109(2):273–85. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10482-015-0630-0.
62. Avendaño-Herrera R, Irgang R, Sandoval C, Moreno-Lira P, Houel A,
Duchaud E, et al. Isolation, characterization and virulence potential of
Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi in salmonid cultures in Chile. Transbound
Emerg Dis. 2016;63(2):121–6. https://doi.org/10.1111/tbed.12464.
63. Grothusen H, et al. First complete genome sequence of Tenacibaculum
dicentrarchi, an emerging bacterial pathogen of salmonids. Genome
Announc. 2016;4(1):e01756–15. https://doi.org/10.1128/genomeA.01756-15.
64. Klakegg Ø, Abayneh T, Fauske AK, Fülberth M, Sørum H. An outbreak of
acute disease and mortality in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) post-smolts in
Norway caused by Tenacibaculum dicentrarchi. J Fish Dis. 2019;42(6):789–
807. https://doi.org/10.1111/jfd.12982.
65. Borrego JJ, et al. Vibrio tapetis sp. nov., the causative agent of the brown
ring disease affecting cultured clams. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol. 1996;46(2):
480–4. https://doi.org/10.1099/00207713-46-2-480.
66. Reid HI, Duncan HL, Laidler LA, Hunter D, Birkbeck TH. Isolation of Vibrio
tapetis from cultivated Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus L.).
Aquaculture. 2003;221(1):65–74. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0044-8486(03
)00060-7.
67. Jensen S, Samuelsen OB, Andersen K, Torkildsen L, Lambert C, Choquet G,
et al. Characterization of strains of Vibrio splendidus and V. tapetis isolated
from corkwing wrasse Symphodus melops suffering vibriosis. Dis Aquat Org.
2003;53(1):25–31. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao053025.
68. Declercq AM, Chiers K, Soetaert M, Lasa A, Romalde JL, Polet H, et al. Vibrio
tapetis isolated from vesicular skin lesions in Dover sole Solea solea. Dis
Aquat Org. 2015;115(1):81–6. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao02880.
69. Bergh Ø, Samuelsen OB. Susceptibility of corkwing wrasse Symphodus
melops, goldsinny wrasse Ctenolabrus rupestis, and Atlantic salmon Salmo
salar smolt, to experimental challenge with Vibrio tapetis and Vibrio
splendidus isolated from corkwing wrasse. Aquac Int. 2007;15(1):11–8.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10499-006-9061-2.
70. Urbanczyk H, Ast JC, Higgins MJ, Carson J, Dunlap PV. Reclassification of
Vibrio fischeri, Vibrio logei, Vibrio salmonicida and Vibrio wodanis as
Aliivibrio fischeri gen. nov., comb. nov., Aliivibrio logei comb. nov., Aliivibrio
salmonicida comb. nov. and Aliivibrio wodanis comb. nov. Int J Syst Evol
Microbiol. 2007;57(12):2823–9. https://doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.65081-0.
71. Kashulin A, Seredkina N, Sørum H. Cold-water vibriosis. The current status of
knowledge. J Fish Dis. 2017;40(1):119–26. https://doi.org/10.1111/jfd.12465.
72. Bano N, Smith AD, Bennett W, Vasquez L, Hollibaugh JT. Dominance of
mycoplasma in the guts of the long-jawed Mudsucker, Gillichthys mirabilis,
from five California salt marshes. Environ Microbiol. 2007;9(10):2636–41.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1462-2920.2007.01381.x.
73. Kim D-H, Brunt J, Austin B. Microbial diversity of intestinal contents and
mucus in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). J Appl Microbiol. 2007;
102(6):1654–64. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2672.2006.03185.x.
74. Tamminen M, Karkman A, Corander J, Paulin L, Virta M. Differences in
bacterial community composition in Baltic Sea sediment in response to fish
farming. Aquaculture. 2011;313(1):15–23. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aqua
culture.2011.01.020.
75. Green TJ, Smullen R, Barnes AC. Dietary soybean protein concentrate-
induced intestinal disorder in marine farmed Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar is
associated with alterations in gut microbiota. Vet Microbiol. 2013;166(1–2):
286–92. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2013.05.009.
76. Xing M, Hou Z, Yuan J, Liu Y, Qu Y, Liu B. Taxonomic and functional
metagenomic profiling of gastrointestinal tract microbiome of the farmed
adult turbot (Scophthalmus maximus). FEMS Microbiol Ecol. 2013;86(3):432–
43. https://doi.org/10.1111/1574-6941.12174.
77. Pizarro-Cerdá J, Cossart P. Bacterial adhesion and entry into host cells. Cell.
2006;124(4):715–27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2006.02.012.
78. Lokesh J, Kiron V. Transition from freshwater to seawater reshapes the skin-
associated microbiota of Atlantic salmon. Sci Rep. 2016;6(1):1. https://doi.
org/10.1038/srep19707.
79. Schmidt VT, Smith KF, Melvin DW, Amaral-Zettler LA. Community assembly
of a euryhaline fish microbiome during salinity acclimation. Mol Ecol. 2015;
24(10):2537–50. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.13177.
80. Zhang M, Sun Y, Liu Y, Qiao F, Chen L, Liu WT, et al. Response of gut
microbiota to salinity change in two euryhaline aquatic animals with
reverse salinity preference. Aquaculture. 2016;454:72–80. https://doi.org/10.1
016/j.aquaculture.2015.12.014.
81. Zhao R, Symonds JE, Walker SP, Steiner K, Carter CG, Bowman JP, et al.
Salinity and fish age affect the gut microbiota of farmed Chinook salmon
(Oncorhynchus tshawytscha). Aquaculture. 2020;528:735539. https://doi.
org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2020.735539.
82. Fogarty C, Burgess CM, Cotter PD, Cabrera-Rubio R, Whyte P, Smyth C, et al.
Diversity and composition of the gut microbiota of Atlantic salmon (Salmo
salar) farmed in Irish waters. J Appl Microbiol. 2019;127(3):648–57. https://
doi.org/10.1111/jam.14291.
83. Webster TMU, Rodriguez-Barreto D, Castaldo G, Gough P, Consuegra S, de
Leaniz CG. Environmental plasticity and colonisation history in the Atlantic
salmon microbiome: a translocation experiment. Mol Ecol. 2020;29(5):886–
98. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.15369.
84. Heys C, et al. Neutral processes dominate microbial community assembly in
atlantic salmon, Salmo salar. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2020;86(8):e02283–19,
/aem/86/8/AEM.02283–19.atom. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02283-19.
85. Llewellyn MS, et al. The biogeography of the atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar )
gut microbiome. ISME J. 2016;10(5):5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2015.189.
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 16 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
17. 86. Yatsunenko T, Rey FE, Manary MJ, Trehan I, Dominguez-Bello MG, Contreras
M, et al. Human gut microbiome viewed across age and geography. Nature.
2012;486(7402):222–7. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11053.
87. Karlsen C, Ottem KF, Brevik ØJ, Davey M, Sørum H, Winther-Larsen HC. The
environmental and host-associated bacterial microbiota of Arctic seawater-
farmed Atlantic salmon with ulcerative disorders. J Fish Dis. 2017;40(11):
1645–63. https://doi.org/10.1111/jfd.12632.
88. Gupta RS, Sawnani S, Adeolu M, Alnajar S, Oren A. Phylogenetic framework
for the phylum Tenericutes based on genome sequence data: proposal for
the creation of a new order Mycoplasmoidales Ord. Nov., containing two
new families Mycoplasmoidaceae fam. Nov. and Metamycoplasmataceae
fam. Nov. harbouring Eperythrozoon, Ureaplasma and five novel genera.
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek. 2018;111(9):1583–630. https://doi.org/10.1007/s1
0482-018-1047-3.
89. Holben WE, Williams P, Saarinen M, Särkilahti LK, Apajalahti JHA.
Phylogenetic analysis of intestinal microflora indicates a novel mycoplasma
phylotype in farmed and wild salmon. Microb Ecol. 2002;44(2):175–85.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00248-002-1011-6.
90. Zarkasi KZ, Abell GCJ, Taylor RS, Neuman C, Hatje E, Tamplin ML, et al.
Pyrosequencing-based characterization of gastrointestinal bacteria of
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) within a commercial mariculture system. J
Appl Microbiol. 2014;117(1):18–27. https://doi.org/10.1111/jam.12514.
91. Zarkasi KZ, Taylor RS, Abell GCJ, Tamplin ML, Glencross BD, Bowman JP.
Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) gastrointestinal microbial community
dynamics in relation to digesta properties and diet. Microb Ecol. 2016;71(3):
589–603. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00248-015-0728-y.
92. Ciric M, Waite D, Draper J, Jones JB. Characterization of mid-intestinal
microbiota of farmed Chinook salmon using 16S rRNA gene
metabarcoding. Arch Biol Sci. 2019;71(4):4.
93. Brown RM, Wiens GD, Salinas I. Analysis of the gut and gill microbiome of
resistant and susceptible lines of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Fish
Shellfish Immunol. 2019;86:497–506. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fsi.2018.11.079.
94. Lowrey L, Woodhams DC, Tacchi L, Salinas I. Topographical mapping of the
rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) microbiome reveals a diverse
bacterial community with antifungal properties in the skin. Appl Environ
Microbiol. 2015;81(19):6915–25. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01826-15.
95. Lyons PP, Turnbull JF, Dawson KA, Crumlish M. Phylogenetic and functional
characterization of the distal intestinal microbiome of rainbow trout
Oncorhynchus mykiss from both farm and aquarium settings. J Appl
Microbiol. 2017;122(2):347–63. https://doi.org/10.1111/jam.13347.
96. Lyons PP, Turnbull JF, Dawson KA, Crumlish M. Effects of low-level dietary
microalgae supplementation on the distal intestinal microbiome of farmed
rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum). Aquac Res. 2017;48(5):
2438–52. https://doi.org/10.1111/are.13080.
97. Rimoldi S, Gini E, Iannini F, Gasco L, Terova G. The effects of dietary insect
meal from Hermetia illucens prepupae on autochthonous gut microbiota of
rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Anim Open Access J MDPI. 2019;9(4):
143. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani9040143.
98. Minich JJ, et al. Microbial ecology of atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
hatcheries: impacts of the built environment on fish mucosal microbiota.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2020;86(12):e00411-20. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.
00411-20.
99. Rasmussen JA, et al. Genome-resolved metagenomics suggests a mutualistic
relationship between Mycoplasma and salmonid hosts. 2021, PREPRINT (Version
1) available at Research Square https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-269923/v1
100. Webster TMU, Consuegra S, Hitchings M, de Leaniz CG. Interpopulation
variation in the atlantic salmon microbiome reflects environmental and
genetic diversity. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2018;84(16):1-14. https://doi.org/1
0.1128/AEM.00691-18.
101. Legrand TPRA, Catalano SR, Wos-Oxley ML, Wynne JW, Weyrich LS, Oxley
APA. Antibiotic-induced alterations and repopulation dynamics of yellowtail
kingfish microbiota. Anim Microbiome. 2020;2(1):26. https://doi.org/10.1186/
s42523-020-00046-4.
102. Legrand TPRA, Wynne JW, Weyrich LS, Oxley APA. Investigating both
mucosal immunity and microbiota in response to gut enteritis in yellowtail
kingfish. Microorganisms. 2020;8(9):9. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorga
nisms8091267.
103. Gaulke CA, et al. A longitudinal assessment of host-microbe-parasite
interactions resolves the zebrafish gut microbiome’s link to Pseudocapillaria
tomentosa infection and pathology. Microbiome. 2019;7(1):10. https://doi.
org/10.1186/s40168-019-0622-9.
104. Anslan S, Li H, Künzel S, Vences M. Microbiomes from feces vs. gut in aquatic
vertebrates: distinct community compositions between substrates and
preservation methods. Microbiology. 2019. https://doi.org/10.1101/651612.
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in
published maps and institutional affiliations.
Bozzi et al. Animal Microbiome (2021) 3:30 Page 17 of 17
Content courtesy of Springer Nature, terms of use apply. Rights reserved.
18. 1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Terms and Conditions
Springer Nature journal content, brought to you courtesy of Springer Nature Customer Service Center GmbH (“Springer Nature”).
Springer Nature supports a reasonable amount of sharing of research papers by authors, subscribers and authorised users (“Users”), for small-
scale personal, non-commercial use provided that all copyright, trade and service marks and other proprietary notices are maintained. By
accessing, sharing, receiving or otherwise using the Springer Nature journal content you agree to these terms of use (“Terms”). For these
purposes, Springer Nature considers academic use (by researchers and students) to be non-commercial.
These Terms are supplementary and will apply in addition to any applicable website terms and conditions, a relevant site licence or a personal
subscription. These Terms will prevail over any conflict or ambiguity with regards to the relevant terms, a site licence or a personal subscription
(to the extent of the conflict or ambiguity only). For Creative Commons-licensed articles, the terms of the Creative Commons license used will
apply.
We collect and use personal data to provide access to the Springer Nature journal content. We may also use these personal data internally within
ResearchGate and Springer Nature and as agreed share it, in an anonymised way, for purposes of tracking, analysis and reporting. We will not
otherwise disclose your personal data outside the ResearchGate or the Springer Nature group of companies unless we have your permission as
detailed in the Privacy Policy.
While Users may use the Springer Nature journal content for small scale, personal non-commercial use, it is important to note that Users may
not:
use such content for the purpose of providing other users with access on a regular or large scale basis or as a means to circumvent access
control;
use such content where to do so would be considered a criminal or statutory offence in any jurisdiction, or gives rise to civil liability, or is
otherwise unlawful;
falsely or misleadingly imply or suggest endorsement, approval , sponsorship, or association unless explicitly agreed to by Springer Nature in
writing;
use bots or other automated methods to access the content or redirect messages
override any security feature or exclusionary protocol; or
share the content in order to create substitute for Springer Nature products or services or a systematic database of Springer Nature journal
content.
In line with the restriction against commercial use, Springer Nature does not permit the creation of a product or service that creates revenue,
royalties, rent or income from our content or its inclusion as part of a paid for service or for other commercial gain. Springer Nature journal
content cannot be used for inter-library loans and librarians may not upload Springer Nature journal content on a large scale into their, or any
other, institutional repository.
These terms of use are reviewed regularly and may be amended at any time. Springer Nature is not obligated to publish any information or
content on this website and may remove it or features or functionality at our sole discretion, at any time with or without notice. Springer Nature
may revoke this licence to you at any time and remove access to any copies of the Springer Nature journal content which have been saved.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, Springer Nature makes no warranties, representations or guarantees to Users, either express or implied
with respect to the Springer nature journal content and all parties disclaim and waive any implied warranties or warranties imposed by law,
including merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose.
Please note that these rights do not automatically extend to content, data or other material published by Springer Nature that may be licensed
from third parties.
If you would like to use or distribute our Springer Nature journal content to a wider audience or on a regular basis or in any other manner not
expressly permitted by these Terms, please contact Springer Nature at
onlineservice@springernature.com