bassianolide and Granuloma

bassianolide has been researched along with Granuloma* in 8 studies

Other Studies

8 other study(ies) available for bassianolide and Granuloma

ArticleYear
Comparison of the pathogenicity of Francisella orientalis in Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), Asian seabass (Lates calcarifer) and largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) through experimental intraperitoneal infection.
    Journal of fish diseases, 2020, Volume: 43, Issue:9

    Topics: Animals; Bass; Cichlids; Disease Susceptibility; Fish Diseases; Francisella; Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections; Granuloma; Head Kidney; Injections, Intraperitoneal; Spleen

2020
Immune and histopathologic responses of DNA-vaccinated hybrid striped bass Morone saxatilis x M. chrysops after acute Mycobacterium marinum infection.
    Diseases of aquatic organisms, 2006, Nov-21, Volume: 73, Issue:1

    The post-challenge immune and histopathologic responses of hybrid striped bass vaccinated with a DNA vaccine encoding the Mycobacterium marinum Ag85A gene and subsequently challenged with M. marinum were investigated. Juvenile hybrid striped bass Morone saxatilis x M. chrysops were injected intramuscularly with 25 or 50 microg DNA plasmid and developed significant specific protective responses to live bacterial challenge 120 d post-vaccination. Both vaccine groups demonstrated increased survival, reduced splenic bacterial counts, and reduced granuloma formation compared to the control groups 14 d after challenge with approximately 8 x 10(5) cfu M. marinum g(-1) fish body wt. The vaccine groups also developed more rapidly and significantly increased antibody and lymphoproliferative responses post-challenge compared to control groups, and these post-challenge immune responses appear to be vital against M. marinum infection in vaccinated hybrid striped bass. No significant differences in immune responses were recognized between the 25 and 50 microg vaccination groups, and these groups eventually experienced mortalities, splenic bacterial counts, and granuloma formation 28 d post-challenge comparable to those of the control groups at 14 d post-challenge. Therefore, vaccination of hybrid striped bass with a DNA vaccine encoding the M. marinum Ag85A gene provided significant but limited duration of protection against an acute high-dose M. marinum challenge.

    Topics: Acyltransferases; Animals; Antibodies, Bacterial; Antigens, Bacterial; Bacterial Vaccines; Bass; Fish Diseases; Granuloma; Lymphocytes; Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous; Mycobacterium marinum; Time Factors; Vaccines, DNA

2006
Side effects in sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) due to intraperitoneal vaccination against vibriosis and pasteurellosis.
    Fish & shellfish immunology, 2005, Volume: 19, Issue:1

    Sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) were injected intraperitoneally with monovalent (Photobacterium damselae subsp. piscicida or Vibrio anguillarum) and divalent (Ph. damselae subsp. piscicida and V. anguillarum) vaccine formulations, with or without adjuvants (mineral oil, liposome or alginate), to evaluate the short and long-term pathological effects. Eight animals from each group were sampled one, two, four and 11 months after intraperitoneal injection. The acute peritoneal response and the progression to a chronic status were evaluated by analysing peritoneal leucocytes collected during the first days post-injection. To evaluate the chronic response, the late peritoneal leucocyte response was analysed and the peritoneal cavity was examined and the intra-abdominal lesion level scored based on a pre-defined scale. Correlation between leucocyte exudative response, tissue inflammatory response and the development of granuloma were sought. The acute leucocyte response was characterized by an early (24-48 h) mobilization of neutrophils and macrophages, with phagocyte numbers dependent on the formulation, but no significant variations were observed in lymphocytes/small cells and EGCs. Later on, a steady increase occurred in lymphocytes/small cells and EGCs and a high concentration in neutrophils and macrophages was maintained up to 30-60 days in groups i.p. injected with oil adjuvanted formulations with antigen. All the lesions observed were moderate, indicating that in sea bass, the pathological effects due to intraperitoneally injected vaccines are less severe than in other fish species. The divalent oil adjuvanted vaccine induced the most severe side effects, with macroscopic granulomas consistently present up to 11 months.

    Topics: Adjuvants, Immunologic; Animals; Bass; Fish Diseases; Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections; Granuloma; Immunohistochemistry; Leukocytes; Microscopy, Electron, Transmission; Peritoneal Cavity; Photobacterium; Vaccination; Vibrio

2005
Ultrastructure of Mycobacterium marinum granuloma in striped bass Morone saxatilis.
    Diseases of aquatic organisms, 2004, Nov-23, Volume: 62, Issue:1-2

    An emerging epizootic of mycobacteriosis currently threatens striped bass Morone saxatilis populations in Chesapeake Bay, USA. Several species of mycobacteria, including Mycobacterium marinum, species resembling M. avium, M. gordonae, M. peregrinum, M. scrofulaceum and M. terrae, and the new species M. shottsii have been isolated from diseased and healthy bass. In this study, we describe the ultrastructure of developing M. marinum granulomas in experimentally infected bass over a period of 45 wk. The primary host response to injected mycobacteria was formation of large macrophage aggregations containing phagocytosed bacilli. M. marinum were always contained within phagosomes. Close association of lysosomes with mycobacterial phagosomes, as well as the presence of electron-opaque material within phagosomes, suggested phagolysosomal fusion. Development of granulomas involved epithelioid transformation of macrophages, followed by appearance of central necrosis. Desmosomes were present between mature epithelioid cells. The necrotic core region of M. marinum granulomas was separated from overlying epithelioid cells by several layers of flattened, electron-opaque spindle-shaped cells. These cells appeared to be formed by compression of epithelioid cells and, aside from a flattened nucleus, did not possess recognizable organelles. Following the development of well-defined, paucibacillary granulomas, secondary disease was observed. Recrudescence was marked by bacterial replication followed by disruption of granuloma architecture, including loss of epithelioid and spindle cell layers. In advanced recrudescent lesions, normal tissue was replaced by macrophages, fibroblasts, and other inflammatory leukocytes. Large numbers of mycobacteria were observed, both intracellular and suspended in cellular debris.

    Topics: Animals; Bass; Fish Diseases; Granuloma; Microscopy, Electron, Transmission; Mycobacterium marinum; Phagosomes; Recurrence

2004
Experimental mycobacteriosis in striped bass Morone saxatilis.
    Diseases of aquatic organisms, 2003, Mar-31, Volume: 54, Issue:2

    Striped bass Morone saxatilis were infected intraperitoneally with approximately 10(5) Mycobacterium marinum, M. shottsii sp. nov., or M. gordonae. Infected fish were maintained in a flow-through freshwater system at 18 to 21 degrees C, and were examined histologically and bacteriologically at 2, 4, 6, 8, 17, 26, 36 and 45 wk post-infection (p.i.). M. marinum caused acute peritonitis, followed by extensive granuloma development in the mesenteries, spleen and anterior kidney. Granulomas in these tissues underwent a temporal progression of distinct morphological stages, culminating in well-circumscribed lesions surrounded by normal or healing tissue. Mycobacteria were cultured in high numbers from splenic tissue at all times p.i. Standard Ziehl-Neelsen staining, however, did not demonstrate acid-fast rods in most early inflammatory foci and granulomas. Large numbers of acid-fast rods were present in granulomas beginning at 8 wk p.i. Between 26 and 45 wk p.i., reactivation of disease was observed in some fish, with disintegration of granulomas, renewed inflammation, and elevated splenic bacterial densities approaching 10(9) colony-forming units g(-1). Infection with M. shottsii or M. gordonae did not produce severe pathology. Mild peritonitis was followed by granuloma formation in the mesenteries, but, with 1 exception, granulomas were not observed in the spleen or anterior kidney. M. shottsii and M. gordonae both established persistent infections in the spleen, but were present at densities at least 2 orders of magnitude less than M. marinum at all time points observed. Granulomas in the mesenteries of M. shottsii- and M. gordonae-infected fish resolved over time, and no reactivation of disease was observed.

    Topics: Animals; Bass; Colony Count, Microbial; Fish Diseases; Granuloma; Immunohistochemistry; Injections, Intraperitoneal; Kidney; Liver; Mycobacterium; Mycobacterium Infections; Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous; Mycobacterium marinum; Spleen; Time Factors; Virulence

2003
Transforming growth factor-beta response to mycobacterial infection in striped bass Morone saxatilis and hybrid tilapia Oreochromis spp.
    Veterinary immunology and immunopathology, 2003, Oct-15, Volume: 95, Issue:3-4

    Striped bass (Morone saxatilis) and hybrid tilapia (Oreochromis spp.) were experimentally infected with Mycobacterium marinum. Splenic mononuclear cell transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) mRNA was measured by reverse transcription quantitative-competitive PCR (RT-qcPCR). In histologic sections of liver and anterior kidney, the area of each section that was occupied by granulomas and the total area of each section were measured by computer-assisted image analysis and compared as a proportion (the granuloma proportion). Infected striped bass splenic mononuclear cell TGF-beta mRNA expression was significantly lower than uninfected controls, while for tilapia there was no significant difference between infected and control fish. Mycobacterial granuloma proportion of liver and anterior kidney sections was significantly greater for infected striped bass than tilapia. Three (of 10) infected tilapia with the most pronounced inflammatory response displayed a decrease in TGF-beta mRNA expression, similar to the overall striped bass response to mycobacterium challenge. Downregulation of TGF-beta and failure to modulate the immune response may be related to excessive inflammatory damage to organs observed in mycobacteria-sensitive fish species.

    Topics: Animals; Bass; Fish Diseases; Gene Expression Regulation; Genetic Predisposition to Disease; Granuloma; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Kidney; Liver; Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous; Mycobacterium marinum; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; RNA; Tilapia; Transforming Growth Factor beta

2003
Detection of a new Mycobacterium species in wild striped bass in the Chesapeake Bay.
    Journal of clinical microbiology, 2001, Volume: 39, Issue:2

    Investigation into recent declines in striped bass health in the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland resulted in the isolation of a putative new species of Mycobacterium. This isolate was obtained from fish showing skin ulcers and internal granulomas in various organs. The isolate was slow growing at 28 degrees C; was nonchromogenic; showed no activities of nitrate reduction, catalase activity, Tween 80 hydrolysis, tellurite reduction, or arylsulfatase reduction; grew best at low salt concentrations; and was urease and pyrazinamidase positive. By PCR a unique insertional sequence was identified which matched nothing in any database. Analysis of the nearly complete 16S rRNA gene sequence also indicated a unique sequence which had 87.7% sequence homology to Mycobacterium ulcerans, 87.6% homology to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and 85.9% homology to Mycobacterium marinum. Phylogenetic analysis placed the organism close to the tuberculosis complex. These data support the conclusion that the isolate probably represents a new mycobacterial species.

    Topics: Animals; Base Sequence; Bass; DNA Primers; DNA, Bacterial; DNA, Ribosomal; Fish Diseases; Granuloma; Maryland; Molecular Sequence Data; Mycobacterium; Mycobacterium Infections; Phylogeny; Polymerase Chain Reaction; RNA, Bacterial; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S; Seawater; Sequence Alignment; Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid; Skin Diseases, Bacterial

2001
Comparative severity of experimentally induced mycobacteriosis in striped bass Morone saxatilis and hybrid tilapia Oreochromis spp.
    Diseases of aquatic organisms, 1999, Nov-30, Volume: 38, Issue:3

    Twenty striped bass Morone saxatilis and 20 hybrid tilapia Oreochromis niloticus x O. mossambicus x O. aureus each received a single intramuscular injection of 1.6 x 10(6) colony forming units per gram body weight of Mycobacterium marinum. Striped bass manifested significantly greater clinical and microscopic disease compared to tilapia. Whereas all the striped bass had died or were clinically ill by Day 8 post-infection, there was no apparent disruption of normal behaviour, physical appearance, or growth in any of the sacrificed or surviving tilapia. Histologically, granulomas in striped bass were generally larger and less discrete, with a higher proportion of heavily vacuolated macrophages, and large cores of necrotic cells. Visceral granulomas in tilapia were smaller, with a higher proportion of epithelioid macrophages, more pigment-containing cells, more peripheral lymphocytes, and virtually no central necrosis. Visceral granulomas were 18-fold more numerous in striped bass than in tilapia. Based upon histomorphometric data, mean proportions of acid-fast bacteria within pronephros granulomas were 4-fold greater in striped bass than tilapia, and striped bass granulomas averaged more than twice as large as tilapia granulomas. In the anterior kidney of striped bass, a positive correlation existed between mean mycobacterial proportions and mean necrosis scores. In tilapia, mean mycobacterial proportions correlated negatively with mean granuloma numbers, whereas there was no correlation between these parameters in striped bass. Results suggest that intrinsic functional differences in the immunologic systems of striped bass and hybrid tilapia may contribute to inter-species variation in mycobacteriosis susceptibility.

    Topics: Animals; Bass; Disease Susceptibility; Fish Diseases; Granuloma; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Injections, Intramuscular; Kidney; Liver; Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous; Mycobacterium marinum; Pilot Projects; Spleen; Statistics, Nonparametric; Tilapia; Virulence

1999