Pathogens (Mar 2022)

First Detection of <i>Francisella halioticida</i> Infecting a Wild Population of Blue Mussels <i>Mytilus edulis</i> in the United Kingdom

  • Irene Cano,
  • Abigail Parker,
  • Georgia M. Ward,
  • Matthew Green,
  • Stuart Ross,
  • John Bignell,
  • Caroline Daumich,
  • Rose Kerr,
  • Stephen W. Feist,
  • Frederico M. Batista

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11030329
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 329

Abstract

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In the last decade, declines in the population of wild blue mussels Mytilus edulis in the Tamar estuary (United Kingdom) have been noted. In archived samples collected from 2013 to 2019, between 7% (in 2013) and 18% (in 2019) showed large granulocytoma and haemocytic infiltration in the interstitial tissue of the digestive gland. Four samples were selected for 16S rRNA gene Nanopore sequencing. A consensus sequence of 1449 bp showed nucleotide similarities between 99.93–100% with published sequences of Francisella halioticida. In situ hybridisation (ISH) confirmed the presence of F. halioticida DNA within individual granulocytes of granulocytomas and also in prokaryotic-like inclusion bodies within the digestive epithelial cells. The design of diagnostic tests for surveillance of F. halioticida, including more specific ISH probes and sequencing the genome of the isolates infecting mussels, will shed more light on the pathogenicity and spread of this pathogen.

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