Edwardsiella tarda is an intracellular pathogen that causes edwardsiellosis in fish. The development of a live attenuated vaccine may be an effective approach for preventing this disease in fish. In this study, we introduced deletions of esrB, esaC, evpH, rpoS, and purA into the E. tarda LSE40ΔaroA strain, thereby generating five double-gene mutants (ΔaroAΔesrB, ΔaroAΔesaC, ΔaroAΔrpoS, ΔaroAΔevpH, and ΔaroAΔpurA) and two triple-gene mutants (ΔaroAΔesrBΔevpH and ΔaroAΔesaCΔevpH). When blue gourami (Trichogaster trichopterus) was used as a fish model for the primary screening and evaluation of the vaccine candidates, all mutants were attenuated significantly by more than 2 to 3 logs in terms of the 50% lethal dose (LD(50)). Five double-gene mutants yielded relative percentage survival (RPS) rates of 26.1-82.6% after challenge with wild-type E. tarda. The ΔaroAΔesrB mutant that conferred the highest RPS (82.6%) in blue gourami was also evaluated in flounder (Paralichthys olivaceus). After vaccination via intramuscular (i.m.) injection or immersion, this mutant could persist in the flounder for 14-35 days and it induced higher serum antibody titers than the control fish (P < 0.01). Flounder vaccinated via i.m. injection at doses of 10(3)-10(7) CFU/fish had RPS rates of 14.3-66.7% after i.m. challenge with 10(4) CFU/fish using wild-type E. tarda. Flounder vaccinated via immersion at a dose of 10(7) CFU/ml exhibited 100% RPS against immersion challenge with 10(7) CFU/ml using wild-type E. tarda. These results indicate that the ΔaroAΔesrB mutant could be used as an effective live vaccine to combat edwardsiellosis in flounder.
Keywords: Attenuated mutant; Edwardsiella tarda; Edwardsiellosis; Immune protection; Paralichthys olivaceus.
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