Growth inhibition of bacterial fish pathogens and quorum-sensing blocking by bacteria recovered from chilean salmonid farms.
Date
2015Author
Fuente, Mery de la
Miranda, Claudio
Jopia, Paz
González Rocha, Gerardo
Guiliani, Nicolás
Sossa, Katherine
Publisher
NCBI-The National Center for BiotechnologyDescription
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The main goal of this study was to find bacterial isolates with the ability to inhibit the growth of
the fish pathogens Aeromonas hydrophila, Vibrio anguillarum, and Flavobacterium
psychrophilum and to inhibit the blockage of the quorum-sensing (QS) system. A total of 80
gram-negative strains isolated from various freshwater Chilean salmonid farms were studied.
We determined that 10 strains belonging to the genus Pseudomonas inhibited at least one of
the assayed fish pathogens. Of these, nine strains were able to produce siderophores and two
strains were able to inhibit the growth of all assayed pathogenic species. When the 80 strains
were examined for QS-blocking activity, only the strains Pseudomonas sp. FF16 and Raoultella
planticola R5B1 were identified as QS blockers. When the QS-blocker strains were analyzed for
their ability to produce homoserine lactone (HSL) molecules, thin-layer chromatography
analysis showed that both strains were able to produce C6-HSL- and C8-HSL-type molecules.
Strain R5B1 did not show growth inhibition properties, but strain FF16 also led to inhibition of
growth in A. hydrophila and F. psychrophilum as well as to siderophore production.
Pseudomonas sp. FF16 exhibited potentially useful antagonistic properties and could be a
probiotic candidate for the salmon farming industry.