The arrival, establishment and spread of a highly virulent Edwardsiella
ictaluri strain in farmed tilapia, Oreochr omis spp.
Abstract
Edwardsiella ictaluri is an emerging bacterial pathogen that
affects farmed tilapia ( Oreochromis spp.). This study reports
the arrival, establishment, and widespread findings of E.
ictaluri in farmed tilapia in Vietnam. Among 26 disease outbreaks from
9 provinces in Northern Vietnam during 2019–2021, 19 outbreaks
originated from imported seeds, while outbreaks in seven farms were from
domestic sources. Clinically sick fish showed the appearance of numerous
white spots in visceral organs, and accumulative mortality reached
30%–65%. Twenty-six representative bacterial isolates recovered from
26 disease outbreaks were identified as E. ictaluri based on a
combination of phenotypic tests, genus- and species-specific polymerase
chain reaction assays, 16S rRNA and gyrB sequencing, and
phylogenetic analysis. All isolates harbored the same virulence gene
profiles esrC +, evpC
+, ureA-C +,
eseI-, escD-, and
virD4-. Antimicrobial susceptibility tests
revealed that 80.8%–100% of isolates were multidrug resistant, with
resistance to 4–8 antimicrobials in the groups of penicillin,
macrolides, sulfonamides, amphenicols, and glycopeptides. The
experimental challenge successfully induced disease that mimicked
natural infection. The median lethal doses (LD 50) of
the tested isolates (n = 4) were 42–61 colony forming units/fish,
indicating their extremely high virulence. This emerging pathogen is
established and has spread to various geographical locations, causing
serious impacts on farmed tilapia in northern Vietnam. It is likely that
this pathogen will continue to spread through contaminated stocks (both
imported and domestic sources) and persist. Thus, increased awareness,
combined with biosecurity measures and emergent vaccination programs is
essential to mitigate the negative impact of this emerging disease on
the tilapia farming industry.