Bacterial isolation and identification
The procured
E. tarda (ATCC® 15947) challenged in
L. rohita was then re-isolated from challenged fish kidney using BHI broth and SS agar media (Fig 1).
E. tarda strain was confirmed by biochemical characterisation (Table 1).
F. columnare isolated from diseased
L. rohita gills and grown in modified TYES broth and then confirmed by using five Griffin tests, which differentiate it from other gram-negative flexing rods.
Confirmation of F. columnare by species-specific PCR
PCR amplification with
F. columnare specific primers (COL-F and COL-R) consistently produced the expected 675 bp amplicon in all tested isolates (Fig 2), confirming species-specific detection.
Clinical signs in experimentally infected fish
In the present study, healthy
L. rohita fingerlings were exposed to
E. tarda and
F. columnare by intra-peritoneal injection and immersion methods, respectively. Experimentally challenged fish exhibit marked clinical signs upon disease caused by both
E. tarda and
F. columnare infection.
E. tarda infected fish showed abnormal swimming, dark skins and fins, redness on the ventral body, ascitic fluid in the pectoral cavity, haemorrhages and skin lesions (Fig 3 and 4). Meanwhile,
F. columnare infected fish exhibit whitish-yellow pigments in the ventral part of the gills arch, eroded skins, ulcers on the surface of the body and pale discoloration on the skin. In this study,
L. rohita challenged with
E. tarda observed to have excess mucus secretion with gross haemorrhagic lesions on the ventral side of the body. In moribund and dead fish, the anus were protruded, haemorrhagic and swollen. These clinical signs align with earlier report on
Clarias batrachus (
Sahoo et al., 1998) and
Anabas testudineus (Sahoo et al., 2000) infected with
E. tarda. Co-infection groups showed faster and significantly higher mortality compared to fish challenged with individual bacterium in 7 days. The present results were corroborated with
Dong et al., (2015), who reported significantly higher cumulative mortality in
Pangasianodon hypophthalmus under co-infection of
E. ictaluri and
F. columnare. Further, the clinical signs of both diseases were observed in co-infected fish group. Similarly,
Crumlish et al., (2010) determined that co-infection challenge of
P. hypophthalmus with
A. hydrophila and
E. ictaluri by immersion caused higher cumulative mortalities (95%) compared to fish exposed to single infection
.
Pathogenicity of E. tarda and F. columnare
In a single infection of
E. tarda, T
1 and T
2 groups having a bacterial dose of 7.2×10
7 and 7.2×10
5 CFU/Fish respectively were injected by an intraperitoneal method. After 7 days, T
1 and T
2 groups showed 60% and 50% cumulative mortality respectively. Similarly, a single infection of
F. columnare in two groups T
3 (5.1×10
6 CFU/mL) and T
4 (5.1×10
4 CFU/mL) results in cumulative mortality of 51.4% and 47.7% respectively in
L. rohita.
Co-infection of E. tarda and F. columnare
In the combinatorial infection of
E. tarda and
F. columnare, T
5 group (7.2×10
5 CFU/Fish and 5.1×10
4 CFU/mL) and T
6 group (7.2×10
7 CFU/Fish and 5.1×10
4 CFU/mL) dose were given by intraperitoneal injection and immersion methods respectively. Cumulative mortality of the T
5 and T
6 groups after 7 days was recorded to be 54.4% and 74.8% respectively. Further, the T
7 group of bacterial dose 7.2×10
5 CFU/Fish and 5.1×10
6 CFU/mL was challenged by the bath immersion method and 60% cumulative mortality was noticed in 10 days experimental period (Fig 5).
Non-specific immune response towards a single and combined infection
Total protein
In a single infection of
E. tarda and
F. columnare, there is no significant difference in total protein value within T
1, T
3 and T
4 treatment groups at different time periods. However, total protein value was substantially (
p<0.05) higher in the pre-challenged group in comparison to other time periods in T
2 group. In the co-infection treatment group T
5, a time-dependent decrease in total protein was observed during the experimental periods. However, T
6 showed no significant difference between time periods and T
7 showed a lower total protein value in 96 h (Fig 6). Total protein was found to be reduced significantly in co-infection treatment group in comparison to either single infected group and similar results were reported in
E. tarda infected Nile tilapia (
Benli and Yildiz, 2004). Similarly, a reduction in total protein concentration was noticed in co-infection of spring viremia and
Pseudomonas fluorescens in common carp (
Rehulka, 1996;
Yildiz, 1998). Higher albumin and globulin level in treatment groups may be due to liver and blood cells destruction with protein synthesis dysfunction (
Paul et al., 2019, 2020;
Bera et al., 2020).
Myeloperoxidase
Myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity in
L. rohita increased in a time-dependent manner following both single infection and co-infection of pathogens. A significantly (
p<0.05) different MPO activity was observed in the T
1 group at different time periods, with the highest elevation in 48 h due to a single infection of
E. tarda (Fig 7). MPO activity decreased significantly (
p<0.05) in the co-infection treatment group compared to pre-challenged group. This might be attributed to the dysfunctioning of phagocytic enzymes and a reduction in the number of phagocytic cells due to invading pathogens.
Shameena et al. (2021) reported significant alterations of MPO and RBA on
Carassius auratus due to co-infection of Argulus and
A. hydrophila under graded temperature corroborates with the results of the present study. Further, the results confirms that the bacterial enzymes such as superoxide dismutase, peroxidase and catalase might be responsible for free radicals detoxification by host phagocytes
(Han et al., 2006; Mohanty and Sahoo, 2007).
Respiratory burst activity (RBA)
In the present study, T
1 group exhibited a differential RBA pattern with higher values in 48 h and moderately decreased in 24 h and 96 h. Similarly, T
2 showed the highest activity in 48 h followed by 24 h in comparison to other time periods. Interestingly, RBA was significantly (
p <0.05) higher in 24 h and reduced during 48 h in the T
3 and T
4 treatment groups (Fig 8). In T
5 group, there is a significant difference in RBA activity in early hours post-challenge. However, in T
6 and T
7, a significantly higher RBA was observed in 48 h followed by a decreasing trend in 96 h. Fish phagocytes after activation are able to produce superoxide anion (O
2-) and its derivatives while intense oxygen consumption which is called as respiratory burst (
Secombes and Fletcher, 1992). The MPO activity and respiratory burst were oxygen-dependent reactions commonly used to understand the host’s defence against pathogens (
Sharp and Secombes, 1993). The increase in phagocytes killing pathogens are evidently correlated with increased respiratory burst activity. In this study, a time-dependent increased RBA activity was observed in both co-infected and individual treatment groups. Higher respiratory burst activity could be linked with increased host cellular immune response to the bacterial pathogen infection.
Histopathology
Histopathological examination of tissues from Rohu fish coinfected with
E. tarda and
F. columnare revealed pronounced pathological alterations in the liver, kidney, gills and spleen. Gills showed hyperplasia with secondary lamellae fusion, epithelial lifting, hyperaemia, haemorrhage in primary lamellae and widening of lamellae with acute inflammatory responses (Fig 9 a,b,c). Kidney sections exhibited disruption of the glomerular apparatus, necrosis and cloudy swelling of renal tubules, sloughing of tubular epithelial cells, intracellular vacuolation and glomerular atrophy with enlarged glomerular space (Fig 9 d,e,f). Liver tissue showed intracytoplasmic vacuolation, hypertrophied hepatocytes, mild mononuclear cell infiltration and alterations in sinusoidal spaces with Kupffer cell activation (Fig 9 g,h,i). In the spleen, diffuse melanomacrophage centres, disorganization of splenic parenchyma, reduced erythrocytes in the red pulp and disruption of the reticular sheath of ellipsoids were observed (Fig 9 j,k,l). Overall, these lesions indicate severe inflammatory and degenerative changes associated with bacterial coinfection in multiple organs. Histopathological alterations observed in this study aligns with earlier reports in Rohu fish infected with bacterial pathogens. Similar lesions such as lamellar hyperplasia and fusion in gills, degeneration of renal tubules, hepatocellular vacuolation and disorganization of splenic parenchyma have been previously reported during infections caused by
E. tarda and
F. columnare (
Mohanty et al., 2010;
Declercq et al., 2013). These pathological alterations are considered typical inflammatory and degenerative responses of fish tissues to bacterial invasion and systemic infection
(Manoj et al., 2010). The current findings on kidney histopathological changes corroborate with
Biswas et al., (2021) results of kidney tissue damage in
L. rohita challenged with
Aeromonas hydrophila. The present findings therefore corroborate earlier studies indicating that bacterial infections can induce severe structural damage in vital organs of rohu.