Michel C, Gonzalez R, Bonjour E, Avrameas S
INRA, Laboratoire d'ichtyopathologie, Station de Virologie Immunologie Moléculaires, Jouy-en-Josas, France.
Ann Rech Vet. 1990;21(3):211-8.
In order to compare the respective roles of specific response and non-specific mechanisms in the enhancement of resistance to furunculosis, 2 groups of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) were immunized with supernatants of Aeromonas salmonicida or Escherichia coli cultures. The fish received 4 weekly intraperitoneal injections (70 micrograms of crude proteins). One control group was injected with phosphate-buffered saline, while another was untreated. Specific agglutinins were produced only in the fish immunized with A salmonicida supernatant. Polyspecific natural antibodies were measured using different antigens in an enzyme immunoassay. A significant rise (up to 3 times the mean titer of untreated controls) was observed in the 3 injected groups (even with PBS), which also displayed significant protection against experimental furunculosis (32 to 42% mortality versus 72% in controls). Thus, although the exact significance of natural antibodies still has to be confirmed, the importance of natural defenses and the difficulty in clearly inducing specific protection against furunculosis are confirmed.