A novel challenge method with Aeromonas salmonicida in rainbow trout for evaluation of furunculosis vaccines.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Standard

A novel challenge method with Aeromonas salmonicida in rainbow trout for evaluation of furunculosis vaccines. / Marana, Moonika Haahr; Skov, Jakob; Chettri, Jiwan Kumar; Krossøy, Bjørn ; Dalsgaard, Inger; Kania, Per Walter; Buchmann, Kurt.

2015. Abstract from 17th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Marana, MH, Skov, J, Chettri, JK, Krossøy, B, Dalsgaard, I, Kania, PW & Buchmann, K 2015, 'A novel challenge method with Aeromonas salmonicida in rainbow trout for evaluation of furunculosis vaccines.', 17th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain, 07/09/2015 - 11/09/2015.

APA

Marana, M. H., Skov, J., Chettri, J. K., Krossøy, B., Dalsgaard, I., Kania, P. W., & Buchmann, K. (2015). A novel challenge method with Aeromonas salmonicida in rainbow trout for evaluation of furunculosis vaccines.. Abstract from 17th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain.

Vancouver

Marana MH, Skov J, Chettri JK, Krossøy B, Dalsgaard I, Kania PW et al. A novel challenge method with Aeromonas salmonicida in rainbow trout for evaluation of furunculosis vaccines.. 2015. Abstract from 17th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain.

Author

Marana, Moonika Haahr ; Skov, Jakob ; Chettri, Jiwan Kumar ; Krossøy, Bjørn ; Dalsgaard, Inger ; Kania, Per Walter ; Buchmann, Kurt. / A novel challenge method with Aeromonas salmonicida in rainbow trout for evaluation of furunculosis vaccines. Abstract from 17th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{897bc00f96d04fe2b92976d9f2866a76,
title = "A novel challenge method with Aeromonas salmonicida in rainbow trout for evaluation of furunculosis vaccines.",
abstract = "Challenge methods used to induce furunculosis in rainbow trout when testing the potency of vaccines may include exposure to Aeromonas salmonicida by intraperitoneal injection, cohabitation or bath immersion. Intraperitoneal injection is effective but will not reflect systemic immunity because inflammatory cells at the vaccine injection site may combat injected bacteria fast. The cohabitation and bath immersion methods both mimic the natural infection route but are less effective in inducing the disease. We have tested a new challenge method mimicking that rainbow trout in fish farms might be infected with A. salmonicida through injured epidermis (fin biting) and our new method resembles closely the natural infection route where bacteria gain access to fish through the lesions. In our challenge procedure small skin lesions were made on the upper part of the caudal fin with a multipuncture device containing 10 needles puncturing the upper tail fin after the fish were anaesthetized. A volume of 100 µl of a 48 hour culture of A. salmonicida (3.4 × 108 CFU/ml) was layered at the puncture site for 60 seconds where after fish were placed in freshwater for recovery. This technique proved to be efficient in inducing a more natural disease progression in fish and a stable mortality. The method could differentiate efficacies of different vaccines with regard to adjuvant formulations and content of antigen. ",
author = "Marana, {Moonika Haahr} and Jakob Skov and Chettri, {Jiwan Kumar} and Bj{\o}rn Kross{\o}y and Inger Dalsgaard and Kania, {Per Walter} and Kurt Buchmann",
year = "2015",
language = "English",
note = "17th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish ; Conference date: 07-09-2015 Through 11-09-2015",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - A novel challenge method with Aeromonas salmonicida in rainbow trout for evaluation of furunculosis vaccines.

AU - Marana, Moonika Haahr

AU - Skov, Jakob

AU - Chettri, Jiwan Kumar

AU - Krossøy, Bjørn

AU - Dalsgaard, Inger

AU - Kania, Per Walter

AU - Buchmann, Kurt

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Challenge methods used to induce furunculosis in rainbow trout when testing the potency of vaccines may include exposure to Aeromonas salmonicida by intraperitoneal injection, cohabitation or bath immersion. Intraperitoneal injection is effective but will not reflect systemic immunity because inflammatory cells at the vaccine injection site may combat injected bacteria fast. The cohabitation and bath immersion methods both mimic the natural infection route but are less effective in inducing the disease. We have tested a new challenge method mimicking that rainbow trout in fish farms might be infected with A. salmonicida through injured epidermis (fin biting) and our new method resembles closely the natural infection route where bacteria gain access to fish through the lesions. In our challenge procedure small skin lesions were made on the upper part of the caudal fin with a multipuncture device containing 10 needles puncturing the upper tail fin after the fish were anaesthetized. A volume of 100 µl of a 48 hour culture of A. salmonicida (3.4 × 108 CFU/ml) was layered at the puncture site for 60 seconds where after fish were placed in freshwater for recovery. This technique proved to be efficient in inducing a more natural disease progression in fish and a stable mortality. The method could differentiate efficacies of different vaccines with regard to adjuvant formulations and content of antigen.

AB - Challenge methods used to induce furunculosis in rainbow trout when testing the potency of vaccines may include exposure to Aeromonas salmonicida by intraperitoneal injection, cohabitation or bath immersion. Intraperitoneal injection is effective but will not reflect systemic immunity because inflammatory cells at the vaccine injection site may combat injected bacteria fast. The cohabitation and bath immersion methods both mimic the natural infection route but are less effective in inducing the disease. We have tested a new challenge method mimicking that rainbow trout in fish farms might be infected with A. salmonicida through injured epidermis (fin biting) and our new method resembles closely the natural infection route where bacteria gain access to fish through the lesions. In our challenge procedure small skin lesions were made on the upper part of the caudal fin with a multipuncture device containing 10 needles puncturing the upper tail fin after the fish were anaesthetized. A volume of 100 µl of a 48 hour culture of A. salmonicida (3.4 × 108 CFU/ml) was layered at the puncture site for 60 seconds where after fish were placed in freshwater for recovery. This technique proved to be efficient in inducing a more natural disease progression in fish and a stable mortality. The method could differentiate efficacies of different vaccines with regard to adjuvant formulations and content of antigen.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - 17th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish

Y2 - 7 September 2015 through 11 September 2015

ER -

ID: 144786403