Attenuated virulence of pigment-producing mutant of Aeromonas veronii bv. sobria in HeLa cells and Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus)

Date

2013-5

Type

Article

Journal title

International Journal of Veterinary Science and Medicine

Issue

Vol. 2013 No. 1

Author(s)

Aboubaker M. Garbaj

Pages

43 - 47

Abstract

Abstract Aeromonas species are potential water/foodborne pathogens, whereas Aeromonas veronii bv. sobria is one of the most virulent species to human and fish. Most current experimental evidence has publicized that suicide plasmid dependent IS1-element untargeted integration into A. veronii bv. sobria ATCC 9071T strain was recently used to generate brown pigment-producing and spontaneous pelleting (BP+SP+) mutant. Current study was conducted to compare virulence of wild-type ATCC 9071T strain and its BP+SP+ mutant with respect to cytotoxicity in HeLa cells and lethality in Nile tilapia. It was found that the cytotoxicity of wild-type ATCC 9071T strain to HeLa cells has reached 75% versus 50% for the cytotoxicity of BP+SP+ mutant. Further, the median lethal dose (LD50) of wild-type ATCC 9071T strain in Nile tilapia was 8.25 Log10 colony-forming units (CFU)/ ml, compared to 9.16 Log10 CFU/ml for the LD50 of BP+SP+ mutant. Thus, current study supports the notion that non pigment-producing Aeromonas strains are more virulent than pigmentproducing ones.

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