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ENHANCEMENT OF MICROBICIDAL ACTIVITY IN THE TIGER SHRIMP PENAEUS MONODON VIA IMMUNOSTIMULATION

100

Citations

12

References

1996

Year

Abstract

We studied the clearance ability of hemolymph drawn from the tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon immersed in a viable cell suspension of Vibrio vulnificus. Results show that Vibrio cells were largely eliminated from shrimp hemolymph within 12 h following invasion and completely undetectable at 24 h. We also examined the anti-E. coli activity of plasma, phenoloxidase (PO) activity, as well as the production of superoxide anion (O2-) by shrimp hemocytes following treatment with each of these 3 immunostimulants. Resultant survival indexes show that some plasma, but not all, exhibits anti-E. coli activity. However, such an activity in all plasma tested could be enhanced by beta-glucan or zymosan up to 24 h following treatment, and slightly enhanced at 6 h following treatment with a Vibrio antigen. PO activity and O2- generation were stimulated by all 3 immunostimulants. Enhanced PO activities were observed from 5 min to 24 h following treatment, with the highest activity occurring at 3 h; the activity recovered to normal on day 3. Increased O2 production was observed from 3-12 h in both glucan- and zymosan-treated shrimp, and at 6 h in shrimp treated with Vibrio antigen. These results show that: (1) some microbicidal reactions may be involved in the clearance of invasive V. vulnificus from shrimp hemolymph; (2) the 3 immunostimulants have the ability to enter shrimp via immersion treatment, thus leading to activation of both the plasma-related factors and hemocytes and the strengthening of PO activity and O2− production; and (3) these enhanced microbicidal reactions exhibit a rapid response that is short in duration.

References

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