Endemism and anthropogenic spread of R. salmoninarum
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-10 收录
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/ERP187836
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Renibacterium salmoninarum is the causative agent of bacterial kidney disease (BKD) and has been isolated from northern European salmonid farms since the 1960s. The bacterium has been detected only sporadically in Norway during the last decades, but the country experienced several geographically spread outbreaks since December 2022. The phylogenomic relationships of R. salmoninarum isolates associated with the epizootics ongoing on the West Coast and in Mid-Norway were explored using draft genome generated by whole genome sequencing. A broad overview of the phylogeography of this pathogen was gained through sequencing and analysis of a collection of isolates from Norway (n=67), Iceland (n=12), Denmark (n=12), and the Faroe Islands (n=1), along with a collection of 109 publicly available sequences. We identified two distinct contemporary clades of R. salmoninarum causing BKD in Norway in the period 2022-2024. Both clades belong to the expanding, aquaculture-associated Lineage 1. The epidemiological picture appears consistent with contemporary aquaculture operations, raising questions on the effectiveness or practice of current biosecurity practices towards R. salmoninarum. This work also describes a hitherto undescribed lineage (Lineage 3), predominantly from Iceland, where BKD is considered endemic. The detection of endemic reservoirs of R. salmoninarum in European water systems underscores the potential for ongoing pathogen circulation independent of acute outbreaks. This finding emphasizes the importance of further investigation of the mechanisms of pathogen persistence, particularly within environments related to aquaculture, where chronic infection reservoirs could compromise disease management and biosecurity.
创建时间:
2026-02-18



