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Disseminated neoplasia in cultured Crassostrea gasar oysters from northeast Brazil.

Disseminated neoplasia (DN) is a disease that affects bivalves worldwide and can lead to mass mortalities. In the present study, a pathological survey conducted from December 2011 to August 2012 in Crassostrea gasar, an oyster of commercial interest in northeast Brazil, revealed the occurrence of DN in oysters reared in the Mamanguape estuary, Paraíba State, Brazil. The present work describes the pathological and functional aspects of the disease in C. gasar by light microscopy (haemolymph cell monolayer and histological section) and flow cytometry analyses. The prevalence of the disease was low (7.1% of 182 oysters examined). Enlarged (neoplastic) cells showed reniform, ovoid or circular-shaped nuclei, with prominent nucleoli and predominantly short filipodia. They were found in the haemolymph and infiltrated the connective tissues of different organs, including the digestive system, gills and gonads, as well as in the sinuses and vessels. Three levels of progression of DN in tissues were observed, light (61.5%), moderate (15.4%) and advanced (23.1%). The viability of neoplastic cells circulating in the haemolymph (97.4%) was similar to that in the haemocytes (95.7%). The neoplastic cells showed low phagocytic ability (3.9%) compared with that of haemocytes (42.4%). Conversely, reactive oxygen species production (679 A.U.) and the total haemocyte count (3.9 × 106  cells mL-1 ) were higher in the affected oysters than in unaffected oysters (268 A.U. and 1.5 × 106  cells mL-1 , respectively). The low prevalence and primarily mild intensity found in the sampled oysters does not preclude an impact at the population level. A timely survey of DN is thus recommended in order to assess the severity and impact of this disease in wild and cultured populations of C. gasar oysters.

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