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Emergence and clonal expansion of <i>Vibrio aestuarianus</i> lineages pathogenic for oysters in Europe

Aurélie Mesnil, Maude Jacquot, Céline Garcia, Delphine Tourbiez, Lydie Canier, Audrey Bidois, Lionel Dégremont, Deborah Cheslett, Michelle Geary, Alessia Vetri, Ana Roque, Dolors Furones, Alison Garden, Petya Orozova, Isabelle Arzul, Mathieu Sicard, Guillaume M. Charrière, Delphine Destoumieux‐Garzón, Marie‐Agnès Travers

2023Molecular Ecology27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Crassostrea gigas oysters represent a significant global food source with 4.7 million tons harvested per year. In 2001, the bacterium Vibrio aestuarianus subsp. francensis emerged as a pathogen that causes adult oyster mortality in France and Ireland. Its impact on oyster aquaculture has increased in Europe since its re-emergence in 2012. To better understand the evolutionary mechanisms leading to the emergence and persistence over time of this pathogen, we conducted a survey of mollusc diseases through national reference laboratories across Europe. We analysed 54 new genomes of Vibrio aestuarianus (Va) isolated from multiple environmental compartments since 2001, in areas with and without bivalve mortalities. We used a combination of comparative genomics and population genetics approaches and show that Va has a classical epidemic population structure from which the pathogenic Va francensis subspecies emerged and clonally expanded. Furthermore, we identified a specific cus-cop-containing island conferring copper resistance to Va francensis whose acquisition may have favoured the emergence of pathogenic lineages adapted and specialized to oysters.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyCrassostreaOysterVibrioPacific oysterPopulationAquacultureSubspeciesPathogenPopulation geneticsZoologyEcologyFisheryGeneticsFish <Actinopterygii>BacteriaDemographySociologyVibrio bacteria research studiesMarine Bivalve and Aquaculture StudiesAquaculture disease management and microbiota