학술논문

Limited Probiotic Effect of Enterococcus gallinarum L1, Vagococcus fluvialis L21 and Lactobacillus plantarum CLFP3 to Protect Rainbow Trout against Saprolegniosis.
Document Type
Article
Source
Animals (2076-2615). Mar2023, Vol. 13 Issue 5, p954. 15p.
Subject
*RAINBOW trout
*SEA basses
*PROBIOTICS
*FISH diseases
*ENTEROCOCCUS
*PARASITIC wasps
*LACTOBACILLUS plantarum
Language
ISSN
2076-2615
Abstract
Simple Summary: Probiotics have been considered as alternatives to the antibiotics currently used to control diseases caused by different microorganisms, which show high prevalence and losses in aquaculture. In this study, the possible utility of three probiotics (Enterococcus gallinarum L1, Vagococcus fluvialis L21 and Lactobacillus plantarum CLFP3—effective against vibriosis or lactococosis in sea bass or rainbow trout) was investigated for the biocontrol of saprolegniosis in rainbow trout. For this purpose, both in vitro inhibition studies and competition for binding sites against Saprolegnia parasitica and in vivo tests with experimentally infected rainbow trout were carried out. Although the three probiotics showed inhibitory capacity and reduced the adhesion activity of S. parasitica cysts to cutaneous mucus in vitro, none of the three bacteria showed in vivo protection through either water or feed. The obtained results show the importance of selecting the most appropriate probiotic and its mechanism of action depending on the species of fish and the disease to be prevented. Previous studies have demonstrated that the strains Enterococcus gallinarum L1, Vagococcus fluvialis L21 and Lactobacillus plantarum CLFP3 are probiotics against vibriosis or lactococosis in sea bass or rainbow trout. In this study, the utility of these bacterial strains in the control of saprolegniosis was evaluated. For this purpose, both in vitro inhibition studies and competition for binding sites against Saprolegnia parasitica and in vivo tests with experimentally infected rainbow trout were carried out. In the in vitro tests, the three isolates showed inhibitory activity upon mycelium growth and cyst germination and reduced the adhesion of cysts to cutaneous mucus; however, this effect depended on the number of bacteria used and the incubation time. In the in vivo test, the bacteria were administered orally at 108 CFU g−1 in the feed or at 106 CFU ml−1 in the tank water for 14 days. None of the three bacteria showed protection against S. parasitica infection either through water or feed, and the cumulative mortality reached 100% within 14 days post infection. The obtained results show that the use of an effective probiotic against a certain disease in a host may not be effective against another pathogen or in another host and that the results obtained in vitro may not always predict the effects when used in vivo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]