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Meningoencephalitis Associated With <i>Carnobacterium maltaromaticum</i>–Like Bacteria in Stranded Juvenile Salmon Sharks (<i>Lamna ditropis</i>)
39
Citations
18
References
2012
Year
BiologyCalifornia CoastMicrobial DiseaseMarine GenomicsMedicinePathogenesisSalmon SharksJuvenile Salmon SharksFish ImmunologyMicrobiologyInfection ControlMarine BiologyMeningoencephalitis AssociatedClinical Microbiology
Juvenile salmon sharks beach yearly along the California coast, primarily during late summer and early fall. Fresh, frozen, and formalin-fixed tissues from 19 stranded salmon sharks were collected for examination. Histopathology revealed meningitis or meningoencephalitis in 18 of 19 shark brains with intralesional bacteria observed in 6 of the affected brains. Bacterial culture of fresh or frozen brain, liver, and/or heart blood from 13 sharks yielded pure cultures characterized molecularly and/or biochemically as belonging to the genus Carnobacterium. The 16s ribosomal DNA sequence of 7 tissue isolates from 7 separate sharks was 99% homologous to C. maltaromaticum (GenBank FJ656722.1). Sequence of the large ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer region (ISR) was 97% homologous to C. maltaromaticum (AF374295.1). This is the first report of Carnobacterium infection in any shark species, and the authors posit that brain infection caused by Carnobacterium is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in juvenile salmon sharks found stranded along the Pacific coast of California.
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