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Environmental DNA approaches are increasingly used to detect microorganisms in environmental compartments, including water. They show considerable advantages to study non-cultivable microorganisms like Bonamia ostreae, a protozoan parasite inducing significant mortality in populations of flat oyster Ostrea edulis. Although B. ostreae development within the host has been well described, questions remain about its behaviour in the environment. As B. ostreae transmission is direct, seawater appears as an interesting target to develop early detection tools and improve our understanding of disease transmission mechanisms. In this context, we have developed an eDNA/eRNA approach allowing detecting and quantifying B. ostreae 18S rDNA/rRNA as well as monitoring its presence in seawater by real-time PCR. B. ostreae DNA could be detected up to 4 days while RNA could be detected up to 30 days, suggesting a higher sensitivity of the eRNA-based tool. Additionally, more than 90% of shed parasites were no longer detected after 2 days outside the oysters. By allowing B. ostreae detection in seawater, this approach would not only be useful to monitor the presence of the parasite in oyster production areas but also to evaluate the effect of changing environmental factors on parasite survival and transmission.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.13617 | DOI Listing |
Dis Aquat Organ
June 2025
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Australian Centre for Disease Preparedness, Portarlington Road, East Geelong, Victoria 3220, Australia.
Bonamiasis, caused by haplosporidian parasites Bonamia spp., is an infectious disease prevalent in 'flat' oysters internationally. Bonamia was first detected in Australian native oysters Ostrea angasi in Victorian waters in the early 1990s and caused mass mortalities in this pilot industry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDis Aquat Organ
May 2025
National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA), Wellington 6021, New Zealand.
Disease outbreaks among shellfish cause significant declines in both wild fisheries and aquaculture production globally. In Aotearoa New Zealand, a long history of flat oyster infections by the haplosporidian parasite Bonamia exitiosa has influenced fishery dynamics in the Foveaux Strait. B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobes Environ
May 2025
Department of Marine Science and Technology, Faculty of Marine Science and Technology, Fukui Prefecture University.
Ascetosporeans are parasitic protists of invertebrates. A deep sequencing ana-lysis of species within the orders Mikrocytida, Paramyxida, and Haplosporida using metagenomic approaches revealed that their mitochondria were functionally reduced and their organellar genomes were lacking. Ascetosporeans belonging to the order Paradinida have not been sequenced, and the nature of their mitochondria remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Environ Res
March 2025
Department of Marine Sciences and Applied Biology, University of Alicante, San Vicente Del Raspeig, 03690 Alicante, Spain; Marine Research Center of Santa Pola, University of Alicante, Santa Pola, 03130, Spain.
The critically endangered species, Pinna nobilis, has nearly disappeared from the Mediterranean Sea, primarily due to infection by the protozoan parasite Haplosporidium pinnae. However, some individuals survive in specific areas with favorable environmental conditions, such as water salinity and temperature. On the Spanish coast, the only two surviving populations are confined to the Ebro Delta and the Mar Menor coastal lagoon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDis Aquat Organ
February 2025
Grice Marine Laboratory, College of Charleston, Charleston, SC 29412, USA.
Bonamia (Haplosporida) are oyster parasites capable of devastating oyster populations. The near-circumglobal distribution of the host generalist B. exitiosa has previously been associated with the natural and anthropogenic dispersal of broadly distributed non-commercial oysters in the Ostrea stentina species complex.
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