Virulence of Paramoeba invadens Jones (Amoebida, Paramoebidae) from Monoxenic and Polyxenic Culture1
This research was funded by a strategic grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council to Robert Scheibling and Kenneth Mann; J.F.J. was supported by a Dalhousie University Fellowship and post-graduate scholarships from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council and the Killam Trust.
ABSTRACT
Paramoeba invadens is a pathogenic marine amoeba responsible for mass mortalities of sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) along the Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia in the early 1980's. The amoeba has been maintained in vivo in S. droebachiensis for five years in the laboratory without observable loss of virulence. Paramoeba invadens was cultured polyxenically (on mixed marine bacteria) and monoxenically (on a single strain of Pseudomonas nautica) on non-nutrient agar for 58 weeks and 19 weeks respectively. Pathogenicity tests showed some loss of virulence in monoxenic culture after 15 weeks and in polyxenic culture after 58 weeks. Polyxenic culture is recommended for long-term culture of P. invadens although periodic passage of the amoeba through the sea urchin host may be required to maintain virulence for periods exceeding one year.