1 / 25

Hawaiian Rickettsia –like Organism (HRLO)

Hawaiian Rickettsia –like Organism (HRLO). Allen C. Riggs DVM, MS Aquaculture Development Program- Disease Prevention (ADP-DP) Hawaii Department of Agriculture. Non-motile, Gram negative, non-sporeforming bacteria Pleomorphic shapes( cocci, rods or thread-like)

hanley
Download Presentation

Hawaiian Rickettsia –like Organism (HRLO)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hawaiian Rickettsia –like Organism (HRLO) Allen C. Riggs DVM, MS Aquaculture Development Program- Disease Prevention (ADP-DP) Hawaii Department of Agriculture

  2. Non-motile, Gram negative, non-sporeforming bacteria Pleomorphic shapes( cocci, rods or thread-like) Obligate intracellular parasite – must live inside cytoplasm of host cell Rickettsia characterisitics

  3. Rickettsia characterisitics • Cannot live in artificial nutrient environments – need tissue or embryo cultures • In the past positioned between viruses and bacteria

  4. RLO History Piscirickettsia salmonis – first RLO fish pathogen from coho salmon from Chile in the 1980s Now numerous freshwater and saltwater species affected ( salmon, seabass, grouper, tilapia and several ornamentals))

  5. RLO in tilapia • First reported case in Taiwan - 1992 • Epizootic affecting six species of tilapia • FW and SW • Originated in 1 farm and eventually spread to 37 facilities • Mortality 75%+ in severe cases – 30% average

  6. RLO in Hawaii • Initial cases in mid 1990s on Oahu • Oreochromis mossambicus and Sarotherodon melanotheron (black chinned tilapia) • Farmed and wild populations affected • Farmed mortalities exceeding 60% resulting in major financial losses

  7. New name and culture conditions for RLO • In 2007 researchers determined that the agent responsible for RLO is a Francisella sp. bacteria – not a rickettsia • They were also able to culture the bacteria on modified artificial media – but difficult and not always successful • PCR assay was developed which is now the preferred method of confirmation

  8. Clinical signs of RLO/Francisella sp. • Dark in color • Emaciation • Abnormal swimming behavior • Eye lesions • Enlarged spleen • White nodules in many visceral organs but NOT liver

  9. What are these white nodules? • Granulomas – groups of inflammatory cells around a focus of infection • Typically chronic or slow, occurring over a long period of time • NOT specific to any one disease – other steps needed to ID cause

  10. How to ID cause of granulomas? • Routine H & E histology to confirm that the structure is a granuloma • Special stain to rule-out acid fast bacteria ( Mycobacterium sp.) • Lowenstein-Jensen culture to rule-out Mycobacterium sp. • PCR test for specific agent - Francisella

  11. What factors lead to clinical outbreaks? • Low water temperatures for longer than 7 days – most Hawaii outbreaks occur October - April • Optimum temperature for tilapia is 29 – 31C or 85-88F • Increased mortalities from all infectious diseases including RLO at temperatures below 19C or 66F • Tilapia often stop feeding below 17C or 63F • Lower lethal temperature in normal non-infected tilapia typically 10 -11C or 50-52F

  12. Secondary stressors: • Overcrowding • Sub-optimum water quality • Inadequate nutrition • Presence of ectoparasites • Combination of many or all is worst case scenario

  13. Can it be treated ? • Mortalities decreased with oxytetracycline medicated foods during the early cases in the 1990s • Alternative treatment methods are being used/developed internationally but not available yet in the US

  14. Questions to be considered? • Is RLO/Francisella present on all of the Hawaiian islands? • Is it present in both wild and farmed stocks? • Can other important Hawaiian aquaculture species be affected? • What can we do with infected stocks? • Is the bacteria endemic in the environment? • Is there a industry need for clean stocks?

More Related