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The widespread presence of a family of fish virulence plasmids in <i>Vibrio vulnificus</i> stresses its relevance as a zoonotic pathogen linked to fish farms

Héctor Carmona-Salido, Belén Fouz, Eva Sanjuán, Miguel Carda‐Diéguez, Christian M. J. Delannoy, Neris García‐González, Fernando Gónzález‐Candelas, Carmen Amaro

2021Emerging Microbes & Infections27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

is a pathogen of public health concern that causes either primary septicemia after ingestion of raw shellfish or secondary septicemia after wound exposure to seawater. In consequence, shellfish and seawater are considered its main reservoirs. However, there is one aspect of its biology that is systematically overlooked: its association with fish in its natural environment. This association led in 1975 to the emergence of a zoonotic clade within phylogenetic lineage 2 following successive outbreaks of vibriosis in farmed eels. Although this clade is now worldwide distributed, no new zoonotic clades were subsequently reported. In this work, we have performed phylogenetic, genomic and functional studies to show that other zoonotic clades are in fact present in 4 of the 5 lineages of the species. Further, we associate these clades, most of them previously but incompletely described, with the acquisition of a family of fish virulence plasmids containing genes essential for resistance to the immune system of certain teleosts of interest in aquaculture. Consequently, our results provide several pieces of evidence about the importance of this species as a zoonotic agent linked to fish farms, as well as on the relevance of these artificial environments acting as drivers that accelerate the evolution of the species.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyVibrio vulnificusCladeVirulenceOutbreakAquaculturePhylogenetic treePathogenShellfishZoonosisVibrioVibrio InfectionsZoologyMicrobiologyFisheryVirologyGeneticsAquatic animalFish <Actinopterygii>GeneBacteriaVibrio bacteria research studiesAquaculture disease management and microbiotaIdentification and Quantification in Food