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Modified
Live Vaccines Against Edwardsiella ictaluri And Flavobacterium
columnareCraig A. Shoemaker1, Phillip H. Klesius1,
Joyce J. Evans2 and Cova R. Arias3 1Aquatic Animal Health Research
Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research
Service, PO Box 952, Auburn, AL 36830 ; 2151 Dixon Dr. Suite 4,
Chestertown, MD 21620; 3Department of Fisheries and Allied
Aquacultures, Auburn University, AL 36849 Edwardsiella ictaluri and Flavobacterium
columnare are the two most important pathogens in the channel catfish
industry in the United States and are responsible for $60-80 million in annual
losses. Development of vaccines against
Enteric Septecemia of Catfish (ESC) and columnaris required the vaccines to be
safe and easily administered to young fish.
Further, the vaccine needed to stimulate protective immunity of long
duration. We developed a modified E.
ictaluri isolate (RE-33) and F. columnare isolate that was
attenuated and did not cause disease. In
vivo reversion to virulence studies demonstrated that both vaccines were
safe. Safety of the E. ictaluri
vaccine on commercial farms was demonstrated in over 2.2 million catfish used
in State veterinarian (Alabama and Mississippi) and USDA-APHIS approved field
trials in 1997. Field safety is pending
on the F. columnare vaccine. Efficacy
was also shown in laboratory trials to some E. ictaluri field isolates
in 3-9 month old catfish with the modified live E. ictaluri (RE-33)
vaccine. We demonstrated the
effectiveness of the E. ictaluri vaccine in 7 to 10 day post hatch fry
and eyed fish eggs (in ovo) following immersion. The live E. ictaluri RE-33 vaccine
was licensed, produced and marketed in 2001 and 2002 by Intervet, Inc. as
AQUAVAC-ESCÔ. This past year, we further characterized the E. ictaluri
vaccine mutant. Immunoblot analysis of
the LPS demonstrated that the vaccine mutant lacked high molecular weight bands
in the LPS as compared to the parent isolate.
Further characterization demonstrated that two fingerprinting techniques
MIDI’s fatty acid and Biolog’s carbon utilization profiles discriminated
between the parent and mutant E. ictaluri.Ô is being successfully
marketed and about 25 of all channel
catfish fry were immunized in 2002.
Efficacy of the modified live F. columnare vaccine was
demonstrated in 48 days post hatch and 3 month old channel catfish. Intervet, Inc., has licensed the F.
columnare vaccine from ARS and will continue the process of obtaining
approval from USDA-APHIS-CVB for commercial use.
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