Fishes (Nov 2021)

Carps, <em>Catla catla</em>, <em>Cirrhinus</em> <em>mrigala</em> and <em>Hypophthalmichthys molitrix</em> Are Resistant to Experimental Infection with Tilapia Lake Virus (TiLV)

  • Pravata Kumar Pradhan,
  • Dev Kumar Verma,
  • Shrish Chandra Yadav,
  • Atul Krishna Dev,
  • Thangaraj Raja Swaminathan,
  • Anutosh Paria,
  • Rajendran Kooloth Valappil,
  • Neeraj Sood

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes6040056
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4
p. 56

Abstract

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Tilapia tilapinevirus, also known as tilapia lake virus (TiLV), is an emerging fish virus that primarily affects tilapines. However, the virus has also been detected in a few non-tilapines. As tilapia is generally farmed in polyculture systems along with carps in South Asian countries, there is a likelihood that TiLV-infected tilapia can transmit the virus to the co-cultured species. In view of the above, the susceptibility of three carp species, namely catla (Catla catla), mrigal (Cirrhinus mrigala) and silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) was evaluated vis-à-vis tilapia, following experimental infection with TiLV. No clinical signs and histopathological alterations could be observed in carps. RT-qPCR revealed that TiLV copy numbers in liver and brain of all the three carps were almost negligible and did not show any increase with time, suggesting that the virus did not replicate in liver and brain, the target organs of TiLV. Further, TiLV could not be isolated from pooled liver and brain tissues of carps using permissive CFF cell line. On the contrary, in tilapia, typical clinical signs and histopathological lesions were observed and there was significant increase in TiLV copy number up to 6 days post-injection. Furthermore, the virus was successfully isolated from pooled liver and brain tissue of infected tilapia. From the above findings, it could be concluded that C. catla, C. mrigala and H. molitrix are resistant to TiLV infection and unlikely to be carriers for this virus.

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