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A
Caribbean Echinoderm Pathogen: Identification And Host Range Kimberly B. Ritchie MicroGenomics, Inc., Carlsbad CA. In
January of 1997, a massive die-off of the heart urchin Meoma ventricosa
was observed in Curacao, Netherlands Antilles. Necropsies of affected
individuals were performed and compared with unaffected individuals.
Comparative microbiological analysis revealed a unique bacterium associated
with catch connective tissue in affected individuals. It was hypothesized that
this may be the cause of spine loss in affected urchins. The bacterial isolate
was used to inoculate a test urchin, Lytechinus variegates. Of ten
urchins inoculated during two experiments, all died within five days of
inoculation. None of the ten control inoculations produced any sign of disease.
16S rDNA analysis showed the bacterium to be closely related to Pseudoalteromonas
haloplanktis subsp. tetraodonis. Monoclonal antibody testing
revealed that the isolate produced tetrodotoxin. Host range studies performed
in Bocas del Toro, Panama showed a number of urchins, as well as sea stars were
susceptible to infection by the bacterium, and that a range of susceptibly
patterns exist among echinoderms. |