Immunohistochemistry of great scallop Pecten maximus larvae experimentally challenged with pathogenic bacteria. (1/8)

Three challenge experiments were carried out on larvae of the great scallop Pecten maximus. Larvae were bath-challenged with Vibrio pectenicida and 5 strains resembling Vibrio splendidus and one Pseudoalteromonas sp. Unchallenged larvae were used as negative controls. The challenge protocol was based on the use of a multidish system, where the scallop larvae (10, 13 and 15 d post-hatching in the 3 experiments, respectively) were distributed to 2 ml wells with stagnant seawater and exposed to the bacterial cultures by bath challenge. Presence of the challenge bacteria in the wells was verified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). A significantly increased mortality was found between 24 and 48 h in most groups challenged with V. pectenicida or V. splendidus-like strains. The exception was found in larval groups challenged with a Pseudoalteromonas sp. LT 13, in which the mortality rate fell in 2 of the 3 challenge experiments. Larvae from the challenge experiments were studied by immunohistochemistry protocol. Examinations of larval groups challenged with V. pectenicida revealed no bacterial cells, despite a high degree of positive immunostaining. In contrast, intact bacterial cells were found in larvae challenged with V. splendidus. In the case of larvae challenged with the Pseudoalteromonas sp., positive immuno-staining was limited to visible bacteria inside the digestive area and cells of the mucosa. The experiments confirm that V. splendidus and V. pectenicida are pathogenic to scallop larvae, and that the Pseudoalteromonas strain is probably not a primary pathogen, although it cannot be ruled out as a secondary pathogen.  (+info)

Conservation of the regulated structure of folded myosin 2 in species separated by at least 600 million years of independent evolution. (2/8)

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Insights into the mechanism of ligand binding to octopine dehydrogenase from Pecten maximus by NMR and crystallography. (3/8)

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Arrestin in ciliary invertebrate photoreceptors: molecular identification and functional analysis in vivo. (4/8)

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Small actions, big costs: the behavioural energetics of a commercially important invertebrate. (5/8)

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Variation in size and growth of the great scallop Pecten maximus along a latitudinal gradient. (6/8)

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Juvenile king scallop, Pecten maximus, is potentially tolerant to low levels of ocean acidification when food is unrestricted. (7/8)

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Flexibility within the heads of muscle myosin-2 molecules. (8/8)

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