Innate host defense mechanisms of fish against viruses and bacteria

被引:959
作者
Ellis, AE [1 ]
机构
[1] FRS Marine Lab, Aberdeen AB11 9DB, Scotland
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0145-305X(01)00038-6
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
The integumental defenses provide a physical and chemical barrier to the attachment and penetration of microbes. Besides the entrapping and sloughing of microbes in the mucus, the latter contains many antibacterial substances including antibacterial peptides, lysozyme, lectins and proteases. The gastro-intestinal tract is a hostile environment of acids, bile salts and enzymes able to inactivate and digest many viruses and bacteria. In most cases the integumental defenses are sufficient to protect against even quite virulent organisms which often only produce disease when the integument has been physically damaged. If a microbe gains access to the tissues of the fish, it is met with an array of soluble and cellular defenses. The complement system, present in the blood plasma, plays a central role in recognising bacteria and its activated products may lyse the bacterial cells, initiate inflammation, induce the influx of phagocytes and enhance their phagocytic activity. Complement can be activated directly by bacterial products and constituents and also indirectly by other factors, principally C-reactive protein and lectins, which can also bind to the bacterial surface. Plasma also contains a number of factors which inhibit bacterial growth(e.g. transferrin and anti-proteases) or which are bactericidal e.g. lysozyme. Following the infection of fish with virus pathogens, infected cells produce interferon. This induces antiviral defenses in neighbouring cells which are then protected from becoming infected. Anti-viral cytotoxic cells are able to lyse virally infected cells and thus reduce the rate of multiplication of virus within them. Innate defenses thus provide a pre-existing and fast-acting system of protection which is non-specific and relatively temperature-independent and thus has several advantages over the slow-acting and temperature-dependent specific immune responses. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:827 / 839
页数:13
相关论文
共 103 条
[1]   The leucocyte population of the unstimulated peritoneal cavity of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) [J].
Afonso, A ;
Ellis, AE ;
Silva, MT .
FISH & SHELLFISH IMMUNOLOGY, 1997, 7 (05) :335-348
[2]   Neutrophil and macrophage responses to inflammation in the peritoneal cavity of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. A light and electron microscopic cytochemical study [J].
Afonso, A ;
Lousada, S ;
Silva, J ;
Ellis, AE ;
Silva, MT .
DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS, 1998, 34 (01) :27-37
[3]   Glycogen granules in resting and inflammatory rainbow trout phagocytes - an ultrastructural study [J].
Afonso, A ;
Macedo, PM ;
Ellis, AE ;
Silva, MT .
DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS, 2000, 42 (02) :101-110
[4]   Uptake of neutrophils and neutrophilic components by macrophages in the inflamed peritoneal cavity of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) [J].
Afonso, A ;
Silva, J ;
Lousada, S ;
Ellis, AE ;
Silva, MT .
FISH & SHELLFISH IMMUNOLOGY, 1998, 8 (05) :319-338
[5]   Antibacterial cathepsins in different types of ambicoloured Japanese flounder skin [J].
Aranishi, F ;
Mano, N .
FISH & SHELLFISH IMMUNOLOGY, 2000, 10 (01) :87-89
[6]   Lectins as defence molecules in vertebrates and invertebrates [J].
Arason, GJ .
FISH & SHELLFISH IMMUNOLOGY, 1996, 6 (04) :277-289
[7]   Peroxide-inducible catalase in Aeromonas salmonicida subsp salmonicida protects against exogenous hydrogen peroxide and killing by activated rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss L, macrophages [J].
Barnes, AC ;
Bowden, TJ ;
Horne, MT ;
Ellis, AE .
MICROBIAL PATHOGENESIS, 1999, 26 (03) :149-158
[8]  
BERNARD J, 1985, ANN INST PASTEUR VIR, V136, P13, DOI 10.1016/S0769-2617(85)80109-X
[9]   Vibrio anguillarum resistance to rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) serum:: Role of O-antigen structure of lipopolysaccharide [J].
Boesen, HT ;
Pedersen, K ;
Larsen, JL ;
Koch, C ;
Ellis, AE .
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 1999, 67 (01) :294-301
[10]   Bactericidal activity by sub-agglutinating levels of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) antiserum to Vibrio anguillarum serogroup O1 [J].
Boesen, HT ;
Larsen, JL ;
Ellis, AE .
FISH & SHELLFISH IMMUNOLOGY, 1999, 9 (08) :633-636