**ABSTRACT
NOT FOR CITATION WITHOUT AUTHOR PERMISSION. The title, authors, and
abstract for this completion report are provided below. For a copy
of the full completion report, please contact the author via e-mail at cek7@cornell.edu . Questions? Contact the GLFC via email
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EVALUATING EXPERIMENTALLY
INDUCED THIAMINE DEFICIENCY IN ATLANTIC SALMON USING IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION
Clifford
Kraft1 and Andrew D. Miller2
1 Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850
2 College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850
April 2018
ABSTRACT:
Despite the
longstanding recognition of fisheries mortality from thiamine deficiency,
methods to evaluate the thiamine status of wild or hatchery fishes are
inadequate. Pilot project funds from the Great Lakes Fishery Commission provided
an opportunity to take steps to develop an in
situ hybridization method to identify intermediate or incipient levels of
thiamine deficiency in fishes. The underlying premise of this project was that
thiamine dependent genes would be downregulated in Atlantic salmon raised in a
hatchery for more than three years under thiamine-deficient conditions by a
research group at the University of Western Ontario led by Bryan Neff. Brain,
skin and skeletal muscle tissue sections from 20 hatchery-reared
thiamine-deficient Atlantic salmon (Salmo
salar) – and 20 control fish reared under similar
conditions – were obtained, prepared and stained for in situ hybridization (ISH) using five RNA probes targeting thiamine-dependent
enzymes, receptors, and transporters or enzymes previously identified as
associated with thiamine deficiency. No differences in brain histology were
observed in a comparison of Atlantic salmon raised in thiamine-deficient
conditions versus thiamine-replete conditions.
All five probes were successful in identifying the target enzymes in
these three tissues, confirming their ability to quantify levels of thiamine-dependent
enzymes in fish tissues. An initial quantitative comparison of expression
levels of two of the thiamine-dependent enzymes in the thiamine-deficient and
non-thiamine-deficient fish did not show a statistically significant difference,
therefore expression levels of three other enzymes were not quantified using
that same approach. Instead, these initial results pointed to the need to
employ more sophisticated quantification approaches to examine expression
levels of the target enzymes. Although this study met two proposed study
objectives demonstrating the potential use of ISH probes to identify thiamine
deficiency in fish, the study objectives associated with quantifying levels of
these enzymes were not achieved. In hindsight, these last two objectives were unrealistic
given the resources available for this pilot project. Fortunately, the initial
success using these probes to identify thiamine-dependent enzymes provides an
opportunity to do future work with stained histological sections prepared
during this project to evaluate quantitative comparisons of expression of
target enzymes that could provide an important tool for assessing thiamine
deficiency in Great Lakes fishes.