Granulomatous Skin Lesions in Moray Eels Caused by a Novel Mycobacterium Species Related to Mycobacterium triplex

Author:

Herbst Lawrence H.12,Costa Sylvia F.3,Weiss Louis M.13,Johnson Linda K.12,Bartell John4,Davis Raymond5,Walsh Michael5,Levi Michael1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology,1

2. Institute for Animal Studies,2 and

3. Department of Medicine,3 Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461;

4. MIDI Labs Inc., Newark, Delaware 197134; and

5. SeaWorld Adventure Park, Orlando, Florida 328215

Abstract

ABSTRACT An outbreak of granulomatous dermatitis was investigated in a captive population of moray eels. The affected eels had florid skin nodules concentrated around the head and trunk. Histopathological examination revealed extensive granulomatous inflammation within the dermis and subcutaneous fascial plane between the fat and axial musculature. Acid-fast rods were detected within the smallest lesions, which were presumably the ones that had developed earliest. Eventually, after several months of incubation at room temperature, a very slowly growing acid-fast organism was isolated. Sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene identified it as a Mycobacterium species closely related (0.59% divergence) to M. triplex , an SAV mycobacterium. Intradermal inoculation of healthy green moray eels with this organism reliably reproduced the lesion. Experimentally induced granulomatous dermatitis appeared within 2 weeks of inoculation and slowly but progressively expanded during the 2 months of the experiment. Live organisms were recovered from these lesions at all time points, fulfilling Koch's postulates for this bacterium. In a retrospective study of tissues collected between 1993 and 1999 from five spontaneous disease cases, acid-fast rods were consistently found within lesions, and a nested PCR for the rRNA gene also demonstrated the presence of mycobacteria within affected tissues.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

Reference25 articles.

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3. Mycobacterium borstelenseisolated from aquarium fishes with tuberculous lesions;Bernstad S.;Scand. J. Infect. Dis.,1974

4. Mycobacterium fortuitum isolated from three species of fish in South Africa;Bragg R. R.;Onderstepoort J. Vet. Res.,1990

5. Pathology attributed to Mycobacterium chelonae infection among farmed and laboratory-infected Atlantic salmon Salmo salar;Bruno D. W.;Dis. Aquat. Organ.,1998

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