* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download A new nodavirus is associated with covert mortality disease of shrimp
2015–16 Zika virus epidemic wikipedia , lookup
Chagas disease wikipedia , lookup
Oesophagostomum wikipedia , lookup
Bioterrorism wikipedia , lookup
Sarcocystis wikipedia , lookup
Schistosomiasis wikipedia , lookup
Leptospirosis wikipedia , lookup
Eradication of infectious diseases wikipedia , lookup
Hepatitis C wikipedia , lookup
Human cytomegalovirus wikipedia , lookup
African trypanosomiasis wikipedia , lookup
Influenza A virus wikipedia , lookup
Ebola virus disease wikipedia , lookup
Orthohantavirus wikipedia , lookup
Antiviral drug wikipedia , lookup
West Nile fever wikipedia , lookup
Herpes simplex virus wikipedia , lookup
Middle East respiratory syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Hepatitis B wikipedia , lookup
Marburg virus disease wikipedia , lookup
Journal of General Virology (2014), 95, 2700–2709 DOI 10.1099/vir.0.070078-0 A new nodavirus is associated with covert mortality disease of shrimp Qingli Zhang,1,2 Qun Liu,1 Shuang Liu,1 Haolin Yang,1 Sun Liu,1 Luoluo Zhu,1 Bing Yang,1,2 Jiting Jin,1 Lixue Ding,1 Xiuhua Wang,1,2 Yan Liang,1,2 Qintao Wang1 and Jie Huang1,2 Correspondence Qingli Zhang [email protected] Jie Huang [email protected] Received 16 July 2014 Accepted 8 September 2014 1 Key Laboratory of Sustainable Development of Marine Fisheries, Ministry of Agriculture, Yellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences, 106 Nanjing Road, Qingdao 266071, PR China 2 National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Qingdao 266071, PR China A new nodavirus, named covert mortality nodavirus (CMNV), is associated with covert mortality disease of shrimp which has caused serious loss in China since 2009. Histopathological examination of shrimp suffering the disease revealed coagulative necrosis of striated muscle similar to typical histopathology features of infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV), Penaeus vannamei nodavirus (PvNV) and Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus (MrNV). However, shrimp suffering this disease tested negative for IMNV, MrNV and PvNV by reverse transcription (RT)PCR. Additionally, eosinophilic inclusions were found in epithelium of the tubules in the hepatopancreas and lymphoid organ, and mass karyopyknotic nuclei existed in the muscle and lymphoid organ. The tubular epithelium of the hepatopancreas showed significant atrophy. A cDNA library was constructed from total RNA of infected shrimp. Sequencing and alignment analysis showed that one clone with an 1185 bp insert (designated CMNV-7) shared 54 , 53 and 39 % identity with the amino acid sequences of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase from Flock House virus, black beetle virus and MrNV. The results of fluorescence in situ hybridization showed that the hepatopancreas, striated muscle and lymphoid organ were positively reacting tissues. The mean size of negative-stained virus particles was 32 nm. In addition, a nested RT-PCR assay was developed for CMNV, and the RT-PCR detection results revealed that Fenneropenaeus chinensis, Litopenaeus vannamei and Marsupenaeus japonicus suffering from this disease were CMNV-positive. INTRODUCTION A major disease that occurred in the shrimp farming industries in China before 2009 was generally named ‘covert mortality disease’ due to the most moribund shrimp hiding on the bottom in deep water rather than swimming to the surface or in shallow water, as did shrimp suffering from white spot disease (Zhang, 2004; Xing, 2004; Song & Zhuang, 2006; Xu & Ji, 2009; Gu, 2012; Huang, 2012). The shrimp suffering the disease exhibited clinical signs including hepatopancreatic atrophy and necrosis, empty stomach and guts, soft shell, slow growth, and in many cases abdominal muscle whitening and necrosis (Zhang, 2004; Huang, 2012). The farmers noted that dead shrimp could be found in the diseased population every day and mortality increased during 60–80 days post-stocking with a cumulative mortality up to 80 %. Early mortality syndrome (EMS)/ The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession number for the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase gene sequence is KM112247. 2700 acute hepatopancreas necrosis disease (AHPND) that emerged in the south of China in 2010 (Lightner et al., 2012) was once thought to represent severe cases of covert mortality disease as its clinical signs were similar to that of covert mortality disease to some degree. Infection with several RNA viruses has been found to cause typical muscle necrosis in cultured shrimp. Infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV) and Penaeus vannamei nodavirus (PvNV) infect Litopenaeus vannamei and result in muscle necrosis (Poulos et al., 2006; Tang et al., 2007; Flegel, 2012). Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus (MrNV) can infect freshwater prawns and L. vannamei (Qian et al., 2003; Bonami et al., 2005; Senapin et al., 2011, 2013; NaveenKumar et al., 2013), causing muscle necrosis in tail muscles. However, IMNV, MrNV and PvNV were not detectable in shrimp suffering from covert mortality disease using relevant reverse transcription (RT)-PCR methods. As has been observed for IMNV, MrNV and PvNV, histological examination of shrimp revealed coagulative necrosis of Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by 070078 G 2014 The authors IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 Printed in Great Britain CMNV causes covert mortality disease of shrimp the skeletal muscle and pyknosis was found in the muscle. In addition, eosinophilic inclusions were identified in the hepatopancreas and lymphoid organ. The histological characteristic suggested the disease might be caused by a virus. In the present study, a new nodavirus, tentatively named covert mortality nodavirus (CMNV), was identified as the aetiological agent of covert mortality disease through construction of a cDNA library and sequencing, virus extraction, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), histopathology, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and challenge testing. (a) (b) RESULTS Observation of clinical signs of farmed shrimp The farmed shrimp of L. vannamei suffering from covert mortality disease exhibited obvious clinical signs, including hepatopancreatic atrophy with colour fading, empty stomach and guts, soft shell, and slow growth, and in many cases were accompanied by uneven slightly whitish muscle lesion areas in the abdominal segments or slightly pale body (Fig. 1a, b). The moribund shrimp sank to the bottom of deep water and were rarely found in shallow water or swimming under the surface. Farmers monitor the bottom of ponds for dead shrimp by throwing out and drawing back a convenient iron-made tetrahedroid with a net at the bottom triangle and a drawstring at the top. Dead shrimp were also often observed on the bottom downstream of aerators. Moribund and dead shrimp could be found every day in diseased ponds. The mortality began 1 month post-stocking and increased after 60–80 days post-stocking, accompanied by an increase of nitrite nitrogen (NO22-N) with a cumulative mortality up to 80 %. Histopathology of CMNV infection Histological examination showed that muscle fibres composing the whitish muscle lesions had muscle fragmentation tending towards coagulative, muscular lysis, and myonecrosis (Fig. 2a). Multifocal myonecrosis in the striated muscle was accompanied by haemocytic infiltration and karyopyknosis of haemocytes (Fig. 2b). Vacuolation in the cytoplasm of hepatopancreocytes and eosinophilic inclusions were observed within the tubular epithelium of the hepatopancreas (Fig. 2c, d). In some cases, swollen nucleoli could be found in hepatopancreocytes. Inclusions and nuclear pyknosis were observed in the lymphoid spheroids (Fig. 2e, f). Additionally, specimens of Fenneropenaeus chinensis and Marsupenaeus japonicus with whitish abdominal muscle collected from diseased ponds exhibited the same gross histopathological characteristics. TEM of virus particles TEM of ultrathin sections of the hepatopancreas of CMNV-infected shrimp revealed the presence of spherical http://ijs.sgmjournals.org Fig. 1. Clinical signs of L. vannamei suffering from covert mortality disease: (a) from the artificial infection experiment and (b) from a farmed pond. Black arrows show whitening muscle of the abdominal segment. White arrows indicate hepatopancreas atrophy and colour fading. The framed triangles show the healthy shrimp, the black triangles indicate the shrimp suffering covert mortality disease and the white triangles indicate the hepatopancreas of healthy shrimp. unenveloped virus-like particles with a diameter of ~24.9±1.8 nm (n521) (Fig. 3a, b). Unenveloped viruslike particles were also observed with TEM of negativestained grids coated with the inoculation extracted from diseased shrimp for challenge tests and purified virions obtained by sucrose-gradient centrifugation (Fig. 3c, d). Small spherical particles were also observed by TEM. The larger virus-like particles were 32.1±5.5 nm (n537) in diameter and the smaller spherical particles were 19.0±1.9 nm (n515) in diameter (Fig. 3c, d). Sequencing and phylogenetic analyses In total, 326 clones and 221 sequences were obtained through the cDNA library constructed with the anchor random primers from the total RNA of the hepatopancreas of diseased shrimp. A BLAST search showed the amino acid sequence of a 1185 bp fragment clone insert from the cDNA library (designated CMNV-7; GenBank accession number KM112247) shared 54, 53 and 39 % identity with the amino acid sequences of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase from Flock House virus (FHV), black beetle virus (BBV) and MrNV, respectively (Table 1). Nucleotide alignment by BLAST showed no significant similarity in GenBank when the nucleotide fragment of CMNV-7 was submitted. The resulting phylogenetic tree inference revealed that the deduced amino acid sequence of the Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 2701 Q. Zhang and others (b) (a) 10 µm 20 µm (d) (c) 20 µm 10 µm (f) (e) 50 µm 10 µm RNA-dependent RNA polymerase gene of CMNV (CMNV-7) clustered in the genus Alphanodavirus, which includes MrNV, PvNV, Nodamura virus, Boolarra virus, FHV, BBV, Drosophila melanogaster American nodavirus and Pariacoto virus (Fig. 4). Bootstrap values indicated that the node support of the CMNV-7 isolate was 98 %, strongly suggesting that the isolate was a novel virus within the genus Alphanodavirus. The isolate was therefore tentatively named CMNV. Confirmation of the causative pathogen by experimental challenge To further identify whether CMNV was the aetiological agent, experimental infections were conducted. The results of the challenge test showed that cumulative mortality of shrimp in the 0.22 mm filtered injection, unfiltered injection and per os infection groups was 100, 100 and 84.85±2.14 %, respectively, by day 10 post-injection. In contrast, there was no mortality of shrimp in the control group injected with PBS (Fig. 5). Further, histopathological examination showed striated muscle necrosis and the presence of karyopyknosis, and inclusions in the hepatopancreas and lymphoid organ. All of the observations were almost identical to those in clinical specimens. In addition, RT-PCR analysis indicated that all shrimp from the infected group were strongly positive for CMNV, whereas shrimp from the control group were negative. 2702 Fig. 2. Histopathology of L. vannamei suffering from covert mortality disease. Black arrows show the karyopyknotic nuclei and white arrows show the light purple inclusions. (a, b) Haematoxylin and eosin (HE) staining of abdominal muscle necrosis. The muscle showed fragmentation tending towards coagulative and dissolving necrosis (black triangles). The framed triangles show the normal skeletal muscle. (c, d) HE staining of atrophied and necrotic hepatopancreatic epithelium. Note that the inclusions in the hepatopancreatic tubular epithelium are one of the typical histopathologic characteristics of CMNV infection. (e, f) HE staining of the lymphoid organ; (f) shows the detail of the frame in (e). Note the lymphoid organ spheroids. Bar, 20 (a), 10 (b), 20 (c), 10 (d), 50 (e) and 10 (f) mm. FISH of CMNV A 165 bp PCR-amplified product from CMNV-7 was labelled with fluorescein and used as a probe to detect CMNV by in situ hybridization in sections of infected L. vannamei from the experimental infection. The results showed that fluorescent signals were evident in the hepatopancreas, lymphoid organ and striated muscle of shrimp of the filtered injection group (Fig. 6). No reaction was observed in tissues prepared from uninfected shrimp (data not shown). The probe reacted most intensely with the inclusions in the tubular epithelium and myoepithelial cells surrounding the hepatopancreatic tubules (Fig. 6a–c). For striated muscle, a few inclusion-like bodies showed a very strong fluorescent signal. Diffusely distributed fluorescence was also observed within the muscle (Fig. 6d–f). The probe also reacted intensely with the inclusions of the lymphoid organ cells (Fig. 6g–i). In addition, when the probe was used to detect CMNV in shrimp that were collected from diseased ponds characterized with obvious whitish abdominal muscles, similar fluorescent signals could also be found in the lymphoid organ, striated muscle and hepatopancreas of those shrimp. CMNV RT-PCR assay A nested RT-PCR assay was developed for highly sensitive detection of CMNV. The amplification result showed that Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 Journal of General Virology 95 CMNV causes covert mortality disease of shrimp (a) (c) (b) Fig. 3. Transmission electron micrographs of ultrathin section of the hepatopancreas and negative-stained CMNV virions. (a) Viral inclusion (big black arrow) and CMNV particles (white arrows) in the inclusion can be observed in the ultrathin section of the hepatopancreas. (b) Magnified micrograph of the virus particles in the ultrathin section of the hepatopancreas. The white arrows show the virus particles assembled in the inclusion. (c) Virus-like particles collected from sucrose-gradient fractionation. The size of the virus-like particles is not homogeneous. The larger virus-like particles (black arrows) are ~32 nm in diameter and the smaller virus-like particles (white arrows) are ~19 nm in diameter. (d) Magnified micrograph of the virus-like particles. The black arrows indicate the larger virus-like particles and the white arrows indicate the smaller virus-like particles. Bar, 100 (a) and 50 (c, d) nm. (d) Table 1. Percentage similarity of the amino acid sequence of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of CMNV compared with other nodaviruses Virus Alphanodaviruses Covert mortality nodavirus Flock House virus Black beetle virus Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus (China strain) Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus (Australia strain) Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus (Malaysia strain) Penaeus vannamei nodavirus Drosophila melanogaster American nodavirus Nodamura virus Boolarra virus Pariacoto virus Betanodaviruses Striped jack nervous necrosis virus Tiger puffer nervous necrosis virus Atlantic halibut nodavirus Golden pompano nervous necrosis virus Atlantic cod nodavirus Japanese flounder nervous necrosis virus Dragon grouper nervous necrosis virus Barfin flounder nervous necrosis virus Redspotted grouper nervous necrosis virus http://ijs.sgmjournals.org Abbreviation GenBank accession number Sequence similarity to CMNV (%) CMNV FHV BBV MrNV-CN MrNV-AU MrNV-MY PvNV DmANV NoV BoV PaV AIL48199 NP_689444 YP_053043 AAQ54758 AEY63648 AEQ39078 YP_004207810 ACU32794 NP_077730 NP_689439 NP_620109 100 54 53 39 39 39 37 48 44 46 35 SJNNV TPNNV AHNV GPNNV ACNV JFNNV DGNNV BFNNV RGNNV NP_599247 YP_003288759 AAY34458 ACX54065 ABR23192 ACN58225 AAU85148 YP_003288756 ACX69744 33 32 32 32 32 31 31 31 31 Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 2703 Q. Zhang and others NoV 99 PvNV MrNV-AU 95 94 MrNV-CN 89 88 MrNV-MY CMNV Alphanodavirus BoV 98 FHV 100 BBV 75 57 DmANV PaV 31 93 DGNNV GPNNV 83 RGNNV 70 JFNNV SJNNV 100 Betanodavirus TPNNV AHNV 93 BFNNV 60 71 ACNV Fig. 4. Phylogenetic tree based on the deduced amino acid sequence of the CMNV-7 clone with RNA-dependent RNA polymerases from other nodaviruses (for virus abbreviations, see Table 1). The tree was reconstructed by the neighbour-joining method using MEGA5.0 and the numbers indicate percentage bootstrap support from replicates. 120 Cumulative mortality (%) 100 80 60 Per os infection Unfiltered group Filtered group Control 40 20 0 0 24 48 72 96 120 144 168 192 216 240 Time after challenge (h) Fig. 5. Cumulative mortality curves of L. vannamei in the experimental infection. One group of healthy shrimp was challenged via per os infection (Per os infection). Three groups of healthy shrimp were infected with a dilution of intramuscular injection with unfiltered tissue homogenate (Unfiltered group), injection with a diluted, 0.22 mm filtered tissue homogenate (Filtered group) and injection with normal saline (Control), respectively. Cumulative mortalities of shrimp are shown as means of data from two replicates for each experimental group (each replicate included 22 individuals). 2704 the first step of the PCR produced a 618 bp amplicon and the second step of the RT-PCR produced a 165 bp amplicon. The RNA samples extracted from purified virus, and shrimp in the filtered group and unfiltered group were all strongly CMNV-positive after the first step of the RTPCR (Fig. 7, lanes 1–3). The RNA samples extracted from the healthy shrimp were CMNV-negative after the first and second step of the RT-PCR. Specificity analysis against the extracted nucleic acid samples from shrimp infected with yellow head virus (YHV), MrNV, white spot syndrome virus (WSSV) and Taura syndrome virus (TSV) indicated that the nested RT-PCR was specific for CMNV. When the newly developed nest RT-PCR was used to amplify RNA from the hepatopancreas and muscle of different shrimp for epidemiological investigation, some specimens of L. vannamei, F. chinensis and M. japonicus with gross signs of atrophied hepatopancreas, soft shell, slow growth or whitish abdominal muscle were CMNV-positive. DISCUSSION The name ‘covert mortality disease’ (or ‘bottom death’) was broadly used in China before 2009 to describe the disease in which mortality was hidden under deep water in shrimp farms (Xing, 2004; Zhang, 2004). It was suggested that environmental factors, such as NO22-N, high temperature, etc., caused the disease (Xu & Ji, 2009). AHPND, Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 Journal of General Virology 95 CMNV causes covert mortality disease of shrimp (a) (b) 20 mm (c) 20 mm (d) 20 mm (e) 20 mm (f) 20 mm (g) 20 mm (h) 20 mm (i) 20 mm for which the causative agent was demonstrated to be virulent strains of Vibrio parahaemolyticus (FAO, 2013; Tran et al., 2013), hit the shrimp farming industries in 2010 in China (NACA, 2012). Many cases of EMS/AHPND were still called covert mortality disease, as the new syndrome looks like a severe case of covert mortality disease. However, the present study reveals that the covert mortality disease was caused by a suspected viral infection, with typical histopathology of inclusions and pyknosis in the tubular epithelium of the hepatopancreas, muscle and lymphoid spheroids, which does not match the histopathology of infection with any known viruses. Phylogenetic analysis of the sequenced clone insert in the cDNA libraries from diseased shrimp revealed a new nodavirus belonging to the genus Alphanodavirus. FISH with the probe amplified from the fragment showed consistent signals with the inclusions observed in the haematoxylin and eosin (HE)-stained histopathology in the hepatopancreas, lymphoid organ and muscle. The challenge test, which http://ijs.sgmjournals.org 20 mm Fig. 6. FISH using the CMNV-7 165 bp probe on histological sections of L. vannamei infected with CMNV: (a–c) hepatopancreas, (d–f) muscles and (g–i) lymphoid organ. (a, e, g) Fluorescein fluorescence; (b, f, h) tissues stained by Evans blue; (c, d, i) merged images. Green fluorescence in (c, d) indicates specific binding of the CMNV-7 165 bp probe to viral nucleic acids in infected cells; brown or yellow signal indicates background. In (c), green fluorescent inclusions were observed in the tubular epithelium of the hepatopancreas and the myoepithelial cells surrounding the hepatopancreatic tubules. In (d), Green fluorescence was very strong and diffusely distributed within the necrotic muscle, and can also be seen in the inclusions of necrotic muscle. In (i), green fluorescent inclusions were observed in the lymphoid spheroids. Bar, 20 mm. proved that both intramuscular injection with bacteriumfree filtered inoculum of tissue homogenates prepared from the shrimp suffering from covert mortality disease and per os infection could successfully pass on the disease to healthy L. vannamei, indicated a virus-like infectious agent as the most probable cause of the disease. The challenged shrimp L. vannamei became infected and exhibited the signs and lesions associated with the disease. TEM examination of ultrathin sections of the lesions of diseased shrimp and negative staining of virus suspensions indicated particles with a mean diameter of 32 nm (measured from the negative staining of purified virions; a mean diameter of 25 nm was measured with ultrathin sections). These results fulfil Rivers’ postulates for the demonstration of a viral aetiology (Rivers, 1937). Based on the findings of the current study, the aetiological agent of the disease has been designated CMNV. In this study, TEM showed that the size of CMNV virus particles is larger than those of MrNV and PvNV; however, Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 2705 Q. Zhang and others M 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 750 bp 500 bp 250 bp 100 bp Fig. 7. RT-PCR detection of the presence of CMNV in the experimentally infected L. vannamei, and the spontaneously infected F. chinensis and M. japonicas collected from diseased ponds. M, DL2000 molecular mass marker. Lanes 1–6: result of the first step of RT-PCR; lanes 7–12: result of the second step of RT-PCR. Lanes 1 and 7, 2 and 8, and 3 and 9: amplification results of cDNAs from purified virus, and shrimp of the filtered group and unfiltered group, respectively. Lanes 4 and 10 and 5 and 11: amplification results of cDNAs from F. chinensis and M. japonicas, respectively. Lanes 6 and 12: negative controls. it is in the diameter range of 32–33 nm, which is the typical size of alphanodaviruses (Thiéry et al., 2012). In addition to the major virus-like particles with a mean diameter of 32 nm, smaller particles were found in the virus preparations with a mean diameter of 19 nm. Given the size of the smaller particles (i.e. 19 nm) and the tissue of viral isolation (i.e. the hepatopancreas), it is highly likely that a densovirus-like hepatopancreatic parvovirus (HPV) or perhaps even infectious hypodermal and haematopoietic necrosis virus (IHHNV) has been co-isolated with CMNV. Nevertheless, the smaller particles were negative for HPV and IHHNV when they were analysed by PCR methods recommended by the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE, 2012) (data not shown). Extra small virus particles of 14–16 nm diameter were also found in preparations of MrNV, which causes whitish muscle disease in M. rosenbergii (Qian et al., 2003). The present study may provide the second instance for the nodavirus-associated satellite virus recognized by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (Briddon et al., 2012). The bootstrap values of cluster nodes of CMNV compared with insect and crustacean nodaviruses were 98 and 94 %, respectively. The fact that CMNV-7 shared the higher bootstrap value with some of the insect nodaviruses rather than the crustacean nodaviruses might be attributed to the phylogenetic analysis, which was based on the partial sequence of the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase gene of CMNV (CMNV-7). The clinical signs of CMNV infection have some similarities with the other two crustacean nodaviruses (MrNV and PvNV) and IMNV (abdominal muscle whitening) in terms of muscle lesions; however, these four viruses differ in virulence. MrNV can cause 100 % mortality in the infected post-larval and juvenile M. rosenbergii (Arcier et al., 1999; Sahul Hameed et al., 2004; NaveenKumar et al., 2013). PvNV does not cause mortality in L. vannamei in 2706 laboratory infections and the survival was reduced from a mean of 74 % in 2003 (before PvNV was detected) to 50 % after the appearance of PvNV in 2004 (Tang et al., 2007). IMNV causes 20 % mortality in laboratory-infected L. vannamei (Tang et al., 2005). Typically, the disease caused by IMNV progresses slowly, with low mortality rates that persist throughout the growing season, and the infection can cause 40–60 % mortality in affected ponds (Nunes et al., 2004). In contrast, our result showed that CMNV cumulative mortality of L. vannamei in the per os infection group is 84.85±2.14 % by day 10 post-injection and the median lethal time (LT50) is 107 h. In the CMNV-infected shrimp ponds, a slowly developing mortality was found during daily management and cumulative mortality of L. vannamei may be variable up to 80–90 %. High CMNVrelated mortality indicates that CMNV possesses higher virulence than PvNV and IMNV. In addition, the host range of MrNV, PvNV, IMNV and CMNV appears to be different. MrNV was isolated originally from M. rosenbergii (Arcier et al., 1999) and several species of marine penaeid shrimp (Fennerpenaeus indicus, M. japonicus and P. monodon) have been identified as reservoir hosts (Sudhakaran et al., 2006; Mello et al., 2011). PvNV appears to have a limited host range; it was isolated originally from L. vannamei (Tang et al., 2007) and did not infect M. rosenbergii in a 4 week injection bioassay as determined by RT-PCR analysis (Tang et al., 2011). IMNV can infect L. vannamei, Litopenaeus stylirostris and P. monodon, and it caused moderate mortality (20 %) in infected L. vannamei and 0 % mortality in L. stylirostris or P. monodon over a period of 4 weeks (Tang et al., 2005). Our results from histopathology and nested RT-PCR showed that CMNV can infect L. vannamei, F. chinensis and M. japonicus, which indicated that the host range of CMNV is wide in cultured shrimp species. The target tissues of CMNV are different from those of MrNV, PvNV, IMNV. Until now, there was no evidence or report that demonstrated that MrNV, PvNV and IMNV can cause hepatopancreatic atrophy and necrosis. In our study, the shrimp with clinical signs collected from both CMNV-infected ponds and from the experimental infection showed that CMNV caused hepatopancreatic atrophy and necrosis. FISH of the hepatopancreas of CMNVinfected shrimp revealed that the CMNV infected the tubular epithelium of the hepatopancreas. Early studies on tissue tropism of fish nodavirus indicated that nodavirus was detected primarily in nervous tissues (Nguyen et al., 1997; Skliris & Richards, 1999; Grove et al., 2003; Nopadon et al., 2009), whereas recent studies have shown that RNA and viral proteins of nodavirus are present in the liver and non-nervous organs, with the highest persistence of viral antigens in the liver (Lopez-Jimena et al., 2011, 2012). Virus detection in the liver may support epitheliotrophism of nodaviruses (Lopez-Jimena et al., 2012). In addition, the obvious fluorescent signal in myoepithelial cells surrounding the hepatopancreatic tubules indicated that myoepithelial cells were also targeted cells and the Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 Journal of General Virology 95 CMNV causes covert mortality disease of shrimp destruction of myoepithelial cells might result in the atrophy of hepatopancreatic tubules. Additionally, similar to PvNV to some degree, CMNVrelated mortality may be sporadic in ponds, but the mortality will be aggravated by environmental stressors, such as NO22-N and high temperature. When the air temperature is .30 uC and water temperature is .28 uC, survival in CMNV-infected ponds decreases sharply. Higher mortality can be found after 60–80 days poststocking during the summer crop (Zhang, 2004; Xing, 2004; Song & Zhuang, 2006; Xu & Ji, 2009; Gu, 2012). In conclusion, through isolation, reinfection and histopathology, we revealed that CMNV, a new nodavirus, is the causative agent of shrimp covert mortality disease. Additionally, we developed a FISH and nested RT-PCR method for the detection of CMNV. The results of the current study indicate that CMNV is a new and highly virulent nodavirus. These findings underscore the need for professionals versed in aquatic animal health and farmers in the shrimp aquaculture industries to pay close attention and take measures to prevent disease outbreaks and economic losses caused by CMNV. METHODS Shrimp. Penaeid shrimp exhibiting signs of whitish abdominal muscle and hepatopancreatic atrophy were collected for virus isolation from farms in Fujian, Shandong and Hebei Provinces in China during 2010– 2013. All farms were suffering from an outbreak of covert mortality disease. For RT-PCR tests, L. vannamei, F. chinensis and M. japonicus were sampled from shrimp farms from the coastal provinces of China during 2012 and 2013. Apparently healthy subadult L. vannamei shrimp (10 g mean weight) for challenge testing were purchased from a shrimp farm in Changyi, Shandong Province. The shrimp were tested and were demonstrated to be free of WSSV, YHV, TSV, IHHNV, Enterocytozoon hepatopenaei and AHPNS by PCR or RT-PCR methods recommended by the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE, 2012; Flegel & Lo, 2013; Suebsing et al., 2013). Virus isolation. Virus isolation was conducted according to the method reported by Bonami et al. (2005) with a minor revision. Sampled cephalothoraxes and whitish abdominal muscle were homogenized in TN buffer (20 mM Tris/HCl, 400 mM NaCl, pH 7.4) and clarified at 1400 g for 15 min. The supernatant was clarified for a second time at 10 000 g for 25 min. The final supernatant was then centrifuged at 130 000 g for 4 h (Ultracentrifuge CP100WX; Hitachi). After resuspension, pellets were twice Freon (1,1,2-trichloro-2,2,1trifluoroethane)-extracted and then pelleted for 4 h at 160 000 g. After resuspension in TN buffer, the final pellet was layered onto a 20–50 % (w/w) sucrose gradient and centrifuged at 160 000 g for 3 h. ultrathin sectioning, the fixed tissues were secondarily fixed with 1 % osmium tetroxide for 2 h, and then embedded in Spurr’s resin and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate. Ultrathin sections were prepared on collodion-coated grids by the Equipment Center of the Medical College of Qingdao University. A suspension of the virus from the isolation was dropped on the collodion-coated grids and then negatively stained with 2 % phosphotungstic acid (pH 7.0). All grids were examined in a JEOL JEM-1200 electron microscope operating at 80–100 kV. Challenge test. Healthy L. vannamei shrimp (10 g mean weight) were cultured temporarily in indoor tanks for 5 days before they were used for challenge tests. For the challenge study, the shrimp were divided into an unfiltered injection group, a filtered injection group and a control group. Each group included two replicates and each replicate included 22 individuals. Cephalothoraxes and whitish abdominal muscle were homogenized and clarified as described above. The final supernatant was clarified for a second time at 10 000 g for 25 min and divided into two parts in two tubes. The supernatant in the first tube was injected directly into healthy shrimp in the lateral area of the fourth abdominal segment. The supernatant in the second tube was filtered through a 0.22 mm membrane and then centrifuged at 130 000 g for 4 h. The precipitation in the second tube was resuspended as viral inoculum and injected directly into healthy shrimp in the lateral area of the fourth abdominal segment. The control group shrimp were injected with normal saline. For per os infection, two challenge groups of healthy shrimp, 22 individuals of L. vannamei per group, were fed minced CMNV-infected tissues (9 mm3) at 10 % of total body weight after 24 h starvation. Thereafter, the shrimp were maintained with pellet feeds for 10 days. At the end of the bioassay, shrimp were sampled for nested RT-PCR analysis. The healthy shrimp were raised similar to the control group. Construction of a cDNA library and sequencing. Total RNA was extracted from the cephalothoraxes of challenged shrimp by using a QIAamp viral RNA kit (Qiagen) following the manufacturer’s protocol. The cDNA was synthesized using an anchor random primer (P17N8: 59-GTTTCCCAGTAGGTCTCNNNNNNNN-39) and dsDNA was synthesized by PCR amplification according to the method of Hang et al. (2012). The amplification products were examined by agarose gel electrophoresis and then purified with a PurElute GX DNA Gel Extraction and Cleanup kit (EdgeBio). A rapid ligation amplicon pyrosequencing library for the purified, anchored, random RT-PCR products was prepared by using a GS FLX Titanium Rapid Library Preparation kit (Roche 454 Life Sciences) (Hang et al., 2012). Clones containing the insert were sequenced and the amino acid sequenced was deduced. Phylogenetic analysis. The sequence of CMNV (CMNV-7) was submitted for a BLAST (National Center for Biotechnology Information) search and highly similar matches were included in the dataset for phylogenetic analysis. A total of 20 RNA-dependent RNA polymerase sequences (Table 1) were aligned with CLUSTAL_W as implemented in MEGA5.0 (Tamura et al., 2011) using the default settings. The alignment file was checked visually for alignment gaps and missing data. A phylogenetic tree was then reconstructed by the neighbour-joining method with bootstrap analysis (1000 replicates) using MEGA5.0. Histopathological sections. Samples of the cephalothoraxes and whitish abdominal muscle were fixed in Davidson’s alcohol formalin acetic acid fixative (Bell & Lightner, 1988) for 24 h and then changed to 70 % ethanol. Paraffin sections were prepared and stained with HE according to the procedures of Bell & Lightner (1988). TEM. Ultrathin sections of the hepatopancreas from infected shrimp and virus preparations were analysed using TEM. Small pieces of the hepatopancreas in ~1 mm3 of infected shrimp were fixed in 2.5 % glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M PBS (pH 7.4) for 2 h at 4 uC. Before http://ijs.sgmjournals.org Probe labelling and FISH. A pair of primers designed from the cDNA clone was used to label the fluorescent probe. PCR reaction mixture (25 ml) contained 10 ng CMNV-7 plasmid, 10 mM Tris/HCl (pH 8.3), 50 mM KCl, 4 mM MgCl2, 2 mM dATP/dCTP/dGTP, 1.5 mM dTTP, 0.5 mM Fluorescein-12-dUTP, 0.4 mM primers (CMNV-7Probe-F: 59-GGCGATGACGGCTTGA-39 and CMNV7Probe-R: 59-GGCGGTGAGATGGATTTT-39) and 2.5 U Taq DNA polymerase (PCR Fluorescein Labelling Mix; Roche Applied Science). The PCR was carried out according to the protocol supported by the Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 2707 Q. Zhang and others PCR Fluorescein Labelling Mix. Following PCR, the fluorescentlabelled DNA probe was precipitated with ethanol, resuspended in water and stored at –20 uC. Isolation and mapping of telomeric pentanucleotide (TAACC)n repeats of the Pacific whiteleg shrimp, Penaeus vannamei, using fluorescence in situ hybridization. Mar Biotechnol (NY) 8, 467–480. Tissues originating from CMNV-infected ponds or experimental challenge tests were fixed with RNA-friendly fixative (Hasson et al., 1997) for 24 h and then transferred into 70 % ethanol for storage. The fixed tissues were embedded in paraffin blocks and sectioned (6 mm thick) in accordance with standard methods (Lightner, 1996). The sections were then subjected to in situ hybridization assays according to the protocol supported by the PCR Fluorescein Labelling Mix with minor modifications adopted by Alcivar-Warren et al. (2006) and Panphut et al. (2011). The PCR amplification product with Fluorescein-12-dUTP and nucleic acid from healthy shrimp were used in negative control hybridization. After incubation, the specimens were washed and viewed under a confocal microscope. The cytoplasm was stained by Evans blue. Arcier, J. M., Herman, F., Lightner, D. V., Redman, R. M., Mari, J. & Bonami, J. R. (1999). A viral disease associated with mortalities Nested RT-PCR. Total RNA was extracted from haemolymph and cephalothoraxes of shrimp using RNAiso Plus (TaKaRa). The extracted RNA was denatured initially at 65 uC for 5 min and then cooled on ice for 2 min. The denatured RNA was then reverse transcribed using SuperScript III Reverse Transcriptase (Invitrogen) at 50 uC for 60 min and then denatured at 70 uC for 15 min. The reaction mixture contained 2 ml cDNA, 10 mM Tris/HCl (pH 8.3), 50 mM KCl, 4 mM MgCl2, 1.5 mM dNTP, 0.4 mM primers (CMNV-7F1: 59-AAATACGGCGATGACG-39 and CMNV-7R1: 59-ACGAAGTGCCCACAGAC-39) and 2.5 U TaKaRa EX Taq DNA polymerase (TaKaRa). The PCR was performed at 94 uC for 4 min, followed by 35 cycles of 94 uC for 30 s, 45 uC for 30 s and 72 uC for 40 s, ending with 72 uC for 7 min. In the first step, the RT-PCR amplified a 619 bp amplicon from the viral genome. For the second step of the PCR, the PCR mixtures were the same as that described above, except different template and primers (CMNV-7F2: 59-CACAACCGAGTCAAACC-39 and CMNV-7R2: 59GCGTAAACAGCGAAGG-39) were included in the reactions. The amplification was performed with the following cycling parameters: initial denaturation at 94 uC for 4 min, followed by 30 cycles of 94 uC for 20 s, 50 uC for 20 s and 72 uC for 20 s, and a final extension at 72 uC for 7 min. A 165 bp amplicon was amplified by the second step of the PCR. To test the specificity of the RT-PCR, nucleic acids from shrimp infected with YHV, MrNV, WSSV and TSV were used as template in the RT-PCR. PCR products (5 ml) were analysed in a 1.5 % agarose gel containing GeneFinder (Bio-V). in hatchery-reared postlarvae of the giant freshwater prawn Macrobrachium rosenbergii. Dis Aquat Organ 38, 177–181. Bell, T. A. & Lightner, D. V. (1988). A Handbook of Normal Penaeid Shrimp Histology. Baton Rouge, LA: World Aquaculture Society. Bonami, J. R., Shi, Z., Qian, D. & Sri Widada, J. (2005). White tail disease of the giant freshwater prawn, Macrobrachium rosenbergii: separation of the associated virions and characterization of MrNV as a new type of nodavirus. J Fish Dis 28, 23–31. Briddon, R. W., Ghabrial, S., Lin, N.-S., Palukaitis, P., Scholthof, K.-B. G. & Vetten, H.-J. (2012). Satellites and other virus-dependent nucleic acids. In Virus Taxonomy: Ninth Report of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses, pp. 1211–1219. Edited by A. M. Q. King, M. J. Adams, E. B. Carstens & E. J. Lefkowitz. London: Academic Press. FAO (2013). Report of the FAO/MARD Technical Workshop on Early Mortality Syndrome (EMS) or Acute Hepatopancreatic Necrosis Syndrome (AHPNS) of Cultured Shrimp (under TCP/VIE/3304). Hanoi, Viet Nam, 25–27 June 2013. FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Report 1053. Rome: FAO. Flegel, T. W. (2012). Historic emergence, impact and current status of shrimp pathogens in Asia. J Invertebr Pathol 110, 166–173. Flegel, T. W. & Lo, C.-F. (2013). Announcement regarding free release of primers for specific detection of bacterial isolates that cause acute hepatopancreatic necrosis disease (AHPND). http://www.enaca.org/ publications/health/disease-cards/ahpnd-detection-method-announcement. pdf Grove, S., Johansen, R., Dannevig, B. H., Reitan, L. J. & Ranheim, T. (2003). Experimental infection of Atlantic halibut Hippoglossus hippoglossus with nodavirus: tissue distribution and immune response. Dis Aquat Organ 53, 211–221. Gu, S. J. (2012). [Analysis of causes of the covert mortality disease of Pacific white shrimp and its control strategies]. Sci Fish Farming 8, 62–63 (in Chinese). Hang, J., Forshey, B. M., Kochel, T. J., Li, T., Solórzano, V. F., Halsey, E. S. & Kuschner, R. A. (2012). Random amplification and pyrosequencing for identification of novel viral genome sequences. J Biomol Tech 23, 4–10. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Hasson, K. W., Hasson, J., Aubert, H., Redman, R. M. & Lightner, D. V. (1997). A new RNA-friendly fixative for the preservation of penaeid The authors would like to thank Dr Andrew D. Winters (Michigan State University) for his generous help in the grammatical correction of the manuscript. The authors also thank Dr Leigh Owens (James Cook University), Dr Timothy W. Flegel (Mahidol University) and Dr Donald V. Lightner (University of Arizona) for their advice on histopathology. This work was supported by the projects under the Special Fund for Agro-scientific Research in the Public Interest (grant 201103034), China Agriculture Research System (CARS-47), the Special Scientific Research Funds for Central Non-profit Institutes, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences (2013A0601 and 2014A06XK01), the Construction Programme for ‘Taishan Scholarship’ of Shandong Province of China, and the Programme for Chinese Outstanding Talents in Agricultural Scientific Research. shrimp samples for virological detection using cDNA genomic probes. J Virol Methods 66, 227–236. Huang, J. (2012). Experience in EMS/AHPNS from China. In: Report of the Asia Pacific Emergency Regional Consultation on the Emerging Shrimp Disease: Early Mortality Syndrome (EMS)/Acute Hepatopancreatic Necrosis Syndrome (AHPNS), pp. 21–23. Edited by NACA Bangkok: Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific. Lightner, D. V. (1996). A Handbook of Shrimp Pathology and Diagnostic Procedures for Diseases of Cultured Penaeid Shrimp. Baton Rouge, LA: World Aquaculture Society. Lightner, D. V., Redman, R. M., Pantoja, C. R., Noble, B. L. & Tran, L. H. (2012). Early mortality syndrome affects shrimp in Asia. Glob. Aquacult. Advocate Jan/Feb, 40. REFERENCES Lopez-Jimena, B., Alonso, M. C., Thompson, K. D., Adams, A., Infante, C., Castro, D., Borrego, J. J. & Garcia-Rosado, E. (2011). Alcivar-Warren, A., Meehan-Meola, D., Wang, Y., Guo, X., Zhou, L., Xiang, J., Moss, S., Arce, S., Warren, W. & other authors (2006). Tissue distribution of Red Spotted Grouper Nervous Necrosis Virus (RGNNV) genome in experimentally infected juvenile European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax). Vet Microbiol 154, 86–95. 2708 Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 Journal of General Virology 95 CMNV causes covert mortality disease of shrimp Lopez-Jimena, B., Garcia-Rosado, E., Thompson, K. D., Adams, A., Infante, C., Borrego, J. J. & Alonso, M. C. (2012). Distribution of red- Senapin, S., Phiwsaiya, K., Gangnonngiw, W., Briggs, M., Sithigorngul, P. & Flegel, T. W. (2013). Dual infections of IMNV spotted grouper nervous necrosis virus (RGNNV) antigens in nervous and non-nervous organs of European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) during the course of an experimental challenge. J Vet Sci 13, 355–362. and MrNV in cultivated Penaeus vannamei from Indonesia. Aquaculture 372–375, 70–73. Mello, M. V., Aragão, M. E., Torres-Franklin, M. L., Neto, J. M. & Guedes, M. I. (2011). Purification of infectious myonecrosis virus in seabass, Dicentrarchus labrax, using different infection models. Virus Res 63, 85–93. Song, S. X. & Zhuang, S. P. (2006). [Measures for control of ‘‘bottom death’’ of Pacific white shrimp]. Fish Sci & Technol 6, 36–39 (in Chinese). (IMNV) in species of marine shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei in the State of Ceará. J Virol Methods 177, 10–14. NACA (2012). Report of the Asia Pacific Emergency Regional Consultation on the Emerging Shrimp Disease: Early Mortality Syndrome (EMS)/Acute Hepatopancreatic Necrosis Syndrome (AHPNS). Bangkok: Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific. NaveenKumar, S., Shekar, M., Karunasagar, I. & Karunasagar, I. (2013). Genetic analysis of RNA1 and RNA2 of Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus (MrNV) isolated from India. Virus Res 173, 377–385. Nguyen, H. D., Mushiake, K., Nakai, T. & Muroga, K. (1997). Tissue distribution of striped jack nervous necrosis virus (SJNNV) in adult striped jack. Dis Aquat Organ 28, 87–91. Nopadon, P., Aranya, P., Tipaporn, T., Toshihiro, N., Takayuki, K., Masashi, M. & Makoto, E. (2009). Nodavirus associated with pathological changes in adult spotted coralgroupers (Plectropomus maculatus) in Thailand with viral nervous necrosis. Res Vet Sci 87, 97– 101. Nunes, A. J. P., Cunha-Martins, P. & Vasconselos-Gesteira, T. C. (2004). [Carcinicultura ameacada.] Rev Panoram Aquic 83, 37–51 (in Portuguese). OIE (2012). Manual of Diagnostic Tests for Aquatic Animals 2012. Paris: World Organisation for Animal Health. Panphut, W., Senapin, S., Sriurairatana, S., Withyachumnarnkul, B. & Flegel, T. W. (2011). A novel integrase-containing element may interact with Laem-Singh virus (LSNV) to cause slow growth in giant tiger shrimp. BMC Vet Res 7, 18. Poulos, B. T., Tang, K. F., Pantoja, C. R., Bonami, J. R. & Lightner, D. V. (2006). Purification and characterization of infectious myonecrosis virus of penaeid shrimp. J Gen Virol 87, 987–996. Qian, D., Shi, Z., Zhang, S., Cao, Z., Liu, W., Li, L., Xie, Y., Cambournac, I. & Bonami, J. R. (2003). Extra small virus-like particles (XSV) and nodavirus associated with whitish muscle disease in the giant freshwater prawn, Macrobrachium rosenbergii. J Fish Dis 26, 521–527. Rivers, T. M. (1937). Viruses and Koch’s postulates. J Bacteriol 33, 1– 12. Sahul Hameed, A. S., Yoganandhan, K., Sri Widada, J. & Bonami, J. R. (2004). Studies on the occurrence of Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus and extra small virus-like particles associated with white tail disease of M. rosenbergii in India by RT-PCR detection. Aquaculture 238, 127–133. Senapin, S., Phiwsaiya, K., Gangnonngiw, W. & Flegel, T. W. (2011). False rumours of disease outbreaks caused by infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV) in the whiteleg shrimp in Asia. J Negat Results Biomed 10, 10. http://ijs.sgmjournals.org Skliris, G. P. & Richards, R. H. (1999). Induction of nodavirus disease Sudhakaran, R., Musthaq, S. S., Haribabu, P., Mukherjee, S. C., Gopal, C. & Sahul Hameed, A. S. (2006). Experimental transmission of Macrobrachium rosenbergii nodavirus (MrNV) and extra small virus (XSV) in three species of marine shrimp (Penaeus indicus, Penaeus japonicus and Penaeus monodon). Aquaculture 257, 136–141. Suebsing, R., Prombun, P., Srisala, J. & Kiatpathomchai, W. (2013). Loop-mediated isothermal amplification combined with colorimetric nanogold for detection of the microsporidian Enterocytozoon hepatopenaei in penaeid shrimp. J Appl Microbiol 114, 1254–1263. Tamura, K., Peterson, D., Peterson, N., Stecher, G., Nei, M. & Kumar, S. (2011). MEGA5: Molecular evolutionary genetics analysis using maximum likelihood, evolutionary distance, and maximum parsimony methods. Mol Biol Evol 28, 2731–2739. Tang, K. F. J., Pantoja, C. R., Poulos, B. T., Redman, R. M. & Lightner, D. V. (2005). In situ hybridization demonstrates that Litopenaeus vannamei, L. stylirostris and Penaeus monodon are susceptible to experimental infection with infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV). Dis Aquat Organ 63, 261–265. Tang, K. F. J., Pantoja, C. R., Redman, R. M. & Lightner, D. V. (2007). Development of in situ hybridization and RT-PCR assay for the detection of a nodavirus (PvNV) that causes muscle necrosis in Penaeus vannamei. Dis Aquat Organ 75, 183–190. Tang, K. F. J., Pantoja, C. R., Redman, R. M., Navarro, S. A. & Lightner, D. V. (2011). Ultrastructural and sequence characterization of Penaeus vannamei nodavirus (PvNV) from Belize. Dis Aquat Organ 94, 179– 187. Thiéry, R., Johnson, K. L., Nakai, T., Schneemann, A., Bonami, J. R. & Lightner, D. V. (2012). Family Nodaviridae. In Virus Taxonomy: Ninth Report of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses, pp. 1061–1067. Edited by A. M. Q. King, M. J. Adams, E. B. Carstens & E. J. Lefkowitz. London: Academic Press. Tran, L., Nunan, L., Redman, R. M., Mohney, L. L., Pantoja, C. R., Fitzsimmons, K. & Lightner, D. V. (2013). Determination of the infectious nature of the agent of acute hepatopancreatic necrosis syndrome affecting penaeid shrimp. Dis Aquat Organ 105, 45–55. Xing, H. (2004). [Discussion of the control measures for the ‘‘bottom death’’ (covert mortality disease) of Pacific white shrimp]. China Fish 4, 88–89 (in Chinese). Xu, Z. J. & Ji, F. (2009). [Comprehensive control of the covert mortality disease of Pacific white shrimp]. Fish Guide to be Rich 1, 60 (in Chinese). Zhang, Q. H. (2004). [To be cautious of ‘‘bottom death’’ in the intensive farming of Pacific white shrimp]. Sci Fish Farming 10, 48–49 (in Chinese). Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 13 May 2017 05:55:39 2709