We studied the ability of Amyloodinium ocellatum to infect gill cell cultures in the presence of serum or mucus from naive blue tilapia Oreochromis aureus. Serum concentrations as low as 1.25 % markedly inhibited parasite infectivity. Serum concentrations greater than 10 % were completely inhibitory. Mucus had considerably less inhibitory activity than serum. Heating serum to 47°C for 20 min or 56°C for 30 min, as well as treating serum with zymosan or carrageenan, suggested that a complement-like factor was responsible for at least some of the activity, but that other factors may also influence parasite infectivity. © 1992, The Japanese Society of Fish Pathology. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Landsberg, J. H., Richards, S. A., Smith, S. A., & Noga, E. J. (1992). Effect of Serum and Mucus of Blue Tilapia, Oreochromis Aureus on Infectivity of the Parasitic Dinoflagellate, Amyloodinium Ocellatum in Cell Culture. Fish Pathology, 27(3), 163–169. https://doi.org/10.3147/jsfp.27.163
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