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1 October 1988 SELECTION FOR VIRULENCE IN THE FISH PATHOGEN AEROMONAS SALMONICIDA, USING COOMASSIE BRILLIANT BLUE AGAR
Rocco C. Cipriano, James Bertolini
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Abstract

Coomassie Brilliant Blue Agar was used to quantify the frequency of the A-layer phenotype in different isolates of Aeromonas salmonicida. Hydrophilic, non-clumping isolates of A. salmonicida consisted predominantly of the A-layer minus phenotype. These bacteria were avirulent by intraperitoneal injection into susceptible brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) and could not be reisolated from infected fish. By contrast, hydrophobic, clumping isolates were predominantly of the A-layer positive phenotype, highly virulent in brook trout, and easily recovered from dead or moribund fish. A-layer positive and negative clones of A. salmonicida were derived by plating bacteria on Coomassie Blue Agar. The plating showed clearly that Coomassie Blue Agar could be used as a highly selective in vitro screening method to reclaim the virulence of certain isolates of A. salmonicida having a relatively low percentage of A-layer positive phenotypes.

Cipriano and Bertolini: SELECTION FOR VIRULENCE IN THE FISH PATHOGEN AEROMONAS SALMONICIDA, USING COOMASSIE BRILLIANT BLUE AGAR
Rocco C. Cipriano and James Bertolini "SELECTION FOR VIRULENCE IN THE FISH PATHOGEN AEROMONAS SALMONICIDA, USING COOMASSIE BRILLIANT BLUE AGAR," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 24(4), 672-678, (1 October 1988). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-24.4.672
Received: 4 April 1988; Published: 1 October 1988
KEYWORDS
Aeromonas salmonicida
A-layer
Coomassie Brilliant Blue Agar
phenotype
virulence
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