Search results for "Salmo"

showing 10 items of 442 documents

Neuroendocrine indicators of allostatic load reveal the impact of environmental acidification in fish

2020

Abstract When mobilized from surrounding soils and binding to gills at moderately low pH, aluminum (Al) cations can adversely affect fish populations. Furthermore, acidification may lead to allostatic overload, a situation in which the costs of coping with chronic stress affects long-term survival and reproductive output and, ultimately, ecosystem health. The brain's serotonergic system plays a key role in neuroendocrine stress responses and allostatic processes. Here, we explored whether sublethal effects of Al in acidified water affects serotonergic neurochemistry and stress coping ability in a unique land-locked salmon population from Lake Bygelandsfjorden, in southern Norway. Fish were …

GillGillsCoping (psychology)HydrocortisonePhysiologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPopulationSalmo salarPhysiologyBiologyToxicologySerotonergicBiochemistry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineWater Pollution ChemicalAnimalsNeurochemistryChronic stresseducation030304 developmental biology0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyNorwayVDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Basale medisinske odontologiske og veterinærmedisinske fag: 710Cell BiologyGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAllostatic loadTurnover030217 neurology & neurosurgeryWater Pollutants ChemicalAluminum
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Effects of waterborne iron overload and simulated winter conditions on acute physiological stress response of whitefish, Coregonus lavaretus

2003

Two-year-old whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus) were exposed for 30 days to episodic iron overload in iron-rich humic water (5%) supplemented with inorganic iron (5 mg FeL(-1)). Two parallel laboratory exposures were performed, one under conditions simulating winter and the other under conditions simulating spring. After exposure, some of the fish were subjected to acute handling stress in the form of a short air challenge to reveal possible modification of the primary and secondary stress responses. In whitefish sampled without additional handling, iron accumulated in the liver (under spring conditions) and gills (under winter and spring conditions); plasma catecholamine and beta-estradiol (b…

GillIron OverloadHydrocortisoneIronHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisHematocritBiologyAcclimatizationGlycogen phosphorylaseCatecholaminesAnimal sciencefoodCoregonus lavaretusmedicineAnimalsEcotoxicologyTissue Distributionmedicine.diagnostic_testfood.dishEcologyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthReproducibility of ResultsWaterGeneral MedicineAdaptation PhysiologicalPollutionKineticsRed blood cellmedicine.anatomical_structureCatecholamineSeasonsSalmonidaemedicine.drugEcotoxicology and Environmental Safety
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Bioaccumulation and subchronic physiological effects of waterborne iron overload on whitefish exposed in humic and nonhumic water.

1999

One-year-old whitefish, Coregonus lavaretus, were exposed to three types of iron-rich water, two dilutions for each, in a subchronic (30-day) experiment. In natural iron-rich humic water, both the bioaccumulation and physiological effects of iron exposure were negligible. In humic-free water with high amount of additional inorganic iron (nominally 8 mg Fe/L), Fe accumulated in gills, liver, and gut. This accumulation was accompanied by decreased glycogen phosphorylase activities and microsomal EROD activity in the liver as well as decreased plasma sodium and potassium concentrations. The third group of whitefish were exposed by adding inorganic iron (nominally 2 and 8 mg Fe/L) to natural ir…

Gillchemistry.chemical_classificationHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPotassiumIronchemistry.chemical_elementGeneral MedicineToxicologyPollutionBiodegradation EnvironmentalchemistryBiochemistryEnvironmental chemistryBioaccumulationMetals HeavyToxicityEcotoxicologyHumic acidAnimalsOrganic matterTissue DistributionWater pollutionSalmonidaeWater Pollutants ChemicalArchives of environmental contamination and toxicology
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Glochidial infection by the endangered Margaritifera margaritifera (Mollusca) increased survival of salmonid host (Pisces) during experimental Flavob…

2021

AbstractCo-infections are common in host-parasite interactions, but studies about their impact on the virulence of parasites/diseases are still scarce. The present study compared mortality induced by a fatal bacterial pathogen, Flavobacterium columnare between brown trout infected with glochidia from the endangered freshwater pearl mussel, Margaritifera margaritifera, and uninfected control fish during the parasitic period and after the parasitic period (i.e. glochidia detached) in a laboratory experiment. We hypothesised that glochidial infection would increase host susceptibility to and/or pathogenicity of the bacterial infection. We found that the highly virulent strain of F. columnare c…

GilljärvitaimenunionidaBrown troutResistanceZoologyImmunology and Host-Parasite Interactions - Original PaperparasitismiFlavobacteriumDisease OutbreaksresistancetoukatFish Diseasesbrown troutco-infectionAnimalsMolluscaMargaritiferaEcosystemGeneral VeterinarybiologyVirulenceHost (biology)PathogenvirulenssiOutbreakGeneral Medicinekalatauditbiology.organism_classificationjokihelmisimpukkaresistenssiCo-infectionBivalviavirulencetaudinaiheuttajatInfectious DiseasesFreshwater pearl musselInsect ScienceFlavobacterium columnareParasitologyFlavobacteriumSalmonidaepathogenUnionidaParasitology Research
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Effects of repeated short episodes of environmental acidification on Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) from a landlocked population

2020

Abstract Chronic or repeated exposure to environmental contaminants may result in allostatic overload, a physiological situation in which the costs of coping affect long-term survival and reproductive output. Continuous measurements in Otra, the largest river in southern Norway, show the occurrence of repeated 24–48 h episodes of acidification. This work investigates the impact of repeated short acidification episodes on a unique land-locked population of normally anadromous Atlantic salmon (“Bleke”). This was done by recording physiological measures of stress and allostatic load in fish exposed for 7 days to continuous or repeated episodes of simulated environmental acidification or untrea…

GillsGillEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSalmo salarPopulationPhysiology010501 environmental sciencesBiologySerotonergic01 natural sciencesAnimalsHomeostasisEnvironmental ChemistryStress measuresSalmoeducationWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental scienceseducation.field_of_studyFish migrationNorwayHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480::Marinbiologi: 497biology.organism_classificationPollutionAllostatic loadFreshwater fishSodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase
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Attenuated Carbohydrate and Gill Na+ , K+-ATPase Stress Responses in Whitefish Caged near Bleached Kraft Mill Discharges

2002

Exposure to biologically treated bleached kraft mill effluent (BKME) is demonstrated to greatly modify the acute physiological stress response in fish and, accordingly, to lead to inconsistencies in data interpretation due to dissimilar effects of handling procedures on reference and exposed fish. To consider this phenomenon, juvenile whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus) were caged for 30 days in four reference sites and in three areas influenced by different BKME discharges. After exposure, fish were subjected to the impacts of low-level handling by raising the cages to the water surface, serially handnetting the fish, and transferring ( approximately 10 min) the submerged cages to the research…

GillsGillTime FactorsHydrocortisoneHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisIndustrial WasteBiologychemistry.chemical_compoundAnimal sciencemedicineAnimalsLactic AcidNa+/K+-ATPaseSalmonidaeGlycogenEcologyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthReproducibility of ResultsEnvironmental ExposureGeneral MedicineEnvironmental exposurebiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalHousing AnimalPollutionRed blood cellmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryToxicityHemoglobinSodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPaseSalmonidaeWater Pollutants ChemicalEcotoxicology and Environmental Safety
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No influence of oxygen levels on pathogenesis and virus shedding in Salmonid alphavirus (SAV)-challenged Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.)

2010

Abstract Background For more than three decades, diseases caused by salmonid alphaviruses (SAV) have become a major problem of increasing economic importance in the European fish-farming industry. However, experimental infection trials with SAV result in low or no mortality i.e very different from most field outbreaks of pancreas disease (PD). This probably reflects the difficulties in reproducing complex biotic and abiotic field conditions in the laboratory. In this study we looked at the relationship between SAV-infection in salmon and sub-lethal environmental hypoxia as a result of reduced flow-through in tank systems. Results The experiment demonstrated that constant reduced oxygen leve…

GillsSalmo salarAlphavirusAlphavirusBiologySeverity of Illness IndexViruslcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesLesionFish DiseasesVirologymedicineAnimalslcsh:RC109-216Viral sheddingAlphavirus infectionHypoxiaPancreasOxygen saturation (medicine)Alphavirus InfectionsHistocytochemistryResearchMyocardiumOutbreakWaterAquatic animalHeartbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyVirus SheddingOxygenInfectious Diseases:Mathematics and natural science: 400 [VDP]medicine.symptomVirology Journal
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Phage-driven loss of virulence in a fish pathogenic bacterium

2012

Parasites provide a selective pressure during the evolution of their hosts, and mediate a range of effects on ecological communities. Due to their short generation time, host-parasite interactions may also drive the virulence of opportunistic bacteria. This is especially relevant in systems where high densities of hosts and parasites on different trophic levels (e.g. vertebrate hosts, their bacterial pathogens, and virus parasitizing bacteria) co-exist. In farmed salmonid fingerlings, Flavobacterium columnare is an emerging pathogen, and phage that infect F. columnare have been isolated. However, the impact of these phage on their host bacterium is not well understood. To study this, four s…

Gliding motilityPathogenesisAquacultureFish DiseasesFlavobacteriaceae InfectionsSalmonphageBacteriophagesPathogenZebrafishGliding motility0303 health sciencesEvolutionary TheoryMultidisciplinarybiologyEcologyVirulenceQRFishesvirulenssiAnimal ModelsBiological EvolutionBacterial PathogensHost-Pathogen InteractionLytic cycleMedicineResearch ArticleScienceVirulenceMicrobiologyFlavobacteriumMicrobiologyMicrobial EcologyHost-Parasite Interactions03 medical and health sciencesModel OrganismsVirologyAnimals14. Life underwaterBiology030304 developmental biologyEvolutionary Biology030306 microbiologyHost (biology)ta1182biology.organism_classificationEvolutionary Ecologyphage resistanceFlavobacterium columnareVirulence Factors and Mechanismsta1181BacteriaFlavobacteriumopportunismi
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Effect of pH, iron and aluminum on survival of early life history stages of the endangered freshwater pearl mussel, Margaritifera margaritifera

2011

Glochidium larvae and juveniles of the endangered freshwater pearl mussel Margaritifera margaritifera may be sensitive to low pH and metal exposure, but to our knowledge, no tolerance tests have been performed. Therefore, we exposed glochidia, fish-attached glochidia, and juveniles of the pearl mussel to low pH and increased iron (Fe) and aluminum (Al) by using realistic pH (6.0–4.5), Fe (0.5–2.0 mg L−1), and Al (0.25–1.0 mg L−1) levels periodically observed in this study site. Survival of glochidia decreased with decreasing pH, increasing Fe, and increasing Al, as well as with increasing Fe + Al concentration in a 72 h exposure. All glochidia died within 24 h in pH 4.5 and Fe 2.0 mg L−1. W…

GlochidiumbiologyEcologyHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesista1172Musselengineering.materialbiology.organism_classificationPollutionTroutAnimal scienceFreshwater pearl musselengineeringEnvironmental ChemistryJuvenileta1181SalmoPearlMargaritiferaToxicological and Environmental Chemistry
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GM-CSF restores innate, but not adaptive, immune responses in glucocorticoid-immunosuppressed human blood in vitro.

2003

Abstract Infection remains the major complication of immunosuppressive therapy in organ transplantation. Therefore, reconstitution of the innate immunity against infections, without activation of the adaptive immune responses, to prevent graft rejection is a clinically desirable status in transplant recipients. We found that GM-CSF restored TNF mRNA and protein expression without inducing IL-2 production and T cell proliferation in glucocorticoid-immunosuppressed blood from either healthy donors or liver transplant patients. Gene array experiments indicated that GM-CSF selectively restored a variety of dexamethasone-suppressed, LPS-inducible genes relevant for innate immunity. A possible ex…

Graft RejectionLipopolysaccharidesT-LymphocytesCell Cycle ProteinsCell SeparationOrgan transplantationDexamethasoneMiceCDC2-CDC28 KinasesConcanavalin ATumor Cells CulturedImmunology and AllergySkin TransplantationMiddle AgedCyclin-Dependent KinasesUp-RegulationSurvival Ratemedicine.anatomical_structureImmunity ActiveTumor necrosis factor alphaGlucocorticoidCell DivisionCyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p27Immunosuppressive Agentsmedicine.drugAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyT cellImmunologyDown-RegulationBiologyProtein Serine-Threonine KinasesImmune systemAdjuvants ImmunologicIn vivomedicineAnimalsHumansDexamethasoneAgedSalmonella Infections AnimalInnate immune systemTumor Suppressor ProteinsCyclin-Dependent Kinase 2Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating FactorImmunity InnateGene Expression RegulationImmunologyLeukocytes MononuclearMice Inbred CBAInterleukin-2Interleukin-1Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)
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