Publication | Closed Access
Stress response for disease control in aquaculture
93
Citations
136
References
2011
Year
Environmental SignalingHsp InductionEnvironmental StressAquaculture SystemAbiotic StressBiotic StressStressAquacultureEnvironmental Stress BiologyFish ImmunologyDiverse StressorsInduced ThermotoleranceOsmotic StressCellular Stress ResponseImmune FunctionStress ResponseBiologyPhysiologyMicrobiologyHost ResistanceMedicine
Heat shock proteins are rapidly induced by diverse stressors and play essential roles in protein folding, development, immunity, and environmental adaptation, and in aquatic species they are triggered by temperature, salinity, contaminants, handling, hormones, and biotic stressors, with sublethal exposure conferring induced thermotolerance and cross‑tolerance. This review outlines established disease‑control strategies employed in aquaculture. The authors document Hsp induction following common aquatic stressors and examine how induced thermotolerance, cross‑tolerance, and immune enhancement contribute to disease resilience. Stress‑induced Hsps enhance disease tolerance in fish, crustaceans, and molluscs, suggesting promising commercial applications for aquaculture production.
Abstract Heat shock proteins (Hsps) are robustly induced by diverse stressors that denature proteins. In addition to stress resistance, Hsps are involved in the folding of nascent proteins, plant and animal development, aging, environmental adaptation and the immune response, demonstrating the fundamental importance of these proteins to cell survival. Heat shock proteins are induced in aquatic organisms by perturbations of temperature and salinity, environmental contaminants, handling, hormones and biotic stressors. Exposure to sublethal stress may enhance tolerance to a subsequent stress, a process termed induced thermotolerance, and provide protection to stressors other than the initial stress, known as cross‐tolerance. In the present review, we briefly describe the established approaches that are used to control disease during aquaculture. This is followed by documentation of Hsp induction after exposure to stressors commonly encountered by aquatic organisms. Induced thermotolerance, cross‐tolerance and immune enhancement by Hsps are also considered. Although physiological stress is known to decrease disease resistance it is now becoming clear that stress‐induced Hsps enhance the tolerance of aquatic organisms to disease. Potential applications for Hsps in the commercial production of fish, crustaceans and molluscs are indicated, an issue of significance when the importance of aquaculture in feeding the world’s population is realized.
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